Difference between revisions of "Category:Salome (subject)"
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'''Salome''' (1st century CE) was the daughter of Herodias and Herod II, and the step-daughter of Herod Antipas. | [[File:Salome Caracciolo.jpg|thumb|300px]] | ||
'''Salome''' (1st century CE) was the daughter of [[Herodias]] and [[Herod II]], and the step-daughter of [[Herod Antipas]]. | |||
< ''Events'' : [[Death of John the Baptist]] > | |||
< ''[[People]]'' : [[Herodias]] -- [[Herod Antipas]] -- [[John the Baptist]] > | |||
< ''Scholarship'' : [[Salome (research)]] -- [[Salome (sources)]] > | |||
''' | < ''[[Salome (fiction)]]'' : [[Salome (art)]] -- [[Salome (cinema)]] -- [[Salome (dance)]] -- [[Salome (literature)]] -- -- [[Salome (music)]] -- [[Salome (theatre)]] > | ||
* [[San Giovanni Battista (St. John the Baptist / 1675 Stradella / Ansaldi), oratorio]] | |||
* [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1881 Massenet / Milliet, Grémont), opera]] | |||
* [[(++) Salomé (Salome / 1893 Wilde), play]] | |||
* [[(++) Salome (1905 Strauss / Lachmann), opera]] | |||
* [[Salomé (1908 Mariotte / Wilde), opera]] | |||
* This page is edited by [[Gabriele Boccaccini]], University of Michigan | |||
'' | ==Overview== | ||
From the historical point of view, Salome is part of the scion of powerful and politically engaged women that characterized the [[House of Hasmoneus]] (and the [[House of Herod]]), from Queen [[Salome Alexandra]] to [[Alexandra the Hasmonean]], [[Mariamne]], [[Herodias]], [[Berenice]], [[Drusilla]], and others. | |||
Josephus introduces Salome as the daughter of [[Herod II]] and [[Herodias]]. Her paternal grandparents were [[Herod the Great]] and [[Mariamne II]], while another son of [[Herod the Great]], [[Aristobulus IV]] and his wife [[Berenice I]] were her maternal grandparents. She was thus related to both the [[House of Herod]] and the House of [[Hasmoneus]]. | |||
After her mother's divorce and remarriage, Salome grew up as the step-daughter of her uncle [[Herod Antipas]]. Some legendary Christian accounts narrate of her involvement in the death of [[John the Baptist]]. | |||
Still an adolescent, Salome was given as wife to her uncle [[Herod Philip]], son of [[Herod the Great]]. A young widow, she remarried with [[Aristobulus of Chalcis]], from whom she had three sons named Herod, Agrippa and Aristobulus (see Ant XVIII 136-137). | |||
Nothing else is known about her life and death. | |||
Research on Salome however is limited by the paucity of historical sources and the legendary nature of the Gospel account. Scholars have rather focused on the study of the Salome legend and its ramifications in literature and the arts. | |||
==== Salome === | |||
The story of Salome is recorded in Islamic sources, as well. | |||
====Salome, in fiction==== | |||
The character of Salome has been subjected in fiction to a dramatic metamorphosis, from innocent child or indifferent teenager to powerful icon of morbid female seductiveness (and anti-Semitism). Salome is one of the most successful and recognizable characters from Second Temple Judaism in modern culture. | |||
In medieval Christian iconography, Salome is portrayed as an innocent child, the passive instrument of her mother's revenge. By the 16th century, the character has matured into a teenager, now more indifferent than innocent to the drama in which she has been involved. The turning point is the second half of the 19th century when Salome is transformed into an Oriental beauty, fully self-conscious of her power of seduction. In the works of Oscar Wilde and Richard Strauss she becomes the epitome of the femme fatale, a sensual, morbid and sadistic character who destroys the men she loves. | |||
* [[Gabriele Boccaccini]], University of Michigan | |||
==Salome, in ancient sources== | |||
The character of Salome is mentioned both in Josephus and in the Gospels of Mark and Matthew. | |||
The Gospels of Mark and Matthew (which do not mention her name or any other incidents in her life) suggest her (involuntary) involvement in the death of John the Baptist. They tell us that as a girl she danced before her uncle (and now step-father) [[Herod Antipas]]. At the instigation of her mother [[Herodias]], she requested and obtained the head of [[John the Baptist]] as her reward from the king. | |||
[[Josephus]] (who does not mention Salome in his account of the death of [[John the Baptist]]), in a genealogical list of the descendants of Herod the Great, talks briefly of her life as the daughter of [[Herod II]] and [[Herodias]], and the step-daughter of [[Herod Antipas]] after her mother's divorce and remarriage. Salome was given as wife to her uncle [[Herod Philip]], son of [[Herod the Great]]. A young widow, she remarried with [[Aristobulus of Chalcis]], from whom she had three sons named Herod, Agrippa and Aristobulus (see Ant XVIII 136-137). | |||
The story of Salome and her involvement in the death of [[John the Baptist]] is repeated also in Islamic traditions. | |||
== Salome, in music == | |||
[[Salome]] first emerged as a "singing" character in the tradition of the oratorios since the end of the 17th century. The first oratorio to be recorded as having [[Salome]] among its characters is [[San Giovanni Battista (St. John the Baptist / 1675 Stradella / Ansaldi), oratorio]]. As in all "biblical oratorios," the protagonist is [[John the Baptist]] and the plot closely follows the biblical narrative. | |||
Among the most celebrated oratorios dealing with the death of [[John the Baptist]] is also [[Il Batista (1727 Caldara / Zeno), oratorio]], which premiered in Vienna in 1727. It is the first of which the name of the interpreter of [[Salome]] is recorded--"Signora Helvertin." | |||
The season of the "biblical" oratorios ended with [[St John the Baptist (1873 Macfarren / Monk), oratorio]]. The transition to the opera came with ''Hérodiade'' (1881). In [[Jules Massenet]]'s opera the character of Salome takes central stage and a life of her own but still preserves her "biblical" innocence. In the 1880s ''Hérodiade" was performed in Belgium, Italy, France, Germany and in 1892 reached New Orleans. | |||
Everything changed in 1896 with the premiere in Paris of [[Salomé (Salome / 1893 Wilde), play]]. Salome lost her innocence and became the embodiment of the ''femme fatale'' who seduces and destroys her lovers. The "Salomania" spread in every corner of Europe and America. | |||
Based on Wilde's play, [[Richard Strauss]]'s ''Salome'' premiered in Dresden on 9 December 1905 (starring [[Marie Wittich]] in the title role). It was an immediate success. In 1906 the opera was performed in a dozen theaters, including Graz, Cologne, Berlin (starring [[Emmy Destinn]]), Turin, and Milan (under the direction of [[Arturo Toscanini]]). In spite of the composer's invitation to look at the opera as nothing more than "a scherzo with a fatal conclusion," many regarded it as a gruesome middlebrow entertainment. When the opera opened at the New York Metropolitan Opera on 22 January 1907, accusations of vulgarity and indecency led to the cancellation of the show and the opera would not be performed again at the Met until 1934. In Austria, Russia and other countries the opera was banned even before being performed. | |||
And yet, Strauss's ''Salome'' was an unstoppable success. In March 1907 the French version of the opera premiered in Brussels, of which a scaled-down rendition was also given in Paris a few days before the German version opened there at the Théâtre du Châtelet on 8 May 1907 under the direction of the composer. [[Aino Ackté]] played [[Salome]] in the 1907 Leipzig premiere as well as in the 1910 London premiere. In spite of the Met's boycott, the Salomania hit New York again at the Manhattan Opera House in 1909 with [[Mary Garden]]. | |||
Among the early interpreters of Strauss's Salome are [[Göta Ljungberg]], [[Maria Jeritza]], [[Maria Cebotari]], and [[Christle Goltz]], Probably the most famous of all was the Bulgarian soprano [[Ljuba Welitsch]], who sang it in the presence of the composer at a performance given to mark his 80th birthday in Vienna in 1944. | |||
Strauss's Salome is regularly staged in the major opera theaters and is now available also in numerous sound and video recordings, featuring interpreters such as [[Birgitt Nilsson]], [[Leonie Rysanek]], [[Hildegard Behrens]], [[Montserrat Caballé]], [[Josephine Barstow]], [[Catherine Malfitano]], [[Maria Ewing]], [[Nadja Michael]], [[Karita Mattila]] and [[Angela Denoke]]. | |||
Although overshadowed by Strauss's ''Salome'', Massenet's ''Hérodiade'' has not ceased to be performed and recorded, offering the soprano the intriguing possibility to play the same role in two different operas. | |||
@2017 Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan | |||
==== External links ==== | |||
* [https://www.gramophone.co.uk/features/focus/richard-strausss-salome-which-recording-is-best Richard Strauss's Salome: which recording is best?] | |||
== Salome, in dance == | |||
* See [[Salome's Dance]] | |||
==Salome, in cinema== | |||
Salome is a marginal character in ancient sources (to the extent of being unnamed in the Gospel narratives). In fiction, however, she took a life of her own, gradually becoming the protagonist of the events related to the [[Death of John the Baptist]]. When the new art of cinematography started, the "Salomania" was at its peak after the 1893 play by [[Oscar Wilde]] and the 1905 opera by [[Richard Strauss]]. Salome entered the movies not as a marginal presence but as the protagonist of a long series of films that offered the most famous actresses (and dancers) a vehicle to show their charm and power of seduction. | |||
Sound cinema has had less to offer. The most ambitious attempt at building an original series of events around Salome was made in 1953 with the epic ''Salome'' with [[Rita Hayworth]]. Most of the Salome movies are video-recordings of the Wilde or Strauss work. | |||
Salome is conspicuously absent in the major Jesus movies with a few exceptions, notably, ''King of Kings'' (1961), ''Il vangelo secondo Matteo'' (1964). Salome must not be confused with ''Mary Salome'', one of the [[Three Marys]], a character often billed simply as "Salome" in many Jesus movies. | |||
==Performing Salome == | |||
==== The 17th, 18th and 19th centuries ==== | |||
Salome has been a singing character in oratorios since the 17th century. The first recorded interpreter of [[Salome]] is "Signora Helvertin," who sang the role at the Vienna premiere of [[Il Batista (1727 Caldara / Zeno), oratorio]]. | |||
It was Massenet who in 1881 made ''Salome'' a leading character also in the opera, interpreted by the most celebrated sopranos ([[Marthe Duvivier]] and [[Emma Calvé]] was the first interpreter of Massenet's ''Hérodiade). | |||
In 1895 [[Loie Fuller]] was the protagonist of the first solo performance on Salome (The inspiration was still the "biblical", innocent Salome). But everything would rapidly change in 1896 after [[Lina Munte]] offered the first portrait of Salome as femme fatales in the premiere of Wilde's play | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
! 1850s !! Salome !! Opera !! Notes | |||
|- | |||
| [[1881]] || [[Marthe Duvivier]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1881 Massenet / Dupont), Brussels premiere (opera)]] || Music -- Premiere of the Massenet opera in Brussels, Belgium. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1882]] || [[Medea Borelli]] (singer) || [[Erodiade, Italian ed. (Herodias / 1882 @1881 Massenet / Faccio), Milan production (opera)]] || Music -- Milan (and Italian) premiere of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1884]] || [[Fidès Devriès]] (singer) || [[Erodiade, Italian ed. (Herodias / 1884 @1881 Massenet / Gialdini), Paris production (opera)]] || Music -- Premiere of the revised version of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1886]] || [[Elisa Frandin]] (singer) || [[Erodiade, Italian ed. (Herodias / 1886 @1881 Massenet / Mascheroni), Bologna production (opera)]] || Music -- Italian premiere of the revised version of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1892]] || [[Marthe Duvivier]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1892 @ 1881 Massenet), New Orleans production (opera)]] || Music -- American premiere of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1895]] || [[Loie Fuller]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1895 Sylvestre, Pierné, Fuller), ballet]] || Dance -- Premiere of the Sylvestre ballet. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1896]]||[[Lina Munte]] (actress)||[[Salomé (1896 @1893 Wilde / Lugné-Poe), Paris premiere (play)]]||Theatre -- Premiere in Paris of the Wilde play at the Comédie-Parisienne on 11 February, 1896. | |||
|} | |||
==== The 1900s ==== | |||
[[Emma Calvé]] was the most celebrated Salome in Massenet's opera at the turn of the century, but the "Salomanie" exploded with actresses such as [[Gertrud Eysoldt]] and [[Tilla Durieux]] who were protagonists of the famous Berlin production of Wilde's play directed by Max Reinhardt. The premiere of Strauss's opera in 1905 made Salome an overnight sensation, as a singer and a dancer. If the protagonist of the premiere [[Marie Wittich]] and many of the first interpreters were still unable or unwilling to dance, the professional dancers who substituted them on the stage for the [[Dance of the Seven Veils]] became no less famous. They inspired other dancers to create a solo performances which shocked the audience for their audacity. | |||
With the scandalous 1907 premiere at the Metropolitan the Salomania conquered the United States as well. The Dance of the Seven Veils became a routine in vaudeville and in movies. The success prompted famous actresses [[Florence Lawrence]], [[Stacia Napierkowska]]) and singers ([[Mary Garden]]) to specialize as dancers as well. In 1908 French composer Mariotte produced a new version of the Salome story and [[Lina Cavalieri]] revived the success of Massenet's opera with its 1909 premiere in the United States. | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1900s!!Salome!!Cinema!!Country | |||
|- | |||
|[[1902]]||[[Gertrud Eysoldt]] (actress) <br/> [[Tilla Durieux]] (actress) ||[[Salome (1902 @1893 Wilde / Reinhardt), Berlin production (play)]] || Theatre -- Berlin premiere of the Wilde play. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1903]] || [[Emma Calvé]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1903 @1881 Massenet / Luigini), Paris production (opera)]] || Music -- Paris premiere of the revised version in French of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1904]] || [[Emma Calvé]] (singer) || [[Salomé = Hérodiade (Herodias / 1904 @1881 Massenet / Lohse), London production (opera)]] || Music -- London premiere of the revised version of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1905]] || [[Marie Wittich]] (singer) || [[Salome (1905 Schuch, Wittich / @1905 Strauss), Dresden production, world premiere (opera)]] || Music -- Dresden premiere (9 December 1905) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1906]] || [[Fanchette Verhunk]] (singer) || [[Salome (1906 Prüwer, Verhunk / @1905 Strauss), Breslau production (opera)]] || Music -- Breslau premiere (1906) and Vienna premiere (15 May 1907) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1906]] || [[Jenny Korb]] (singer) || [[Salome (1906 Strauss, Korb / @1905 Strauss), Graz production (opera)]] || Music -- Graz premiere (16 May 1906) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1906]] || [[Paula Doenges]] (singer) || [[Salome (1906 Hagel, Doenges / @1905 Strauss), Leipzig production (opera)]] || Music -- Leipzig premiere (25 May 1906) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1906]] || [[Alice Guszalewicz]] (singer) || [[Salome (1906 Strauss, Guszalewicz / @1905 Strauss), Cologne production (opera)]] || Music -- Cologne premiere of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1906]] || [[Adorée Villany]] (dancer) || [[Tanz der Salome (Salome's Dance / 1906 Messter), short film]] || Cinema -- Short film, Germany | |||
|- | |||
|[[1906]] || [[Maud Allan]] (dancer) || [[The Vision of Salome (1906 Allan), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance (2 Dec 1906) | |||
|- | |||
| [[1906]] || [[Emmy Destinn]] (singer) || [[Salome (1906 Strauss, Destinn / @1905 Strauss), Berlin production (opera)]] || Music -- Berlin premiere (5 December 1906) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1906]] || [[Gemma Bellincioni]] (singer) || [[Salomè, Italian ed. (Salome / 1906 Strauss, Bellincioni / @1905 Strauss), Turin production (opera)]] || Music -- Turin premiere (23 December 1906) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1906]] || [[Solomiya Krushelnytska]] (singer) || [[Salomè, Italian ed. (Salome / 1906 Toscanini, Krushelnytska / @1905 Strauss), Milan production (opera)]] || Music -- Milan premiere (26 December 1906) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1907]] || [[Olive Fremstad]] (singer) <br/> [[Bianca Froelich]] (dancer)|| [[Salome (1907 Hertz, Fremstad / @1905 Strauss), New York (Met) premiere]] || Music -- New York premiere (22 January 1907) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1907]] || [[Bianca Froelich]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1907 Froelich), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1907]] || <unknown> || [[Salome (1907 Lubin), short film]] || Cinema -- Short film (USA, February 1907) | |||
|- | |||
| [[1907]] || ??? || [[Salomé, French ed. (1907 / @1905 Strauss), Brussels production (opera)]] || Music -- Brussels (25 March 1907) & Paris (29 April 1907) premiere of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1907]] || [[Emmy Destinn]] (singer) <br/> [[Natalia Trouhanova]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1907 Strauss, Destinn / @1905 Strauss), Paris production (opera)]] || Music -- Paris premiere (8 May 1907) of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1907]] || [[Emmy Destinn]] (singer) || [[Salome (1907 Strauss, Destinn / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || Music -- Recording of excerpts of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1907]] || <unknown> || [[If You Had a Wife Like This (1907 Biograph), short film]] || Cinema - Short film (USA, 23 May 1907). | |||
|- | |||
| [[1907]] || <unknown> || [[Salome (1907 Gaumont), short film]] || Cinema -- Short film (UK, June 1907) | |||
|- | |||
|[[1907]] || [[Mdlle. Dazie]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1907 Dazie), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1907]] || [[Loie Fuller]] (dancer) || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1907 Schmitt / Fuller), Paris premiere (ballet)]] || Dance -- Paris premiere of the Schmitt ballet. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1908]] || [[Florence Lawrence]] (actress & dancer) || [[Salome; or, The Dance of Seven Veils (1908 Blackton), short film]] || Cinema -- Short film, USA | |||
|- | |||
|[[1908]] || [[Gertrude Hoffmann]] (dancer) || [[A Vision of Salome (1908 Hoffmann), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance | |||
|- | |||
| [[1908]] || [[Stacia Napierkowska]] (actress & dancer) || [[Salomé (1908 Capellani), short film]] || Cinema -- Short film, France | |||
|- | |||
|[[1908]] || [[Mlle. De Wailly]] (singer) || [[Salomé (1908 Mariotte / Wilde), opera]] || Music -- Premiere of the Mariotte opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1908]] || [[La Sylphe]] (dancer) || [[The Remorse of Salome (1908 La Sylphe), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1908]] || [[Vera Olcott]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1908 Olcott), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1908]] || [[Lotta Faust]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1908 Faust), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1908]] || [[Aida Overton Walker]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1908 Overton Walker), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1908]] || [[Eva Tanguay]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1908 Tanguay), solo dance]] || Dance -- Solo performance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1908]] || [[Ida Rubinstein]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1908 Fokine, Glazunov), ballet]] || Dance -- Mimed performance at St. Petersburg. Music: Glazunov Set & costumes: Bakst. A single private performance in which the dancer stripped nude in the course of the ''Dance of the Seven Veils''. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1909]] || [[Mary Garden]] (singer & dancer) || [[Salomé, French ed. (Salome / 1909 Garden / @1905 Strauss), New York (Manhattan) production]] || Music -- Manhattan Opera House production of the Strauss. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1909]] || [[Lina Cavalieri]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1909 Fuente / @1881 Massenet), New York production (opera)]] || Music -- New York premiere (Manhattan Opera House) of the Massenet opera. | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1910!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
| [[1910]] || [[Vittoria Lepanto]] (actress) || [[Salome (1910 Falena), short film]] || Italy || Cinema & Dance | |||
|- | |||
| [[1910]] || [[Maria Ventura]] (actress)|| [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1910 Jasset, Hatot), short film]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
| [[1910]] || [[Lucienne Bréval]] (singer) <br/> [[Natalia Trouhanova]] (dancer) || [[Salomé (1910 Amalou / @1908 Mariotte), Paris production (opera)]] || France || Music & Dance -- (April-May 1910). | |||
|- | |||
| [[1910]] || [[Mary Garden]] (singer) || [[Salomé, French ed. (1910 Messager, Garden / @1905 Strauss), Paris production (opera)]] || France || Music & Dance -- Opera (April 1910). The Paris premiere of the French version of the Strauss opera happened just a few weeks after the Paris premiere of Mariotte's Salome. Garden performed herself the ''Dance of the Seven Veils'' | |||
|- | |||
| [[1910]] || [[Aino Ackté]] (singer & dancer) || [[Salome (1910 Beecham, Ackté / @1905 Strauss), London production (opera)]] || England || Music -- London premiere of the Strauss opera | |||
|- | |||
| [[1911]] || [[Zina Brozia]] || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1911 Amalou / @1881 Massenet), Paris production (opera)]] || France || Music- Paris production of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1912]]||[[Suzanne De Labroy]] (actress) ||[[Erodiade (Herodias / 1912 Mentasti), short film]]||Italy || Cinema -- [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1887019/ Imdb] | |||
|- | |||
|[[1912]] || [[Mata Hari]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1912 Hari / @1905 Strauss), ballet]] || || Dance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1912]]||[[Natalia Trouhanova]] (dancer) || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1912 @1907 Schmitt / Guerra), Paris production (ballet)]] || France || Dance -- Schmitt revised the score for Natalia Trouhanova in 1912 which was choreographed by Nicholas Guerra. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1913]] || [[Tamara Karsarvina]] (dancer) || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1913 @1907 Schmitt / Romanov), Paris production (ballet)]]|| France || Dance -- In 1913 the Diaghilev’s company (Ballets Russes) staged a version with the choreography by Boris Romanov starring Tamara Karsarvina. Decor: Sergei Soudeikine. There was a later production by Serge Lifar. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1916]] || [[Stacia Napierkowska]] (actress & dancer) || [[La figlia d'Erodiade (The Daughter of Herodias / 1916 Falena), short film]] || Italy || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1917]] || [[Alisa Koonen]] (actress & dancer) || [[Salomé (1917 Mordkin, Gyutel), ballet]]|| Russia || Theatre? -- Production of the Wilde play. Kamerny Thatre, Moscow, 9 October 1917 - Music: Jules Gyutel -- Alisa Koonen (Salome), Ivan Arkadin (Herod Antipas), Nikolai Tseretelli (John the Baptist) | |||
|- | |||
|[[1918]]||[[Theda Bara]] (actress) || [[Salome (1918 Edwards), feature film]]|| || Cinema & Dance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1919]]||[[Pépa Bonafé]] (actress) ||[[Redenzione (1919 Gallone, Mateldi), film]] || Italy || [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0093710/ Imdb] | |||
|- | |||
|[[1919]]||[[Ida Rubinstein]] (dancer) || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1919 @1907 Schmitt / Guerra), Paris production (ballet)]] || France || Dance -- New choreography by [[Nicholas Guerra]]. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1919]]|| [[Lucienne Bréval]] (singer) <br/> [[Jeanne Delsaux]] (dancer) ||[[Salomé (1919 Ruhlmann / @1908 Mariotte), Paris production (opera)]]||France||Music & Dance -- Delsaux substituted the soprano in the ''Dance of the Seven Veils'' | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1920s!!Salome!!Cinema!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
| [[1920]] || [[]] || [[Salomé, vierge folle (Salome, Mad Virgin / 1920 Raphaël), opera]] || France || Music -- Premiere of the Raphaël opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1921]] || [[Fanny Heldy]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1921 Gaubert / @1881 Massenet), Paris production (opera)]] || France || Music -- Paris production (revival) of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1921]]|| [[Aleksandra Balashova]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1921 Gorsky / @1905 Strauss), ballet]] || Russia || Dance -- Moscow production (January 1921). Last ballet of Balashova (1887-1979) in Russia before leaving for America. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1922]]||[[Alla Nazimova]] (actress) || [[Salome (1922 Bryant), feature film]]|| || Cinema & Dance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1923]]||[[Diana Allen]] (actress)||[[Salome (1923 Strauss), film]]|| || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
| [[1924]] || [[Göta Ljungberg]] (singer) || [[Salome (1924 Coates, Ljungberg / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- First sound recording of the Strauss opera | |||
|- | |||
| [[1924]] || ??? || [[Salome (1924 / @1905 Strauss), Leningrad production (opera)]] || Russia || Music -- Russian premiere of the Strauss opera, 6 June 1924, State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre (Mariinsky Theatre), Leningrad | |||
|- | |||
| [[1924]] || ??? || [[Salome's Dance (1924 Goleizovsky / @1905 Strauss), ballet]] || Russia || Dance -- Kasyan Goleizovsky, choreography | |||
|- | |||
|[[1925]]||[[Gloria Swanson]] (actress)||[[Stage Struck (1925 Dwan), film]] - A young waitress dreams of being Salome on stage. || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1926]]||[[Stacia Napierkowska]] (actress)||[[Le berceau de dieu (The Cradle of God / 1926 Granville), feature film]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1928]]|| [[Olga Spessivtseva]] (dancer) || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1928 @1907 Schmitt), Paris production (ballet)]] || France || Dance -- Paris production | |||
|- | |||
| [[1928]] || [[Ninon Vallin]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1928 Cloëz / @1881 Massenet), sound recording (opera)]] || France || Music -- Paris production of the Massenet opera. | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
! 1930s !! Salome !! Work !! Country !! Notes | |||
|- | |||
| [[1933]] || [[Ruth Sorel]] (dancer) || [[Salome's Dance (1933 Sorel), ballet]] || || Dance -- Ruth Sorel won the top prize in performance at Warsaw, Poland for her expressiveness in Salomé's Dance. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1934]] || [[Göta Ljungberg]] (singer) || [[Salome (1934 Bodanzky, Ljungberg / @1905 Strauss), New York production, sound recording (opera)]] || USA || Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1934]] || [[Joy Montaya]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1934 Horton, Montaya), ballet]] || USA || Dance -- First major version of Horton's ballet | |||
|- | |||
| [[1937]] || [[Bella Lewitzky]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1937 Horton, Lewitzky), ballet]] || USA || Dance -- Second major version of Horton's ballet | |||
|} | |||
==== 1940s==== | |||
Probably the most famous of all interpreters of Salome in the 1940s was the Bulgarian soprano [[Ljuba Welitsch]], who sang the part in the presence of composer [[Richard Strauss]] at a performance given to mark his 80th birthday in Vienna in 1944 and in numerous other occasions. | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1940s!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
| [[1942]] || [[Else Schulz]] (singer) || [[Salome (1942 Strauss, Schulz / @1905 Strauss), Vienna production, sound recording (opera)]] || Austria || Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1944]]|| ??? || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1944 @1907 Schmitt), Paris production (ballet)]] || France || Dance -- Paris production of the Schmitt ballet. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1944]]|| [[Martha Graham]] (dancer) || [[Hérodiade (Salome / 1944 Hindemith / Graham), ballet]] || USA || Dance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1945]]||[[Yvonne De Carlo]] (actress & dancer) ||[[Salome, Where She Danced (1945 Lamont), feature film]]|| USA || Cinema & Dance | |||
|- | |||
| [[1945]] || [[Lily Djanel]] (singer) || [[Salome (1945 Sébastian, Djanel / @1905 Strauss), San Francisco production, sound recording (opera)]] || USA || Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1946]]|| [[Olga Adabache]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1946 Lifar / @1905 Strauss), ballet]] || Monte Carlo || Dance | |||
|- | |||
| [[1947]] || [[Maria Cebotari]] (singer) || [[Salome (1947 Krauss, Cebotari / @1905 Strauss), London production, sound recording (opera)]] || England || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1948]] || [[Christel Goltz]] (singer) || [[Salome (1948 Keilberth, Goltz / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1948]] || [[Lilly Djanel]] (singer) || [[Salome (1948 Perlea, Djanel / @1905 Strauss), Florence production (opera)]] || Italy || Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1949]] || [[Ljuba Welitsch]] (singer) || [[Salome (1949 Reiner, Welitsch / @1905 Strauss), New York production, sound recording (opera)]] || USA || Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1949]] || [[Ljuba Welitsch]] (singer) || [[Salome, English ed. (1949 Rankl, Welitsch / @1905 Strauss), London production (opera)]] || UK || Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1949]] || [[Maria Callas]] (singer) || [[San Giovanni Battista (St. John the Baptist / 1949 Santini / @1675 Stradella), Perugia production (oratorio)]] || Italy || Music -- Production of the Stradella oratorio. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1949]]||[[Celia Franca]] (dancer) ||[[The Dance of Salome (1949 Franca / Hartley), TV film (ballet)]]|| || Cinema & Dance [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celia_Franca Wiki] [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1433057/ Imdb] | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1950s!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[1950]]||[[Gloria Swanson]] (actress) ||[[Sunset Blvd. (1950 Wilder), feature film]] - A faded silent movie star dreams of making a triumphal return to the screen as Salome || USA || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1951]]||[[Eugenia Paul]] (actress) || [[The Living Christ Series (1951 Coyle), film series]] || USA || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
| [[1953]] || [[Carmen de Lavallade]] (dancer) || [[Salome; or, The Face of Violence (1953 Horton, Lavallade), ballet]] || USA || Dance -- Third major version of Horton's ballet | |||
|- | |||
|[[1953]]||[[Rita Hayworth]] (actress & dancer)||[[Salome (1953 Dieterle), feature film]]|| USA || Cinema & Dance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1954]]|| [[Lycette Darsonval]] (dancer) || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1954 @1907 Schmitt / Aveline), Paris production (ballet)]] || Frence || Dance -- Paris production of the Schmitt ballet. | |||
|- | |||
| [[1955]] || [[Lelia Goldoni]] (dancer) || [[Miss Salome (1955 Truitte / @1953 Horton), ballet]] || USA || Dance -- Revival of Horton's ballet | |||
|- | |||
| [[1955]] || [[Eartha Kitt]] (actress & dancer) || [[Omnibus: Salome (1955 / @1893 Wilde), TV production (play)]] || || Cinema & Theatre -- TV production of the Wilde play. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1956]]||[[Maria Fernanda]] (actress) || [[Salomé, Portuguese ed. (1956 Filho, Gallon / @1893 Wilde), TV production (play)]] || Brazil || Cinema & Theatre -- TV production of the Wilde play. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1957]]||[[Helga Pilarczyk]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1957 @1905 Strauss / Goehr), TV production (opera)]]|| || Cinema & Music -- TV production of the Strauss opera; see [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helga_Pilarczyk Wiki] [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3936169/ Imdb] | |||
|- | |||
|[[1957]]||[[Helga Pilarczyk]] (singer) || [[Salome (1957 Goehr, Pilarczyk / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1960s!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[1960]]||[[Inge Borkh]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1960 Kempe, Borkh / @1905 Strauss), Munich production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1961]]||[[Brigid Bazlen]] (actress)||[[King of Kings (1961 Ray), feature film]] - Based on the [[Gospel of Mark]] and the [[Gospel of Matthew]] || United States || Cinema & Dance -- Based on the [[Gospel of Mark]] and the [[Gospel of Matthew]]. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1961]]||[[Michèle Le Bris]] (singer) ||[[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1961 Etcheverry / @1881 Massenet), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1961]]||[[Margaret Tynes]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1961 Schippers, Tynes / @1905 Strauss), Spoleto production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1961]]||[[Birgit Nilsson]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1961 Solti, Nilsson / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1963]]||[[Suzanne Sarroca]] (singer) ||[[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1963 Dervaux / @1881 Massenet), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1963]]||[[Régine Crespin]] (singer) ||[[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1963 Lombard / @1881 Massenet), New York production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1963]]||[[Régine Crespin]] (singer) ||[[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1963 Prêtre / @1881 Massenet), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1963]]||[[Christel Goltz]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1963 Suitner, Goltz / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1964]]||[[Paola Tedesco]] (child actress)||[[Il vangelo secondo Matteo (The Gospel According to St. Matthew / 1964 Pasolini), feature film]] - Based on the [[Gospel of Matthew]] || Italy || Cinema -- Based on the [[Gospel of Matthew]]. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1965]]||[[Birgit Nilsson]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1965 Böhm, Nilsson / @1905 Strauss), New York production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1965]]||[[Felicia Weathers]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1965 Keilberth, Weathers / @1905 Strauss), Munich production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1965]]||[[Anja Silja]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1965 Kosler, Silja / @1905 Strauss), Vienna production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1965]]||[[Birgit Nilsson]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1965 Sébastian, Nilsson / @1905 Strauss), Buenos Aires production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1965]]||[[Helga Pilarczyk]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1965 Varviso, Pilarczyk / @1905 Strauss), Philadelphia production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1967]]||[[Birgit Nilsson]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1967 Klobucar, Nilsson / @1905 Strauss), Milan production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1967]]||[[Anja Silja]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1967 Sebastian, Silja / @1905 Strauss), Geneva production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1968]]||[[Anja Silja]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1968 Krombholc, Silja / @1905 Strauss), Amsterdam production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1968]]||[[Montserrat Caballé]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1968 Leinsdorf, Caballé / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1969]]||[[Paula Bukovac]] (singer) ||[[Salome (1969 Wallberg, Bukovac / @1905 Strauss), Venice production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1969]]||[[Ludmilla Tchérina]] (dancer)||[[Salomé (1969 Koralnik / @1893 Wilde), TV production (play)]] || France || Cinema, Theatre & Dance -- Filmization of the 1893 Wilde play. Choreographed by [[Maurice Béjart]]. Produced and broadcast in France (9 May 1969). | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1970s!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[1971]]||[[Mascha Rabben]] (actress)||[[Salome, German ed. (1971 Schroeter / @1893 Wilde), TV production (play)]]|| West Germany (11 June 1971) || Cinema & Theatre -- Production of the Wilde play. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1971]] || [[Leonie Rysanek]] (singer) || [[Salome (1971 Leitner, Rysanek / @1905 Strauss), Munich production, sound recording (opera)]] || Germany || Music - Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1971]] || [[Montserrat Caballé]] (singer) || [[Salome (1971 Mehta, Caballé / @1905 Strauss), Orange production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music - Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1972]] || [[Leonie Rysanek]] (singer) || [[Salome (1972 Böhm, Rysanek / @1905 Strauss), New York production, sound recording (opera)]] || USA || Music - Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1972]] || [[Leonie Rysanek]] (singer) || [[Salome (1972 Böhm, Rysanek / @1905 Strauss), Vienna production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music - Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1972]]||[[Donyale Luna]] (actress)||[[Salomé (1972 Bene), film]]|| Italy || Cinema -- Freely inspired by the 1893 Wilde play. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1973]]||[[Anne Taylor]] (actress) ||[[Salome (1973 Barker), short film]]|| UK || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
| [[1973]] || [[Karen Kuertz]] (dancer) || [[Salome; or, The Face of Violence (1973 Truitte / @1953 Horton), ballet]] || || Dance -- The Second revival of Horton's ballet was performed several times between 1972 and 1979. [[Karen Kuertz]], [[Coleen Giesting]] and [[Diane Edwards]] alternated in the role of Salome. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1973]]||[[Carla Fracci]] (dancer) || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1973 @1907 Schmitt / Gai), Florence production (ballet)]] || Italy || Dance -- Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. New choreography by [[Loris Gai]]. Bruce Marks ([[Herod Antipas]]), [[Sallie Wilson]] ([[Herodias]]), [[Carla Fracci]] (Salome), Francois Klaus ([[John the Baptist]]). 19, 21, 22, 23 June 1973 (4 performances) [[Edoardo Muller]], conductor | |||
|- | |||
|[[1974]]||[[Teresa Stratas]] (singer)||[[Salome (1974 Böhm, Stratas / Friedrich / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]|| || Music - Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1974]] || [[Leonie Rysanek]] (singer) || [[Salome (1974 Kempe, Rysanek / @1905 Strauss), Orange production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music - Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1974]] || [[Muriel de Channes]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1974 Lloyd-Jones / @1881 Massenet), sound recording (opera)]] || || Music - Recording of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1975]]||[[Cosetta Pichetti]] (actress) || [[(+) Il Messia (The Messiah / 1975 Rossellini), film]] || Italy || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1975]] || [[Marisa Galvany]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1975 Andersson / @1881 Massenet), New Orleans production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music - Recording of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1977]]||[[Núria Espert]] (actress) || [[Salomé (1977 @1893 Wilde / Schaaff), TV film (play)]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1977]]||[[Isabel Mestres]] (actress) || [[(++) Gesù di Nazareth / Jesus of Nazareth (1977 Zeffirelli), TV mini-series]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1977]] || [[Lindsay Kemp]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1977 Kemp), ballet]] || England || Dance -- Lindsay Kemp Company, Roundhouse, London, 21 February 1977 -- All-male performance -- Lindsay Kemp (Salome), Vladek Sheybal (Herod Antipas), The Incredible Orlando (Herodias), David Haughton (John the Baptist) | |||
|- | |||
|[[1977]] || [[Hildegard Behrens]] (singer) || [[Salome (1977 Karajan, Behrens / @1905 Strauss), Salzburg production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music - Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1977]] || [[]] || [[Salome, Daughter of Herodias (1977 Sams / Janer), opera]] || || Music | |||
|- | |||
|[[1977]] || [[Eilene Hannan]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1977 Stapleton / @1881 Massenet), Wexford production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music - Recording of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1978]]||[[Isabel Mestres]] (actress) || [[Salomé (Salome / 1978 Almodóvar), short film]] || Spain || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1978]]||[[Jana Cilliers]] (actress) || [[Salome, English ed. (1978 Faure / @1893 Wilde), TV production (play)]] || South Africa || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1978]] || [[Vivi Flindt]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1978 Davies / Flindt), ballet]] || || Dance | |||
|- | |||
|[[1979]]||[[Montserrat Caballé]] (singer)||[[Salome (1979 Rudel, Caballé / @1905 Strauss), Madrid production, video recording (opera)]] || Spain || Cinema & Music - Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1980s!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[1980]]||[[Martha Arlette]] (actress) || [[La vida de nuestro señor Jesucristo (The Life of Jesus Christ / 1980 Zacarías), TV film]] || || Cinema -- Jesus film. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1983]] || [[Patrick Dupont]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1983 Bejart / Drigo), ballet]] || || Dance -- First produced in Geneva by [[Maurice Bejart]] (1983), with recorded music by Riccardo Drigo. Salome here a male dancer, Patrick Dupont, who performs a solo in an imposing gown, unequivocally linking the character to transvestitism. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1984]]||[[Montserrat Caballé]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1984 @1881 Massenet / Delacôte), Barcelona production, video recording (opera)]] || || Cinema & Music -- Production of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1986]]||[[Jo Champa]] (actress) || [[Salome (1986 D'Anna), film]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1986]] || [[Holly Irwin]] (dancer) || [[Salome (1986 Cratty / MacDermot), ballet]] || || Dance -- [[Bill Cratty]] (chor.) and [[Galt MacDermot]] (mus.). Mr. Cratty's bizarre new version of the biblical tale took place in the roaring 20's and, as portrayed by Holly Irwin, Salome was no temptress but an innocent girl who adored her father (Richard Cravens), hated her vain stepmother (Mary Gambardella) and was kind to a beggar (Mr. Cratty). | |||
|- | |||
|[[1987]]||[[Rita Capobianco]] (actress) || [[Secondo Ponzio Pilato (According to Pontius Pilate / 1987 Magni), feature film]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[1987]]|| [[Leona Mitchell]] (singer) || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1987 Prêtre / @1881 Massenet), Nice production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music -- Recording of the Massenet opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1988]]||[[Imogen Millais-Scott]] (actress) || [[(+) Salome’s Last Dance (1988 Russell), feature film]] || || Cinema | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1990s!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[1991]] || [[Catherine Malfitano]] (singer & dancer) || [[Salome (1991 Sinopoli, Malfitano / Weigl, Large / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]] || || Cinema, Music & Dance -- Video Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1992]]|| [[Maria Ewing]] (singer & dancer) || [[Salome (1992 Downes, Ewing / Bailey / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]] || || Cinema, Music & Dance -- Video Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1995]]||[[Myriam Cyr]] || [[Salome (1995 Berkoff / @1893 Wilde), video recording (play)]] || || Cinema & Theatre -- Video Recording of the Wilde play. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1997]]||[[Catherine Malfitano]] (singer & dancer) || [[Salome (1997 Dohnányi, Malfitano / Bondy, Hulscher / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]] || || Cinema, Music & Dance -- Video Recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[1999]]||[[Gabriella Pession]] || [[Jesus (1999 Young), TV mini-series]] || USA || Cinema -- Jesus film | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!1990s!! Salome !!Opera!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[1990]] || [[Jessye Norman]] || [[Salome (1990 Ozawa, Norman / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1990]] || [[Cheryl Studer]] || [[Salome (1990 Sinopoli, Studer / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1991]] || [[Catherine Malfitano]] || [[Salome (1991 Sinopoli, Malfitano / Weigl, Large / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1991]] || [[Karen Huffstodt]] || [[Salome, French ed. (1991 Nagano, Huffstodt / @1905 Strauss), sound recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1992]] || [[Maria Ewing]] || [[Salome (1992 Downes, Ewing / Bailey / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1994]] || [[Renée Fleming]] || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1994 Gergiev / @1881 Massenet), San Francisco production, sound recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1994]] || [[Cheryl Studer]] || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1994 Plasson / @1881 Massenet), Toulouse production, sound recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1995]] || [[Renée Fleming]] || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1995 Queler / @1881 Massenet), New York production, sound recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1995]] || [[Nancy Gustafson]] || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 1995 Viotti / @1881 Massenet), Vienna production, sound recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[1997]] || [[Catherine Malfitano]] || [[Salome (1997 Dohnányi, Malfitano / Bondy, Hulscher / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!2000s!! Salome !!Opera!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[2001]] || [[Alexia Cousin]] || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 2001 Fournillier / @1881 Massenet), Saint-Étienne production, video recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[2002]] || [[Barbara Haveman]] || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 2002 Lacombe / @1881 Massenet), Liege production, sound recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[2005]] || [[Kate Aldrich]] || [[Salomé (2005 Layer / @1908 Mariotte), Montpellier production, sound recording (opera)]] || || [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kate_Aldrich Wiki]] | |||
|- | |||
|[[2008]] || [[Nadja Michael]] || [[Salome (2008 Jordan, Michael / McVicar / @1905 Strauss), London production, video recording (opera)]] || [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadja_Michael Wiki.en] | |||
|- | |||
|[[2008]]||[[Karita Mattila]] ||[[Salome (2008 Summers, Mattila / Sweete / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]], , by [[Richard Strauss]] (mus.) || [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karita_Mattila Wiki.en] | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!2000s!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[2000]]||[[Ambra Angiolini]] || [[Gli amici di Gesù: Maria Maddalena (Close to Jesus: Mary Magdalene / 2000 Mertes), TV film]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[2001]]||[[Alexia Cousin]] || [[Hérodiade (Herodias / 2001 @1881 Massenet / Fournillier), Saint-Étienne production, video recording (opera)]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[2001]]||[[Dominique Vascquez]] || [[Salome (2001 Poitevin), short film]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[2002]]||[[Aída Gómez]] (dancer) || [[Salomé (Salome / 2002 Saura / Baños, Tomatito), film-ballet]] || Spain || Cinema & Dance -- Film | |||
|- | |||
|[[2004]]||[[Melissa Riker]] || [[Salome (2004 Bellware), short film]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[2005]]||[[María Adánez]] (actress & dancer) || [[Salome, Spanish ed. (2005 @1893 Wilde / Narros), Seville production (play)]] || Spain || Theatre & Dance -- Production of the Wilde play. | |||
|- | |||
|[[2005]]||[[Carolina Felline]] (actress)||[[Chiamami Salomé (Call Me Salome / 2005 Sestieri), feature film]]|| Italy || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[2007]]||[[Alexia Anastasio]] (actress) ||[[Salome (2007 Anastasio), short film]]|| United States || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[2007]]||[[Nadja Michael]] (singer)||[[Salome (2007 Harding, Michael / Bondy / @1905 Strauss), Milan production, sound & video recording (opera)]]|| || Cinema & Music | |||
|- | |||
|[[2008]]||[[Nadja Michael]] (singer)||[[Salome (2008 Jordan, Michael / McVicar / @1905 Strauss), London production, video recording (opera)]]|| England || Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[2008]]||[[Karita Mattila]] (singer & dancer) ||[[Salome (2008 Summers, Mattila / Sweete / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]|| || Cinema, Music & Dance -- Video recording of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[2009]]||[[Emily Gajek]] (actress) || [[Salome (2009 Quint), short film]]|| United States || Cinema | |||
|} | |||
==== ==== | |||
{| border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | |||
|- bgcolor=yellow | |||
!2010s!!Salome!!Film!!Country!!Notes | |||
|- | |||
|[[2010]]||[[Débora Melo]]||[[Salomé (Salome / 2010 Cabral), short film]]|| Brazil || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[2010]]||[[Amy Johnson]]? ||[[Cedar Rapids Opera Theatre Presents: Salome (2010 Johnson / @1905 Strauss), TV film (opera)]] || United States || Cinema & Music - Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[2010]]||[[Erika Sunnegårdh]]||[[Salome (2010 Luisotti, Sunnegårdh / Lavia, Bevilacqua / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]] || || Cinema & Music - Production of the Strauss opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[2011]]||[[Jessica Chastain]]||[[Wilde Salome (2011 Pacino), documentary]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[2012]]||[[Valentina Cervi]]||[[True Blood, season 5 (2012 Ball), TV series]] || || | |||
|- | |||
|[[2012]]||[[Angela Denoke]]||[[Salome (2012 Soltesz, Denoke / Lehnhoff / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]|| ||Cinema & Music - Production of the Strauss opera. Released as a DVD. | |||
|- | |||
|[[2013]]||[[Viktoria Brilyova]] (dancer) || [[La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 2013 @1907 Schmitt / Faski), St. Petersburg production (ballet)]] || Russia || Dance -- The Mariinsky Ballet’s production ([[Emil Faski]], chor.) of the Schmitt ballet premiered in Russia on 9 March 2013 at the XIII Ballet Festival MARIINSKY, followed by stagings outside the country, including May 28, 29, 30, 31, June 1, 2013 – Teatro Verdi Orchestra (Trieste); Alexei Repnikov, conductor | |||
|- | |||
|[[2013]]||[[Jessica Chastain]]||[[Salome (2013 Pacino), feature film]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[2014]]||[[Hayat Haigoune]]||[[The Gospel of John (2014 Batty), feature film]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[2014]]||[[Hayat Haigoune]]||[[The Gospel of Matthew (2014 Batty), feature film]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[2014]]||[[Anna Maria Thoma]] || [[Salomé (2014 Kovalik / @1908 Mariotte), Munich production, sound recording (opera)]] || || Music - Production of the Mariotte opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[2014]]||[[Na’ama Goldman]] || [[Salomé (2014 Angus / @1908 Mariotte), Wexford production (opera)]] || || Music - Production of the Mariotte opera. | |||
|- | |||
|[[2015]]||[[Hayat Haigoune]]||[[The Gospel of Mark (2015 Batty), feature film]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[2015]]||[[Stephanie Leonidas]]||[[Killing Jesus (2015 Menaul), TV mini-series]] || || Cinema | |||
|- | |||
|[[2016]]||[[Victoria Vera]] (actress & dancer) || [[Salome, Spanish ed. (2016 @1893 Wilde / Chávarri), Madrid production (play)]] || Spain || Theatre & Dance -- Production of the Wilde play. | |||
|} | |||
==Related categories== | ==Related categories== | ||
*[[ | |||
*[[ | *[[John the Baptist]] | ||
*[[Herod Antipas]] / [[Herodias]] | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salome Wikipedia] | *[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salome Wikipedia] | ||
Latest revision as of 06:44, 10 February 2021
Salome (1st century CE) was the daughter of Herodias and Herod II, and the step-daughter of Herod Antipas.
< Events : Death of John the Baptist >
< People : Herodias -- Herod Antipas -- John the Baptist >
< Scholarship : Salome (research) -- Salome (sources) >
< Salome (fiction) : Salome (art) -- Salome (cinema) -- Salome (dance) -- Salome (literature) -- -- Salome (music) -- Salome (theatre) >
- San Giovanni Battista (St. John the Baptist / 1675 Stradella / Ansaldi), oratorio
- Hérodiade (Herodias / 1881 Massenet / Milliet, Grémont), opera
- (++) Salomé (Salome / 1893 Wilde), play
- (++) Salome (1905 Strauss / Lachmann), opera
- Salomé (1908 Mariotte / Wilde), opera
- This page is edited by Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan
Overview
From the historical point of view, Salome is part of the scion of powerful and politically engaged women that characterized the House of Hasmoneus (and the House of Herod), from Queen Salome Alexandra to Alexandra the Hasmonean, Mariamne, Herodias, Berenice, Drusilla, and others.
Josephus introduces Salome as the daughter of Herod II and Herodias. Her paternal grandparents were Herod the Great and Mariamne II, while another son of Herod the Great, Aristobulus IV and his wife Berenice I were her maternal grandparents. She was thus related to both the House of Herod and the House of Hasmoneus.
After her mother's divorce and remarriage, Salome grew up as the step-daughter of her uncle Herod Antipas. Some legendary Christian accounts narrate of her involvement in the death of John the Baptist.
Still an adolescent, Salome was given as wife to her uncle Herod Philip, son of Herod the Great. A young widow, she remarried with Aristobulus of Chalcis, from whom she had three sons named Herod, Agrippa and Aristobulus (see Ant XVIII 136-137).
Nothing else is known about her life and death.
Research on Salome however is limited by the paucity of historical sources and the legendary nature of the Gospel account. Scholars have rather focused on the study of the Salome legend and its ramifications in literature and the arts.
= Salome
The story of Salome is recorded in Islamic sources, as well.
Salome, in fiction
The character of Salome has been subjected in fiction to a dramatic metamorphosis, from innocent child or indifferent teenager to powerful icon of morbid female seductiveness (and anti-Semitism). Salome is one of the most successful and recognizable characters from Second Temple Judaism in modern culture.
In medieval Christian iconography, Salome is portrayed as an innocent child, the passive instrument of her mother's revenge. By the 16th century, the character has matured into a teenager, now more indifferent than innocent to the drama in which she has been involved. The turning point is the second half of the 19th century when Salome is transformed into an Oriental beauty, fully self-conscious of her power of seduction. In the works of Oscar Wilde and Richard Strauss she becomes the epitome of the femme fatale, a sensual, morbid and sadistic character who destroys the men she loves.
- Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan
Salome, in ancient sources
The character of Salome is mentioned both in Josephus and in the Gospels of Mark and Matthew.
The Gospels of Mark and Matthew (which do not mention her name or any other incidents in her life) suggest her (involuntary) involvement in the death of John the Baptist. They tell us that as a girl she danced before her uncle (and now step-father) Herod Antipas. At the instigation of her mother Herodias, she requested and obtained the head of John the Baptist as her reward from the king.
Josephus (who does not mention Salome in his account of the death of John the Baptist), in a genealogical list of the descendants of Herod the Great, talks briefly of her life as the daughter of Herod II and Herodias, and the step-daughter of Herod Antipas after her mother's divorce and remarriage. Salome was given as wife to her uncle Herod Philip, son of Herod the Great. A young widow, she remarried with Aristobulus of Chalcis, from whom she had three sons named Herod, Agrippa and Aristobulus (see Ant XVIII 136-137).
The story of Salome and her involvement in the death of John the Baptist is repeated also in Islamic traditions.
Salome, in music
Salome first emerged as a "singing" character in the tradition of the oratorios since the end of the 17th century. The first oratorio to be recorded as having Salome among its characters is San Giovanni Battista (St. John the Baptist / 1675 Stradella / Ansaldi), oratorio. As in all "biblical oratorios," the protagonist is John the Baptist and the plot closely follows the biblical narrative.
Among the most celebrated oratorios dealing with the death of John the Baptist is also Il Batista (1727 Caldara / Zeno), oratorio, which premiered in Vienna in 1727. It is the first of which the name of the interpreter of Salome is recorded--"Signora Helvertin."
The season of the "biblical" oratorios ended with St John the Baptist (1873 Macfarren / Monk), oratorio. The transition to the opera came with Hérodiade (1881). In Jules Massenet's opera the character of Salome takes central stage and a life of her own but still preserves her "biblical" innocence. In the 1880s Hérodiade" was performed in Belgium, Italy, France, Germany and in 1892 reached New Orleans.
Everything changed in 1896 with the premiere in Paris of Salomé (Salome / 1893 Wilde), play. Salome lost her innocence and became the embodiment of the femme fatale who seduces and destroys her lovers. The "Salomania" spread in every corner of Europe and America.
Based on Wilde's play, Richard Strauss's Salome premiered in Dresden on 9 December 1905 (starring Marie Wittich in the title role). It was an immediate success. In 1906 the opera was performed in a dozen theaters, including Graz, Cologne, Berlin (starring Emmy Destinn), Turin, and Milan (under the direction of Arturo Toscanini). In spite of the composer's invitation to look at the opera as nothing more than "a scherzo with a fatal conclusion," many regarded it as a gruesome middlebrow entertainment. When the opera opened at the New York Metropolitan Opera on 22 January 1907, accusations of vulgarity and indecency led to the cancellation of the show and the opera would not be performed again at the Met until 1934. In Austria, Russia and other countries the opera was banned even before being performed.
And yet, Strauss's Salome was an unstoppable success. In March 1907 the French version of the opera premiered in Brussels, of which a scaled-down rendition was also given in Paris a few days before the German version opened there at the Théâtre du Châtelet on 8 May 1907 under the direction of the composer. Aino Ackté played Salome in the 1907 Leipzig premiere as well as in the 1910 London premiere. In spite of the Met's boycott, the Salomania hit New York again at the Manhattan Opera House in 1909 with Mary Garden.
Among the early interpreters of Strauss's Salome are Göta Ljungberg, Maria Jeritza, Maria Cebotari, and Christle Goltz, Probably the most famous of all was the Bulgarian soprano Ljuba Welitsch, who sang it in the presence of the composer at a performance given to mark his 80th birthday in Vienna in 1944.
Strauss's Salome is regularly staged in the major opera theaters and is now available also in numerous sound and video recordings, featuring interpreters such as Birgitt Nilsson, Leonie Rysanek, Hildegard Behrens, Montserrat Caballé, Josephine Barstow, Catherine Malfitano, Maria Ewing, Nadja Michael, Karita Mattila and Angela Denoke.
Although overshadowed by Strauss's Salome, Massenet's Hérodiade has not ceased to be performed and recorded, offering the soprano the intriguing possibility to play the same role in two different operas.
@2017 Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan
External links
Salome, in dance
- See Salome's Dance
Salome, in cinema
Salome is a marginal character in ancient sources (to the extent of being unnamed in the Gospel narratives). In fiction, however, she took a life of her own, gradually becoming the protagonist of the events related to the Death of John the Baptist. When the new art of cinematography started, the "Salomania" was at its peak after the 1893 play by Oscar Wilde and the 1905 opera by Richard Strauss. Salome entered the movies not as a marginal presence but as the protagonist of a long series of films that offered the most famous actresses (and dancers) a vehicle to show their charm and power of seduction.
Sound cinema has had less to offer. The most ambitious attempt at building an original series of events around Salome was made in 1953 with the epic Salome with Rita Hayworth. Most of the Salome movies are video-recordings of the Wilde or Strauss work.
Salome is conspicuously absent in the major Jesus movies with a few exceptions, notably, King of Kings (1961), Il vangelo secondo Matteo (1964). Salome must not be confused with Mary Salome, one of the Three Marys, a character often billed simply as "Salome" in many Jesus movies.
Performing Salome
The 17th, 18th and 19th centuries
Salome has been a singing character in oratorios since the 17th century. The first recorded interpreter of Salome is "Signora Helvertin," who sang the role at the Vienna premiere of Il Batista (1727 Caldara / Zeno), oratorio.
It was Massenet who in 1881 made Salome a leading character also in the opera, interpreted by the most celebrated sopranos (Marthe Duvivier and Emma Calvé was the first interpreter of Massenet's Hérodiade).
In 1895 Loie Fuller was the protagonist of the first solo performance on Salome (The inspiration was still the "biblical", innocent Salome). But everything would rapidly change in 1896 after Lina Munte offered the first portrait of Salome as femme fatales in the premiere of Wilde's play
The 1900s
Emma Calvé was the most celebrated Salome in Massenet's opera at the turn of the century, but the "Salomanie" exploded with actresses such as Gertrud Eysoldt and Tilla Durieux who were protagonists of the famous Berlin production of Wilde's play directed by Max Reinhardt. The premiere of Strauss's opera in 1905 made Salome an overnight sensation, as a singer and a dancer. If the protagonist of the premiere Marie Wittich and many of the first interpreters were still unable or unwilling to dance, the professional dancers who substituted them on the stage for the Dance of the Seven Veils became no less famous. They inspired other dancers to create a solo performances which shocked the audience for their audacity.
With the scandalous 1907 premiere at the Metropolitan the Salomania conquered the United States as well. The Dance of the Seven Veils became a routine in vaudeville and in movies. The success prompted famous actresses Florence Lawrence, Stacia Napierkowska) and singers (Mary Garden) to specialize as dancers as well. In 1908 French composer Mariotte produced a new version of the Salome story and Lina Cavalieri revived the success of Massenet's opera with its 1909 premiere in the United States.
1910 | Salome | Film | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1910 | Vittoria Lepanto (actress) | Salome (1910 Falena), short film | Italy | Cinema & Dance |
1910 | Maria Ventura (actress) | Hérodiade (Herodias / 1910 Jasset, Hatot), short film | Cinema | |
1910 | Lucienne Bréval (singer) Natalia Trouhanova (dancer) |
Salomé (1910 Amalou / @1908 Mariotte), Paris production (opera) | France | Music & Dance -- (April-May 1910). |
1910 | Mary Garden (singer) | Salomé, French ed. (1910 Messager, Garden / @1905 Strauss), Paris production (opera) | France | Music & Dance -- Opera (April 1910). The Paris premiere of the French version of the Strauss opera happened just a few weeks after the Paris premiere of Mariotte's Salome. Garden performed herself the Dance of the Seven Veils |
1910 | Aino Ackté (singer & dancer) | Salome (1910 Beecham, Ackté / @1905 Strauss), London production (opera) | England | Music -- London premiere of the Strauss opera |
1911 | Zina Brozia | Hérodiade (Herodias / 1911 Amalou / @1881 Massenet), Paris production (opera) | France | Music- Paris production of the Massenet opera. |
1912 | Suzanne De Labroy (actress) | Erodiade (Herodias / 1912 Mentasti), short film | Italy | Cinema -- Imdb |
1912 | Mata Hari (dancer) | Salome's Dance (1912 Hari / @1905 Strauss), ballet | Dance | |
1912 | Natalia Trouhanova (dancer) | La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1912 @1907 Schmitt / Guerra), Paris production (ballet) | France | Dance -- Schmitt revised the score for Natalia Trouhanova in 1912 which was choreographed by Nicholas Guerra. |
1913 | Tamara Karsarvina (dancer) | La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1913 @1907 Schmitt / Romanov), Paris production (ballet) | France | Dance -- In 1913 the Diaghilev’s company (Ballets Russes) staged a version with the choreography by Boris Romanov starring Tamara Karsarvina. Decor: Sergei Soudeikine. There was a later production by Serge Lifar. |
1916 | Stacia Napierkowska (actress & dancer) | La figlia d'Erodiade (The Daughter of Herodias / 1916 Falena), short film | Italy | Cinema |
1917 | Alisa Koonen (actress & dancer) | Salomé (1917 Mordkin, Gyutel), ballet | Russia | Theatre? -- Production of the Wilde play. Kamerny Thatre, Moscow, 9 October 1917 - Music: Jules Gyutel -- Alisa Koonen (Salome), Ivan Arkadin (Herod Antipas), Nikolai Tseretelli (John the Baptist) |
1918 | Theda Bara (actress) | Salome (1918 Edwards), feature film | Cinema & Dance | |
1919 | Pépa Bonafé (actress) | Redenzione (1919 Gallone, Mateldi), film | Italy | Imdb |
1919 | Ida Rubinstein (dancer) | La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1919 @1907 Schmitt / Guerra), Paris production (ballet) | France | Dance -- New choreography by Nicholas Guerra. |
1919 | Lucienne Bréval (singer) Jeanne Delsaux (dancer) |
Salomé (1919 Ruhlmann / @1908 Mariotte), Paris production (opera) | France | Music & Dance -- Delsaux substituted the soprano in the Dance of the Seven Veils |
1930s | Salome | Work | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1933 | Ruth Sorel (dancer) | Salome's Dance (1933 Sorel), ballet | Dance -- Ruth Sorel won the top prize in performance at Warsaw, Poland for her expressiveness in Salomé's Dance. | |
1934 | Göta Ljungberg (singer) | Salome (1934 Bodanzky, Ljungberg / @1905 Strauss), New York production, sound recording (opera) | USA | Music -- Production of the Strauss opera. |
1934 | Joy Montaya (dancer) | Salome (1934 Horton, Montaya), ballet | USA | Dance -- First major version of Horton's ballet |
1937 | Bella Lewitzky (dancer) | Salome (1937 Horton, Lewitzky), ballet | USA | Dance -- Second major version of Horton's ballet |
1940s
Probably the most famous of all interpreters of Salome in the 1940s was the Bulgarian soprano Ljuba Welitsch, who sang the part in the presence of composer Richard Strauss at a performance given to mark his 80th birthday in Vienna in 1944 and in numerous other occasions.
1980s | Salome | Film | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1980 | Martha Arlette (actress) | La vida de nuestro señor Jesucristo (The Life of Jesus Christ / 1980 Zacarías), TV film | Cinema -- Jesus film. | |
1983 | Patrick Dupont (dancer) | Salome (1983 Bejart / Drigo), ballet | Dance -- First produced in Geneva by Maurice Bejart (1983), with recorded music by Riccardo Drigo. Salome here a male dancer, Patrick Dupont, who performs a solo in an imposing gown, unequivocally linking the character to transvestitism. | |
1984 | Montserrat Caballé (singer) | Hérodiade (Herodias / 1984 @1881 Massenet / Delacôte), Barcelona production, video recording (opera) | Cinema & Music -- Production of the Massenet opera. | |
1986 | Jo Champa (actress) | Salome (1986 D'Anna), film | Cinema | |
1986 | Holly Irwin (dancer) | Salome (1986 Cratty / MacDermot), ballet | Dance -- Bill Cratty (chor.) and Galt MacDermot (mus.). Mr. Cratty's bizarre new version of the biblical tale took place in the roaring 20's and, as portrayed by Holly Irwin, Salome was no temptress but an innocent girl who adored her father (Richard Cravens), hated her vain stepmother (Mary Gambardella) and was kind to a beggar (Mr. Cratty). | |
1987 | Rita Capobianco (actress) | Secondo Ponzio Pilato (According to Pontius Pilate / 1987 Magni), feature film | Cinema | |
1987 | Leona Mitchell (singer) | Hérodiade (Herodias / 1987 Prêtre / @1881 Massenet), Nice production, sound recording (opera) | Music -- Recording of the Massenet opera. | |
1988 | Imogen Millais-Scott (actress) | (+) Salome’s Last Dance (1988 Russell), feature film | Cinema |
1990s | Salome | Film | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1991 | Catherine Malfitano (singer & dancer) | Salome (1991 Sinopoli, Malfitano / Weigl, Large / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera) | Cinema, Music & Dance -- Video Recording of the Strauss opera. | |
1992 | Maria Ewing (singer & dancer) | Salome (1992 Downes, Ewing / Bailey / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera) | Cinema, Music & Dance -- Video Recording of the Strauss opera. | |
1995 | Myriam Cyr | Salome (1995 Berkoff / @1893 Wilde), video recording (play) | Cinema & Theatre -- Video Recording of the Wilde play. | |
1997 | Catherine Malfitano (singer & dancer) | Salome (1997 Dohnányi, Malfitano / Bondy, Hulscher / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera) | Cinema, Music & Dance -- Video Recording of the Strauss opera. | |
1999 | Gabriella Pession | Jesus (1999 Young), TV mini-series | USA | Cinema -- Jesus film |
Related categories
External links
Pages in category "Salome (subject)"
The following 72 pages are in this category, out of 72 total.
1
- The Daughter of Herodias (1831 Rich), play
- Salome, the Daughter of Herodias (1862 Heywood), play
- Salome (1867 Heywood), play
- Hérodiade (Salome / 1887 Mallarmé), poetry
- A rebours (Against Nature / 1884 Huysmans), novel
- (++) Salomé (Salome / 1893 Wilde), play
- Salome (1895 Sylvestre, Pierné, Fuller), ballet
- Salome/Judith (1895 Mackennal), art
- Σαλώμη (Salome / 1896 Cavafy), poetry
- Salome (1905 Hadley), music
- (++) Salome (1905 Strauss / Lachmann), opera
- The Vision of Salome (1906 Allan), solo dance
- Tanz der Salome (Salome's Dance / 1906 Messter), short film
- If You Had a Wife Like This (1907 Biograph), short film
- Salome's Dance (1907 Dazie), solo dance
- Salome's Dance (1907 Froelich), solo dance
- Salome (1907 Gaumont), short film
- Salome (1907 Lubin), short film
- La tragédie de Salomé (The Tragedy of Salome / 1907 Schmitt), ballet
- Salome; or, The Dance of Seven Veils (1908 Blackton), short film
- Salomé (1908 Capellani), short film
- Salome's Dance (1908 Faust), solo dance
- L'inconsciente Salomé (Salome / 1908 Feuillade), short film
- A Vision of Salome (1908 Hoffmann), solo dance
- The Remorse of Salome (1908 La Sylphe), solo dance
- Salomé (1908 Mariotte / Wilde), opera
- Salome's Dance (1908 Olcott), solo dance
- Salome's Dance (1908 Overton Walker), solo dance
- Salome's Dance (1908 Tanguay), solo dance
- The Great Salome Dance (1908 Tyler), short film
- Sadie Salome, Go Home! (1909 Berlin / Leslie), song
- Salome (1910 Falena), short film
- Salome: Ihre Gestalt in Geschichte und Kunst, Dictung, bildende Kunst, Musik (1912 Daffner), book
- Herod (1912 Frenkel), short film
- Erodiade (Herodias / 1912 Mentasti), short film
- La figlia d'Erodiade (The Daughter of Herodias / 1916 Falena), short film
- Salomé en la literatura: Flaubert, Wilde, Mallarmé, Eugenio de Castro, Apollinaire (Salome in Literature / 1919 Cansinos-Asséns), book
- Salomé, vierge folle (Salome, Mad Virgin / 1920 Raphaël), opera
- Princess Salome (1921 Jenkins, Hoskins), novel
- Salome (1922 Bryant), feature film
- Salome (1923 Strauss), film
- Salome (1948 Ifukube), ballet
- The Dance of Salome (1949 Franca / Hartley), TV film (ballet)
- Het hoofd van Johannes (1951 Brom), novel
- Salome: Virgin or Prostitute? (1953 Hospodar), book
- Omnibus: Salome (1955 / @1893 Wilde), TV production (play)
- The Song of Salome (1969 Bloom), novel
- Salomé (1969 Koralnik / @1893 Wilde), TV production (play)
- Salome, Daughter of Herodias (1977 Sams / Janer), opera (music & libretto)
- Salomé (1977 @1893 Wilde / Schaaff), TV film (play)
- Salomé (Salome / 1978 Almodóvar), short film
- Salome (1978 Davies / Flindt), ballet
- The Eighth Veil (1981 Kadison), novel
- Salomè (1983 Tacconi), novel
- Salome (1986 D'Anna), film
- Salome (1995 Berkoff / @1893 Wilde), video recording (play)
2
- Salome (2001 Poitevin), short film
- Salomé (Salome / 2002 Saura / Baños, Tomatito), film-ballet
- Salome (2004 Bellware), short film
- Perverse Midrash: Oscar Wilde, André Gide, and Censorship of Biblical Drama (2004 Downey), book
- Chiamami Salomé (Call Me Salome / 2005 Sestieri), feature film
- Exilée Salome (2006 Ciarapica), play
- The Trial of Salome (2006 Pavlich), play
- Salomé in Low Land (2006 Zagler), animated short film
- Salome (2007 Gormley), novel
- Fatale: Exploring Salome (2009 Harvey, Samyn), video game
- Salome (2009 Quint), short film
- Salomé (Salome / 2010 Cabral), short film
- Cedar Rapids Opera Theatre Presents: Salome (2010 Johnson / @1905 Strauss), TV film (opera)
- Wilde Salome (2011 Pacino), documentary
- Il venditore di profumi (The Seller of Perfumes / 2012 Bagnara), play
- Salome (2013 Pacino), feature film
Media in category "Salome (subject)"
The following 26 files are in this category, out of 26 total.
- 1918 Edwards (film).jpg 330 × 523; 93 KB
- 1953 * Dieterle (film).jpg 214 × 387; 27 KB
- 1972 Bene (film).jpg 187 × 270; 17 KB
- 1973 Barker (film).jpg 314 × 463; 35 KB
- 1986 Dijkstra.jpg 350 × 499; 38 KB
- 1987 Meltzer.jpg 152 × 244; 11 KB
- 1988 Russell (film).jpg 330 × 464; 47 KB
- 1993 Saladin.jpg 327 × 499; 30 KB
- 1995-E Berg.jpg 315 × 499; 14 KB
- 1996 Tydeman.jpg 297 × 474; 11 KB
- 2000 Rohde.jpg 316 × 499; 22 KB
- 2002 Bentley.jpg 333 × 499; 27 KB
- 2004 Karayanni.jpg 333 × 499; 29 KB
- 2005-E Langford.jpg 353 × 499; 20 KB
- 2007 Anastasio (short).jpg 182 × 268; 13 KB
- 2007 Bochet.jpg 289 × 474; 40 KB
- 2010-E Macintosh.jpg 331 × 499; 26 KB
- 2011-E Bennett.jpg 330 × 499; 30 KB
- 2011 Dierkes-Thrun.jpg 334 × 499; 30 KB
- 2013 Hamidovic.jpg 309 × 499; 28 KB
- 2013 Nezhinskaia.jpg 358 × 499; 28 KB
- 2013-E Rowden.jpg 298 × 445; 14 KB
- 2013 Simonson.jpg 907 × 1,360; 78 KB
- 2015-E George-Graves.jpg 344 × 499; 28 KB
- 2015 Molinari.jpg 383 × 499; 21 KB
- 2016 Baert.jpg 359 × 499; 21 KB