Les biches (French: [le biʃ], The Hinds or The Little Darlings) is a ballet choreographed by Bronislava Nijinska to music by Francis Poulenc, premiered by the Ballets Russes on 6 January 1924. Some consider this piece a milestone in ballet history. The composer, who was at the time relatively unknown, was asked by Serge Diaghilev to write a piece based on Glazunov's Les Sylphides, written seventeen years earlier. Poulenc, however, chose to base his work on the paintings of Watteau that depicted Louis XV and various women in his "Parc aux biches". The word biche is usually translated as "doe," an adult female deer. "Does" was used as a slang for coquettish women. Poulenc described his work as a "contemporary drawing room party suffused with an atmosphere of wantonness, which you sense if you are corrupted, but of which an innocent-minded girl would not be conscious."

Original Name Les biches
Librettist 17th century text
Date of composition 1923
Premiered 1924, January 6th in Monaco-Ville, Monaco
First published 1923
Dedicated to Misia Sert
Type Ballet
Catalogue FP 36a
Spoken language French
Instruments Chorus/Choir
Orchestra
Arrangements Francis Poulenc: Les biches, FP 36b
Francis Poulenc: The Hinds or The Little Darlings, FP 36c
Links
Autotranslations beta Francis Poulenc: The Hinds or The Little Darlings, FP 36a
Francis Poulenc: The Hinds or The Little Darlings, FP 36a
Francis Poulenc: The Hinds or The Little Darlings, FP 36a