-
Chaperon (act 1), Eugène
Carpezat and (Joseph-)
Antoine Lavastre (act 2), and Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (act 3). Set in
British India in the mid-19th century...
- I,
scene 1; Act II,
scene 1), and Édouard
Desplechin and Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (Act I,
scene 2). The ballet's
first flush of
success was
interrupted by...
- Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (24
August 1839 – 24
April 1891) was a
French landscape painter and
scenic designer. A
student of Édouard
Desplechin as soon as...
-
Auguste Alfred Rubé and
Philippe Chaperon (acts 2 and 3), and Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (act 4).
Prior to M****enet's work, Halévy (Manon Lescaut, ballet, 1830)...
- I,
scene 2; Act V),
Louis Chéret (Act II), Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (Act III),
Antoine Lavastre and Eugène
Louis Carpezat (Act IV). Le roi de La**** is the...
-
Philippe Chaperon (acts 1 and 4) and Édouard
Desplechin and Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (acts 2 and 3), and
shipped to Cairo.
Although Verdi did not
attend the...
-
workshop was
taken over by Eugène
Carpezat and Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre. Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (1839–1891). His name is
often spelt "Despléchin" » with an...
-
Philippe Chaperon and
their students Marcel Jambon (act 3), and Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (act 4). The
opera had been seen 150
times by 1919 but
faded from the repertory...
- Rubé and
Philippe Chaperon (acts 1 and 4), Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre (act 2),
Antoine Lavastre and Eugène
Carpezat (act 3). The
piece ran for 34 performances...
- the
scenery was
recreated after the
original designs by Jean-Baptiste
Lavastre and Édouard Desplechin, Chéret, Charles-Antoine Cambon, and
Auguste Alfred...