The Green Table is a ballet by the German choreographer Kurt Jooss. His most popular work, it depicts the futility of peace negotiations of the 1930s. It was the first work to be fully notated using kinetography Laban (Labanotation). It is in the repertoire of ballet companies worldwide, where it has been staged by Jooss himself. When he died in 1979, his daughter Anna Markard took over stagings of the work. With her death in 2010, Former Dutch National Ballet principal Jeanette Vondersaar assumed those responsibilities.
Choreography | Kurt Jooss |
Music | Fritz Cohen |
Design | Hein Heckroth |
Libretto | Kurt Jooss |
Lighting Design | Hermann Mankard |
First Production | Folkwang Tanzbuhne, "Concours international de chorégraphie en souvenir de Jean Borlin," organized by the Archives Internationales de la Danse, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Paris, 3 July 1932 |
Principal Dancers | Kurt Jooss (Death), Karl Bergeest (The Profiteer), Ernst Uthoff (The Standard Bearer), Elsa Kahl (Woman), Lisa Czobel (Young Girl) |
Other Productions | Jooss Ballet (new name of the Folkwang Tanzbuhne), restaged by Jooss, New York, 31 October 1933; restaged Paris, July 1946; City Center Joffrey Ballet (restaged Jooss), New York, 9 March 1967; Northern Dance Theatre (staged Anna Markard), Manchester, 30 May 1973; Oakland Ballet (restaged by daughter Anna Markard) 1984; Joffrey Ballet, 2007 with lighting reconstructed by Kevin Dreyer. |