It was composed in 1882, inspired by the Cercle des Patineurs or Rink of Skaters at the Bois de Boulogne in Paris. The introduction to the waltz can be likened to the poise of a skater, and the rapid runs invoke scenes of a wintry atmosphere. Bells were added for good measure to complete the winter scenery. It was published by Hopwood & Crew and was dedicated to Ernest Coquelin, the younger brother of two celebrated actor brothers of the Comédie Française.
Key and structure
The overall key is A major. Among the subsections the key alternates between the tonic and the subdominant. Introduction \relative g
Waltz 1 \relative g
Waltz 2 \relative c'
Waltz 3 \relative c'
Waltz 4 \relative c'
Coda \relative c'
Use in motion pictures
Les Patineurs Valse has featured in dozens of films, from the earliest talkies to the present, including The Hollywood Revue of 1929, My Favorite Wife, Chariots of Fire, A Simple Wish, My Beautiful Laundrette, and Wife vs. Secretary. It was also played at Rose's "coming-out" ball in London in the last episode of Season 4 of the TV showDownton Abbey, as well as in the episode "Secret Shopper" of the kids' TV show Fanboy & Chum Chum. It was used in the original version of the children's television seriesPingu in the third episode, "The New Arrival". It is also on the compilation Andy Williams Christmas Show DVD in a scene from his 1967 Christmas show on television. A music-box version is used in the Japanese movieHimizu, the piece is hummed by Rabbit while he is skating in Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too. In the 2019 Elton John biopic Rocketman, a young Reggie plays along on the piano as the waltz plays on the wireless, sparking the recognition of his musical talent.
Use in other media
The music is played in every level of the NES game Antarctic Adventure. A small part of it is played in the TV seriesDaredevil. "The Skater's Waltz" is also a music record in Nintendogs + Cats. This piece was remixed in Nintendo's 2005 video game Dance Dance Revolution Mario Mix, as a song called "Rendezvous on Ice" that plays when Mario is skating away from an avalanche down a mountain. This piece was shortened in Sega's 2009 Wii video game Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games. "The Skater's Waltz" is used in the 1985 BBC children's television showGalloping Galaxies! "The Skater's Waltz" is used, briefly, towards the end of Paul Hindemith's arrangement, for String Quartet, of Richard Wagner's "Overture to 'The Flying Dutchman,' as played at sight by a bad spa orchestra at 7:00 in the morning by the village well," a very dissonant spoof of the Wagner overture; Waldteufel's music suddenly appears, perfectly consonant, as the players "forget" what they were playing and then they "remember" what they were supposed to be playing and return to the dissonant spoof on Wagner. Hindemith wrote this in 1925.