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William Christie et les Arts Florissants
Ou la passion du baroque
1994 , 70′ , couleur , documentaire
Réalisation : Andrea Kirsch. Production : Imalyre Groupe France Télécom, Dauphin productions, La Sept-Arte. Participation : CNC, ministère des affaires étrangères.
In 1979, the American conductor William Christie, a lover of French culture, founded Les Arts Florissants that takes its name from an opera by Marc-Antoine Charpentier. Since then, this vocal and instrumental ensemble has permitted the discovery of an entire repertoire of French, Italian and English music from the 17th and 18th centuries. This is the portrait of a man for whom baroque is above all an art of living.
The word “authentic” has no meaning for William Christie. If he unearths unpublished works by Charpentier, Lully and Campra, it is to breathe new life into them and not to expose them as museum pieces. His dream is to get as close as possible to what these composers would have wanted, while forgetting the centuries separating us from them. To do this, the interpretation required tremendous work by specialists. Also an experienced man of the theatre, Christie chose directors with little interest in historical reconstruction. The creation of Lully’s Atys directed by Jean-Marie Villégier marked the beginning of the popular success of Les Arts Florissants, while the triumph of Rameau’s Indes Galantes by Alfredo Arias confirmed the public’s interest in this repertoire.
Source : Mario Fanfani