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  1. Ballet Royal de la Nuit. The Ballet Royal de la Nuit (Royal Ballet of the Night), Ballet Royal de la Nuict in its original spelling and often referred to simply as the Ballet de la Nuit, is a ballet de cour with a libretto by Isaac de Benserade and music by Jean de Cambefort, Jean-Baptiste Boësset, Michel Lambert and possibly others, which ...

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  4. Overview. Le Ballet de la Nuit. Quick Reference. A court ballet, one of the most famous examples of a ballet de cour, staged at the Salle du Petit-Bourbon in the Louvre, Paris, on 23 Feb. 1653. The ballet lasted twelve hours, beginning at sunset and ending with sunrise, and featured figures from mythology in various nocturnal episodes.

  5. The Ballet de la Nuit was not a ballet celebrating peace, but part of Cardinal Mazarin’s careful strategy to build up the royal image (a nd thereby his own execu-tive power), in an ongoing battle to strengthen the monarchy and secure the loyalty of im-portant sections of the court. This in itself gave the Ballet de la Nuit its own underlying

  6. Aug 1, 2022 · Fig. 7. Louis XIV dans Le Ballet de la nuit. The ballet was choreographed in 1653. It was significant because Louis XIV made his debut at court. This court ballet lasted 12 hours, beginning at sundown and lasting until morning, and consisted of 45 dances. Louis XIV appeared in 5 of them. The most famous dance of Ballet de la Nuit portrays Louis ...

  7. As political propaganda, Louis began to create performances in order to convince the public that he was truly a leader sent from God. In 1653 Louis XIV created his first dance performance, “Ballet de la Nuit” or “ballet of the night.”. Lasting for twelve hour straight (sundown to sunset) it depicted a metaphoric image of France in the ...

  8. The Ballet de la Nuit (Paris, 1653) is perhaps best known today for its association with the iconic image of Louis XIV as Le Soleil. As Michael Burden informs us in ‘A spectacle for the King’ (one of four introductory essays to a facsimile reproduction of the livret, with an edition of the music by Lionel Sawkins), while this imagery had been associated with the youthful king previously ...

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