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Submit ReviewA century before crowds of extras and gigantic sets first filled the silver screen of Cecil B. DeMille’s Hollywood extravaganzas, the Paris Opera brought similar resources to the stage for their historical operas—offering shipwrecks, explosions, massacres, and other crowd-pleasing spectacles.
For example, on today’s date in 1849, the premiere of Giacomo Meyerbeer’s opera “The Prophet,” included a ballet sequence that made audiences gasp in surprise when the dancers—supposed skating on a frozen lake—glided across the stage on roller skates!
Roller skates had been invented in Paris in 1790 but were considered a useless curiosity—after Meyerbeer’s opera, however, there was a booming demand for what was marketed as "Prophet Skates." Meyerbeer’s opera also included an on-stage sunrise, employing , for the first time at the Paris Opera, state-of-the art electric lights.
And just to prove that there is nothing new under the sun—electric or otherwise–in 1984, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Starlight express,” a rock musical about roller-ball competitors, had singers racing around the stage on roller-skates. The musical proved a big hit in London, New York and Las Vegas, and, reminiscent of Meyerbeer’s frozen pond ballet, there has even been a version of “Starlight Express—On Ice.”
Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791-1864) The Prophet: Ballet of the Skaters: Galop Barcelona Symphony Orchestra/Michal Nesterowicz Naxos 573076
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