by Douglas Messerli
Vaslav Nijinsky (choreographer), L'Aprés-midi
d'un Faune (Afternoon of the Faun) [performance by Rudolf Nureyev with
the Joffrey Ballet] / 1979
Although we do have a 3-minute tape of Nijinsky’s
original performance of the Claude Debussy-based Afternoon of a Faun, it is so badly filmed,
with missing segments, that it is hard to know what his performance really
looked like. But fortunately we have a full video/CD performance of Rudolf Nureyev’s
1979 performance, based on Nijinsky’s original choreography, that I couldn’t
imagine being less sensuous that the original 1912 original.
This
ballet is not at all “gay” in its substance; but the focus on the faun’s body,
with his constantly erect tale and seeming half-nude ballet costume with
piebald shapes to suggest the faun’s skin is most certainly homoerotic,
particularly since in ends in a kind of festishized frotting of one of the nymph’s
shawl, dropped in her escape from the faun.
And
the gay dancer Nureyev does everything he can to eroticize the role, twisting
his torso in ways that feature his groin and erect tail. Even his arm gestures
early in the ballet, as the fawn awakens become somewhat sexual.
The
fawn, even if he is attracted to the six nymphs, particularly their leader
(danced by Charlene Gehm in this production), acts as a king of narcissism, and
it is his body upon which the dance focuses, as the nymphs merely move
laterally across the stage in posed positions, hands high in the air as on the
Greek statuary.
Even
after the departure of the nymphs, Nureyev draws attention to his movements as
he performs a series of astonishing relevés as he moves up to stony cliff to
his original sleeping spot.
And
his final fetishizing of the lost shawl upon which he rubs his full body is truly
sexual. If it might symbolize the woman who wore it, it is his sexual act to
which we are witness rather than intercourse with a woman. And, after all, the
faun is left with only a shawl, not with a nymph. Even in Mallarme’s far more
heterosexual original poem, we realize that the sexual encounters of the faun
were just an illusion.
Is it
any wonder that this ballet both delighted and scandalized Paris audiences upon
its premier? It also a parting of the ways between the Ballet Russes and choreographer
Michel Fokine, Fokine jealous of Nijinsky and director Sergei Diaghilev’s
attentions, both on and off-stage, to him.
Los Angeles, April 26, 2025
Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog (April 26, 2025).
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