Sergey Prokofiev’s
Romeo& Juliet
On Motifs of Shakespeare
The

Discovery

The Timeline of Sergey Prokofiev

1891 Sergey Prokofiev born on April 23 (April 11, Old Style) in Sontsovka, Ukraine, third but only surviving child of Sergey Alekseyevich Prokofiev and Mariya Grigoryevna Zhitkova

Tchaikovsky conducts performance for the grand opening of The Music Hall (Carnegie Hall) in New York; Thomas Edison demonstrates and patents the Kinetoscope, an early motion picture device

1896 Begins piano lessons under tutelage of his mother; starts composing for piano soon after

Premieres of Oscar Wilde's Salome in Paris and Giacomo Puccini's La bohème in Turin

1900 Composes first opera, The Giant, after exposure to opera performances in Moscow and St. Petersburg

First public exhibition of sound films at the Paris World Fair

1902 Receives formal composition lessons from composer and pianist Reinhold Glière in Sontsovka during the summers of 1902 and 1903

Lenin completes political pamphlet What is to be Done?

1904 Begins composition studies at the St. Petersburg Conservatory

Russo-Japanese War begins

1905 Revolution temporarily suspends classes at the Conservatory

Bloody Sunday in St. Petersburg; mutiny on the battleship Potemkin

1909 Completes composition studies and begins courses in piano and conducting

Sergey Diaghilev establishes the Ballets Russes

1910 First public performance in Moscow; father dies
1912 Premiere of Schoenberg's Pierrot lunaire in Berlin
1913 Stravinsky's Rite of Spring premieres in Paris
1914 Studies culminate in first prize for his piano examination, performing his First Piano Concerto; travels to London and is introduced to Diaghilev, who commissions Ala et Lolly which goes unperformed (Prokofiev uses the music in the Scythian Suite, which premieres in 1916)

Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand; beginning of First World War

1915 Conceives The Gambler
1916 Meets theater director Vsevolod Meyerhold, with whom he later collaborates
1917 Composes "Classical" Symphony, First Violin Concerto, The Gambler

Russian Revolution (February: end of Tsarist autocracy; October: Bolsheviks overthrow Provisional Government); United States enters war

1918 Conducts premiere of "Classical Symphony" in Petrograd; emigrates, arriving in New York in September (spends summers in Europe)

Armistice treaty between Allies and Germany; Russian Civil War begins

1919 The Love for Three Oranges commissioned by Chicago Opera; conceives The Fiery Angel (completed in 1927)

Treaty of Versailles ends First World War

1921 The Tale of the Buffoon premieres in Paris, commissioned by Diaghilev; Third Piano Concerto and The Love for Three Oranges premiere in Chicago

Red Army invades Georgia; Hitler becomes Fuhrer of Nazi Party

1922 Returns to Europe; moves to southern Germany

Soviet Union established; Stalin appointed General Secretary of Communist Party; James Joyce's Ulysses is published in Paris

1923 Marries singer Lina Codina; moves to Paris

Stroke leaves Lenin bedridden and unable to speak

1924 Composes Second Symphony; mother dies; begins to study Christian Science

Hitler imprisoned at Landsberg; Lenin dies

1927 Begins two-month tour concert tour of Soviet Union in January; Le Pas d'acier premieres in Paris

Trotsky expelled from the Communist Party

1933 Composes film score for Lieutenant Kijé, which he reworks as a symphonic suite the following year

Hitler comes to power in Germany

1934 Meets with the theater director Sergey Radlov and others in Leningrad to discuss potential operas and ballets; they conceive the ballet Romeo and Juliet, which is commissioned for the Bolshoy
1935 Composes Romeo and Juliet
1936 Permanently relocates to Russia from France; composes Peter and the Wolf, incidental music for Eugene Onegin and Boris Godunov, and the score for a film version of The Queen of Spades

Spanish Civil War begins; Anti-Comintern Pact signed between Germany and Japan; Stalin launches widespread purges

1937 Completes the Cantata for the Twentieth Anniversary of the October Revolution; it goes unperformed

Italy joins Anti-Comintern Pact, completing the three major axis powers

1938 Final tour abroad (Prague, Paris, London, and the United States); receives offers from Paramount and Hyperion for film scores; forfeits his external passport; Romeo and Juliet premieres in Brno; composes film score for Alexander Nevsky

Orson Welles's radio broadcast of War of the Worlds

1939 Becomes involved with future second wife Mira Mendelson

Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact (German-Soviet treaty of non-aggression) signed; invasion of Poland precipitates beginning of the Second World War in Europe

1940 Romeo and Juliet has Soviet premiere in Leningrad; composes Betrothal in a Monastery

Trotsky assassinated by Soviet secret police

1941 Begins living with Mira; is evacuated and subsequently lives in Nalchik, Tbilisi, Alma-Ata, and Perm; begins composing War and Peace

Germany attacks the Soviet Union

1942 Collaborates with Sergey Eisenstein on Ivan the Terrible

Battle of Stalingrad

1943 Returns to Moscow from evacuation

Béla Bartók composes Concerto for Orchestra; Paul Hindemith composes Symphonic Metamorphoses

1944 Completes Fifth Symphony; Part I of Eisenstein's Ivan the Terrible premieres
1945 Fifth Symphony and Cinderella premiere in Moscow; suffers a severe stroke precipitated by high blood pressure

Soviets take Berlin; Hitler dies; end of Second World War

1946 Premiere of Betrothal in a Monastery in Leningrad
1947 Completes Ninth Piano Sonata for Svyatoslav Richter; awarded the title of People's Artist of the R.S.F.S.R. (Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic)
1948 Marries Mira; Prokofiev's works largely banned from performance; writes letter of contrition admitting to artistic errors; Lina arrested and sent to labor camp; completes The Story of a Real Man; begins The Tale of the Stone Flower
1949 Performance ban lifted in a decree signed by Stalin; completes the Cello Sonata in collaboration with Mstislav Rostropovich
1952 Completes Seventh Symphony

Premiere of John Cage's 4'33"

1953 Dies on March 5 in Moscow

Death of Stalin the same evening

Kara Olive

Prokofiev in 1915.
© Serge Prokofiev Estate, 2002

 

Stalin's Approval
Stalin’s approval to stage Romeo and Juliet in Moscow at the Bolshoy Theater, March 23, 1940.
Courtesy of the Russian State Archive of Social-Political History

 

Mutnykh's Removal
Confirmation of Vladimir Mutnykh’s removal as director of the Bolshoy Theater, February 1936
Courtesy of the Russian State Archive of Social-Political History

 

Sktch of Prokofiev
Prokofiev in the Fall of 1943 at the Metropole Hotel
courtesy of RGALI

 

Sktch of Prokofiev
1948 Sketch of Prokofiev by his son Oleg
courtesy of Malcolm Brown

 

Sktch of Prokofiev
Prokofiev in 1952 in Nikolina Gora
© Serge Prokofiev Estate, 2002
Mark Morris Dance Group
Fisher Center