Antigone (Honegger)
Antigone is
an opera (tragédie musicale) in three acts by Arthur Honegger to a French
libretto by Jean Cocteau based on the tragedy Antigone by Sophocles. Honegger
composed the opera between 1924 and 1927. It premiered on 28 December 1927 at
the Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie with sets designed by Pablo Picasso and
costumes by Coco Chanel.
COCO CHANEL. Alex Madsen
“…Charles Dullin produced an adaptation of Cocteau's Antigone. Arthur
Honegger wrote the musical score and Pablo Picasso painted the sets. Coco
Cocteau proposed that she will design the costumes. When Coco knew that Picasso
would collaborate on the production, she accepted the commission to make the
costumes. Coco ordered a specialist
knitting make one robe to the floor, raw wool, with motifs of Greek jars of
brown and black.
Coco was very jealous of
the professional success of Picasso. One day, seized by anger and jealousy, she
took the stage and broke the tunica apart…’’
Photo
by MAN RAY, the actress Genica Athanasiou from
1921. She was playwright Antonin Artaud's muse and in this photo she is wearing
the costume Coco Chanel designed for Jean Cocteau's 1922 production of
Sophocles Antigone.