Georges Bizet (1838 – 1875) wrote Symphony in C when he was 17-year-old student, and the score was not found until 1933. Composer Igor Stravinsky informed choreographer George Balanchine about this discovery.[2] In 1947, as a guest ballet master at the Paris Opera Ballet,[3] Balanchine choreographed the ballet, then titled Le Palais de Cristal, to "showcase for the talent of the whole company."[1] Balanchine paid homage to Léo Staats, a French choreographer he admired.[4] According to NYCB, Balanchine created the ballet within two weeks.[3] The following year, he restaged the ballet for Ballet Society, under the title Symphony in C, and this version was featured in New York City Ballet's first program.[5] Choreographer Jerome Robbins was in the audience, and decided to join the company after seeing the ballet.[6]
The ballet has four movements, each featuring a principal couple, two demi-soloist couples and the corps de ballet. In the finale, the whole cast appears on stage.[1] When NYCB was based at the New York City Center, the stage was too small for the entire cast to appear in the finale, but this became possible when the company moved to the New York State Theater.[7]
In the original Paris version, each movement references a gemstone, including Rubies, Black Diamonds, Emeralds and Pearls, with the dancers wearing red, black, green and white costumes, designed by Leonor Fini. Balanchine later used this idea again in Jewels.[1][9]
In 1950, NYCB started donning black-and-white costumes designed by Barbara Karinska. In 2012, NYCB commissioned Marc Happel to design costumes for the ballet that had a "more modern, yet still timeless look". He kept the black and white scheme, and used crystals provided by Swarovski.[10]
The Royal Ballet's production uses costumes and sets by former artistic director Anthony Dowell. Like the Karinska design, men are dressed in black, and women are in white tutus.[2]
World premiere: Lycette Darsonval, Alexandre Kalioujny, Tamara Toumanova, Roger Ritz, Micheline Bardin, Michel Renault, Madeleine Lafon, Max Bozzoni[14]