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Jan McNulty

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Posts posted by Jan McNulty

  1. Over on the "Doing Dance" forum tomuchtallent has given us a link to the Arsenal/ENB advertisement: http://www.balletcoforum.com/index.php?/topic/654-arsenal-and-the-enb/page__pid__8082#entry8082

     

    Northern Ballet recently featured with Ryan Hall on Superleague TV:

     

    Over the years, I've seen bits in the press about football teams attending ballet classes to improve their flexibility and mobility.

     

    Do people think initiatives like this may draw more people into watching ballet? I'd love to hear anyone else's thoughts.

  2. Lindsay, I've very much enjoyed reading your impressions. Many years ago, BRB did a work that used the music of Jimi Hendrix. It was, of course, a recorded score and what seriously disappointed me about it (apart from Miyako Yoshida as a Pan's People person on pointe) was the fact that the sound system used did not bring out the force of the music. I never saw Hendrix live (toooooo young) but mis-spent my youth going to rock gigs and was used to having the breath knocked out of me! Instead we got very loud, distorted and no bass! As a rock chick I was seriously disappointed.

     

    I would be very interested to hear opinions of fans of the music who had gone there for that rather than the dance.

  3. Great interview Bruce, thanks.

     

    In respect of the press release: I thought Tamara Rojo was a principal at Scottish Ballet when she left to join ENB. I had certainly seen her do principal roles - Juliet and Odette/Odile - and wonderful she was too, even as a whippersnapper!

     

    Graham Watts has some interesting thoughts: http://londondance.com/articles/features/tamara-rojo-director-enb/#.T4fTbm7Ddjk.twitter

  4. The Globe's Henry V is currently enjoying a short run at the Liverpool Playhouse and I attended the performance last night.

     

    According to the pre-publicity it was being performed on a Globe-style stage but not having had the pleasure of going to the Globe yet I was not 100% sure what that meant!

     

    There was a very simple but effective wooden set that reminded me of scenes from the film Shakespeare in Love. The main surprise though was the fact that the house lights didn't go down.

     

    After a slow start the performance really started to get under my skin and by the end I was held in its thrall. I did sometimes find it confusing that an actor was playing one part one minute, went off stage and came straight back on a someone else in almost the same costume! I did get into the swing of it in the end!

     

    Jamie Parker gave a beautifully nuanced and understated performance. It was almost impossible to take your eyes off him when he was on stage. Brid Brennan was superb as The Chorus and and I was very taken with Kurt Egyiawan's expressive performance as The Dauphin and Lord Scroop. Brendan O'Hea hit just the right note as Captain Fluellen.

     

    Above all, however, it was a fantastic ensemble performance.

     

    I really enjoyed my Liverpool experience of the Globe!

  5. Sadly, senior management did not find out about the leak until the general announcement. The look of shock on people's faces was quite staggering and we only found out later what had happened! I should have said also that other changes had been made to the draft structure hence the mass shock.

     

    I don't know what the answer is and, presumably in this case, more than one organisation is involved so it may not be a case of ENB being able to change the release time without negotiation.

     

    As it must be less than 24 hours to go I just think people should let the sleeping dog lie for the time being.

  6. Well here's another work example. A reorganisation was being planned. Our senior managers had done a draft that was given to several of us to input. One person, not involved in the discussions, was shown the early draft by her manager (not me). She then told an individual that he was picking up a promotion. Think of his mortification when someone else was allocated to that post. Embargoes are there for a reason and we need to respect that however strongly we feel that it is a waste of time.

  7. It is a fact in all walks of life that the reputable press accepts and adheres to voluntary embargos until agreed release times. As an example there was a really nasty drug trial in Liverpool some years ago where witnesses and jury members had been threatened. We all knew something was going on in the court because we could all see the police convoys every day. The press did not report anything at all until the jury had pronounced and sentences had been made. This is just one example.

     

    It is likely that at least one more organisation is involved. I am assuming that the incoming AD is not currently claiming JSA. If you applied for a job, would you go round telling everyone, including your employers, of your intentions - I think not. Therefore it is only proper to assume that the other organisation requires some sort of notice in case that organisation also wants to organise a press release.

     

    I myself was subject to news being issued to early some years ago in work. A colleague issued a statement across our internet announcing his happy appointment to a project post I had been told was mine a couple of weeks earlier. My management team (in a different location) had not told the Liverpool team that the project team structure was being changed. You could imagine how distressed I felt. As it happened the new team structure made much better sense and I ended up with a post I much preferred. It did not, however, erase the memory of the distress I was caused by the premature announcement.

     

    I can understand that everyone is waiting with bated breath but it is unfortunate that current comments seem to be casting aspersions at personnel within the Company who, at the end of the day, are only trying to do their job to the best of their abilities. From what I have read, the official announcement is due tomorrow. Let's leave it till tomorrow and we can then have a separate thread with all the congratulations for the new incumbent.

    • Like 1
  8. Off-topic slightly but as a non-London based person I would like to say that there is an obvious reason why there are more likely to be more posts about RB than other British companies. All the other companies perform in blocks whereas the RB tend to perform in performances spread throughout the year ergo people are more likely to dip in and out.

     

    I believe the people who post on this board are interested in ballet and dance in general. When I post about BRB, NB or ENB, as I am usually only seeing one performance or several in two days it is impossible for me to post more than once on that topic.

     

    Back to topic, I had a look at the DT comments again last night. They had grown considerably from the last time I had checked and I was horrified by the tone of many of them. As no-one outside those directly involved can possibly know the facts, speculation can be harmful and hurting. For the sake of those involved I suspect that most people have decided to wait and see what happens without further stoking the flames.

     

    Again, this board encourages discussion on all forms of ballet and dance and, hopefully, some people who have recently decided to post will continue to do so about a variety of companies.

    • Like 3
  9. I don't know how many coffee shops there are in Tring but there are loads in Leeds! There is actually a public cafe in the foyer at NB's HQ. (When I attended NB's mixed programme in February, lots of parents were enjoying a cuppa while waiting to pick up children.) They do some lovely cakes! NB is also very close to West Yorkshire Playhouse where, again, there is a very nice cafe.

     

    Quarry Hill is maybe a five minute walk from the main drag. During the day there are a couple of nice cafes in the gorgeous Victoria Quarter arcades as well as the usual high street ones on Briggate. If you don't mind a 10-15 minute walk from Quarry Hill there is a fantastic vegetarian cafe in the Grand Arcade (adjacent to the Grand Theatre). Although I am by no means a vegetarian, it's one of my favourite places to eat and is very reasonably priced.

    • Like 3
  10. As with most people, some critics I agree with and some I don't. I don't usually see reviews until after I have seen the performance so they don't usually influence me. I read some reviewers because I like their writing even if I don't agree with their view. I don't like reviewers who make personal and imho vindictive comments.

     

    Again, as other posters have commented I do sometimes wonder if reviewers have actually been at the same performance as me!

     

    I sometimes wonder when a reviewer seems to tend to the negative for most performances if they see too many performances and forget how to enjoy and see the positive. I remember the fuss when Deborah Jowitt left the Village Voice because her reviews were "too positive" and the paper wanted more "negative" reviews. I would rather the "positive" approach. You can be both honest and positive (for example you may not like a production but you can admire the commitment and talent of the dancers' performances).

     

    This is an interesting article on the subject of Deborah Jowitt: http://www.orartswatch.org/deborah-jowitt-the-voice-and-negative-reviews/

     

    Quite a few years ago, I attended a Northern Ballet performance of Romeo and Juliet in Nottingham. At the end of the performance the lady manning the Friends' stall commented that a national press critic had been attending but had left before the start of act 3 to get a train back to London. When I saw the review, the critic had specifically commented on act 3. I could accept the leaving before the end but absolutely NOT the comments about something the individual had not actually seen! When recounting this tale to another friend she told me of an occasion when an orchestra had to change an advertised piece of music at the last minute. The reviewer "reviewed" the piece that was not performed!

     

    I personally pay more attention to the thoughts on performances of my fellow balletcoforumers! They are written from the heart and may be likely to influence me.

    • Like 1
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