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RDB Dancers in London - radio feature 3 Jan


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From the RDB Principals and Soloists Facebook pages:

 

Make sure to tune in to BBC Radio London 94.9 tomorrow morning between 9-10am UK time, as they will be talking to principal Gregory Dean about the upcoming tour to London.

 

 

 

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If you missed this you can still hear it, for the next few weeks, at

 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02fhx8k

 

The section with Gregory Dean starts at 2hr 16m and lasts about 10 minutes - it's not very deep stuff but Dean handles it very well (and gets in some nice publicity for Arts Educational, where he trained). And it's not every day you hear a battement sur le coup de pied being demonstrated on the radio.

 

(Details taken from @Rdbprincipals at

 

http://instagram.com/p/xeg0eQhPjk/

 

where you also get a nice photo of Dean with Ida Praetorius)

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Given that it's 10 years since the Royal Danish Ballet's last visit and given that it's a very good company and given that we see very little of Bournonville's work in the UK, it's sad that their two day visit has been so little promoted and seems, so far, to have sold so poorly.

 

If you go to the Sadler's Wells home page you won't see it (it's somewhere on page 2). Maybe SW management is diffident about giving prominence to ballet as opposed to dance. This will not encourage the company to come again.

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What on earth is it doing on Page 2?!  The only things on before it are Edward Scissorhands and The Snowman, and I suspect the latter has probably finished its run.  Why on earth bother hosting this gem of a company if you're not going to publicise it?

 

FWIW, I actually bought my ticket pretty much the day booking opened :(

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What on earth is it doing on Page 2?!  The only things on before it are Edward Scissorhands and The Snowman, and I suspect the latter has probably finished its run.  Why on earth bother hosting this gem of a company if you're not going to publicise it?

 

FWIW, I actually bought my ticket pretty much the day booking opened :(

 

Absolutely agreed Alison! I bought my Saturday matinee ticket the day booking opened and can't believe the theatre is still only half booked for that show, for such an absolute rare treat of a performance. :o

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can't believe the theatre is still only half booked for that show, for such an absolute rare treat of a performance. :o

 

It IS hard to comprehend isn't it, Nottsballetlover?  It makes one fear for future appearances by world ranked companies in London.  Of course, education is key and that too has been eroding - and becoming ever more privileged - for some time.  In the distant past the British Council helped subsidise such major company appearances in the name of the Nation's greater edification.  In those instances the box office returns were not so keen a consideration.  I was myself vastly enriched as a child by the World Theatre Seasons at the Aldwych - now all those many decades ago. ... I was thrilled to have an opportunity to see the Berliner Ensemble and the Moscow Art Theatre and such like.  Sadly that subsidy has not been generally present in that way for some time - although theatrically the world fare continues to arrive on the Barbican's schedule which is much appreciated.  One wonders of course if the further cuts as predicted may make the terrain even for the home based ensembles all that much more uncertain.  Perhaps not now given the beginning of the tax incentive opening an additional window for support.  (That's one good thing that George Osbourne has fostered.)  I do wonder, however, with the fall of the Oil barrier below $50 dollars and the overall instability of the rouble if the considerable independent subsidy that Russian ballet/dance companies such as the Mikhailovsky enjoyed when in London in recent years will become but a yellowing item in our collective - albeit aging - memory banks.  It would, of course, be sad if that were the case ... but certainly understandable.  Perhaps it will open the path for other - then more prosperous cultures - to showcase their noted balletic achievements.  One can only live in hope.  We all need to learn and through that learning feed our appreciation. 

Edited by Bruce Wall
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Actually, I'm wondering whether it's partly because the venue is no longer (barring the Trocks and the odd dance school graduation performances) perceived as a ballet theatre. When you think that Johan Kobborg and co. managed to sell out (I think) the Queen Elizabeth Hall for several similar performances maybe a decade ago, and how well the RDB's last visit to Sadler's went, I'm not sure what has happened in the meantime. Having ENB and the RB performing at the same time probably doesn't help, of course.

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I don't think that it's the best time of year for them to come either, being so soon after Christmas and New Year. Having said that, this is probably a programme for fairly keen balletgoers rather than for most of the audience for Nutcracker, Swan Lake and Alice - and Edward Scissorhands is still on this weekend as well. It's ridiculous that it's on the second page of Sadler's Wells' website as it's clearly out of order date-wise. In the last couple of years the only overseas company which has 'sold' really well in London (other than the Bolshoi and the Mariinsky which both went to the ROH) is San Francisco Ballet. Why they sold so well I don't know but the city's cool image might have helped.

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I just had a quick peek at the Joyce seating for this programme in New York between 13 and 18 January and it appears that there are sections 'unavailable' for every performance ... and with the opening and closing nights almost already full.  Hopefully it will pick up even more steam there in the interim and help defray any losses for the presenters that may be occurred in the London round of three performances.  (That said, I would imagine - indeed hope - that this ad hoc Company itself would be playing against a set guarantee and thus would not themselves ever be a victim of any lack of marketing prowess, etc.)  Certainly it would be a shame indeed if this fine bill wasn't supported in both locales.  I'm sure all of us would love to encourage them to return.  Sadly I can't go to the Friday evening performance as I am in Munich for work (where I will catch the Ratmansky Paquita) but will be at both outings at the Peacock on Saturday (assuming no aircraft delays).  I SO look forward to it.

Edited by Bruce Wall
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And I realised it might have helped if Sadler's had actually sent out the Spring booking programme this year, as well. I waited for ages before I decided it wasn't going to arrive, by which time I'd missed out on the chance to book tickets for Guillem's final performances.

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I'd been thinking I might get tickets for a second performance, too, since it's such a rare visit, but there's no sign of anything appearing on tkts yet, and the bottom price have of course sold out, so I guess that's a no :(

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