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Here's to You, Morricone

Aterballetto, the main contemporary company in Italy (now a national choreographic centre), made a hit two years commissioning a new creation by Marcos Morau: “Notte Morricone” (Morricone Night). The Spanish director and choreographer has become one of the most in demand dance makers on the European scene and a permanent guest on the roster of avant-garde dance festivals in Italy, la Biennale in Venice for instance, as well as an associate artist at Triennale Theatre in Milan. Rumours say that his recent “Étude,” created for the Paris Opera Ballet, will be programmed on the next season of La Scala Ballet!

Performance

CCN Aterballetto: “Notte Morricone” by Marcos Morau

Place

Teatro Regio, Parma, Italy, April 11, 2026

Words

Valentina Bonelli

CCN Aterballetto in “Notte Morricone” by Marcos Morau. Photograph by Christophe Bernard

Anyway, Morau’s work, together with the internationally renowned name of our composer, is allowing the company based in Reggio Emilia to widely tour in Europe and make itself well known outside Italy. 

After an outdoor preview at Macerata Opera Festival in the summer of 2024 and a premiere at Teatro Argentina in Rome the following autumn, along its two-years tour we saw it for the first time last season at Teatro Ponchielli, a beautiful theatre “all’italiana” (“Italian style” of the XIX century) in Cremona, a city of art in North Italy, where Claudio Monteverdi was born, and we wanted to see it again this season at Teatro Regio (another beautiful theatre “all’italiana”) in Parma, another city of art in North Italy, this one the birth town of Giuseppe Verdi.

It’s interesting and even touching to discover the composer’s personality and obsessions, beyond the biopic that the director/choreographer, a self-confessed Morricone fan from way back, rightly, absolutely avoids. The portrait that emerges is that of an excellent artist, so deep into his work to dedicate every day of his life to it, from the pop songs written out of necessity in the sixties (but nowadays cult hits!), to the well-known scores for the so called “spaghetti westerns,” until the famous soundtracks for Hollywood movies (Once Upon a Time in America by Leone, The Untouchable by De Palma, The Hateful Eight by Tarantino among the others). 

A few notes sprinkled here and there throughout the piece are enough for the audience to recall songs and films of our common past, seen through the eyes of the son of a trumpet player who conquered America. 

CCN Aterballetto in “Notte Morricone” by Marcos Morau. Photograph by Christophe Bernard

CCN Aterballetto in “Notte Morricone” by Marcos Morau. Photograph by Christophe Bernard

The title, “Morricone Night,” seems to mean not an evening dedicated to Morricone, but all the nights and the days without light he spent in the recording studio to compose and finish his music. Sometimes to play chess, his great passion, beating the movie stars. An enduring black scene, composing and decomposing its rooms, Morricone is identified in two effective ways: multiplied by the 16 dancers, all dressed in grey, with shirt, trousers with braces and his typical black glasses, or as a little puppet (Morau always uses puppets in his pieces) speaking via ventriloquist, who also multiplies himself. In any way, with or without puppets, Morau’s choreography for the ensemble, is as usual original, and seems to be created for a unique body; highly expressive, moving as if without joints and bones, like a floating wave, sometimes interrupted by a duet or a solo, finely crafted like a Morricone’s composition. It was interesting to talk before the performance with the dancers of Aterballetto: they explained how, under the guidance of Morau and with one of his assistant choreographers (it’s well known that Morau doesn’t have a dance education), the company definitely contributed to the creation of the dance.

Fragments of Morricone’s life and career are also evoked through the real voice of the composer, like the speech in occasion of one of his two Oscars, when he especially thanked his wife Maria, always at his side, or another public talk of his lasts, when the old artist proud of being loved by people, bid his last farewell with these touching words: “ . .  . and while I was composing music for others, I realized that this was the music of my same life, of my birth and of my funeral.” Then, with a delicate touch, the dancers lay a Morricone puppet inside a grand piano like in a coffin, all around bouquets of red roses, in a kind of a miniature funeral. Confirming our first impression, “Notte Morricone” is one of the most sincere and accomplished pieces of Marcos Morau. 

Valentina Bonelli


Valentina Bonelli is a dance journalist and critic based in Milan, and a longtime contributor to Vogue Italia and Amadeus. She is a correspondent from Italy for international dance magazines such as Dance Europe and Dance Magazine Japan. As a scholar her main interest lies in the XIX century Russian ballet, in its connections with the Italian ballet school. She has translated and edited Marius Petipa’s Memoires (2010) and Diaries (2018) into Italian, and she is currently writing essays and biographies about La Scala ballerinas dancing at Russian Imperial theatres.

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