Jump to content

Irmgard

Members
  • Posts

    582
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Irmgard

  1. 16 minutes ago, Dawnstar said:

    Going through the reviews in the last couple of days of Links & I am completely baffled by this section in the Seeing Dance review:

     

     

    Is Act II meant to be mostly Albrecht's dream? Because if so then this the first I've known of it!

    I am completely baffled as well, as I am sure Theophile Gautier who wrote the scenario would be!!! 

    • Like 7
  2. 21 minutes ago, Emeralds said:

    While we're discussing Mary Skeaping's production of Giselle here, it was a fun  coincidence to see one of her retagings of a 17th century production, Cupid out of his Humour, at the quaint, beautifully preserved court theatre of Drottningholm Palace on TV last night in The Magic of Dance, the documentary series presented by Margot Fonteyn. (A bit before my time but the ballet was reportedly performed for the state visit of the late Queen Elizabeth II to Sweden in 1956 too!). I loved the ingenious backstage equipment and machinery that reminded me of the wire work, flying effects and stagecraft in her production of Giselle. True theatre genius and magic. 

    Cupid out of his Humour was actually commissioned from Mary Skeaping and the Royal Swedish Ballet by the King of Sweden for Queen Elizabeth's state visit to Sweden in 1956 but has been performed many times since then for the general public at Drottningholm and, in the 1950s, it was toured to Bath and the Edinburgh Festival.

    • Thanks 5
  3. 17 minutes ago, Fonty said:

     

    Thank you very much for this.  As a matter of interest, how are the Wilis supposed to kill their victims?  I have always thought that they literally danced their victims to death (similar to the fate of the chosen one in the Rite of Spring).  My practical mind wonders about these details.  They have marked similarities to vampires, so perhaps they are supposed to suck his blood?  Or do they just swarm over him and tear him to pieces?  Either way my mind is producing Hammer Horror images.....

     

    Also, I have always felt so sorry for Hilarion.  He has done nothing wrong other than genuinely love Giselle.  

    😂 to your Hammer Horror images! Yes, the Wilis are supposed to dance their victims to death but, so that we do not have poor Hilarion's corpse onstage for the rest of Act 2, he is chased out of the glade and falls into the pond and drowns because of his exhaustion (slight artistic licence here as we cannot magic up the water splashing as he hits it!).  I, too, feel sorry for Hilarion, especially as in this production he is a nice guy, understandably concerned for Giselle although obviously jealous of Albrecht.  However, that is the way of the Wilis- they are out to avenge themselves on any man, guilty or not!

    • Like 6
    • Thanks 1
  4. 22 minutes ago, LinMM said:

    Sorry just for clarity’s sake does “sadly  Cojocaru did not embrace the Skeaping Production” mean that she didn’t actually appear in it or she wanted to change certain things within it? 

    She danced in it in 2017 but was not interested in embracing many of the elements unique to Skeaping's production, unlike last-minute guest artist Jurgita Dronina who was keen to embrace all of them.

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 3
  5. 1 hour ago, Dawnstar said:

    This is ramblings rather than a proper review. Warning: I am probably hopelessly biased towards Frola, as he's been one of my favourite dancers since I first saw him in Manon 5 seasons ago.

     

    Well, after 2 attempts in under 48 hours to see Oliveira & Frola it three-quarters worked! I'm very glad I made a second attempt as I'd been looking forward to seeing Frola as Albrecht for months & he was worth the wait. I didn't get round to posting anything on here about Friday's cast but I felt that Arrieta, while he gave a decent performance, came over as rather too nice in most of Act I to be plausible as a two-timing cad. I thought Frola managed to find significantly more acting nuances indicating that he was playing with the situation & was not being entirely sincere with Giselle and then more emotional depth in Albrecht's unmasking & witnessing of Giselle's madness & death. His dancing was, as always, wonderful in my opinion. I'm very pleased that Giselle & Albrecht get the extra Act I pdd. I thought his Act II solo was glorious, I had tears in my eyes from the sheer quality of the jumps. I don't know if it was because I was seeing them from different angles but there was one jump during the solo that looked different & more spectacular than what Arrieta did. I don't know the name of the jump but when Albrecht comes downstage towards Myrtha and does three up-and-round jumps en route my far-right-edge of the stalls seat was at the perfect angle to see it. I wish Adam had written far more music for the dance to near-death as I didn't want Frola to stop!

     

    It's not possible to fully judge today's Giselles with them doing only an act each. I thought Oliveira was very good in Act I and it was a great pity she was unable to show the rest of her portrayal. I suppose I'll never see her do a full Giselle now. I wouldn't have guessed she was ill from her performance, though admittedly as Giselle goes mad possibly playing a distraught character could hide potential signs of illness. I'm getting very confused by the Act I hops. It looked to me like Oliveira did more of them than Khaniukova did but neither did as many as I feel I've seen previously & I thought Cojocaru did more but then someone mentioned upthread that Ratmansky's production doesn't include then. Another good moment from my viewing angle was that as Albrecht has to take Bathilde's hand Giselle was framed between them before she ran to break them apart. I thought Takahashi did very well in Act II under the circumstances but unfortunately I found it difficult to feel as much emotional connection with her Giselle given we hadn't seen first her pleasure and then her suffering & death previously. Considering she & Frola had presumably not rehearsed together I thought they worked very well together in general. The only slight indication of lack of rehearsal that I spotted was shen he was kneeling down & she bourreed over to him and as she got there & reached for his shoulder the distance seemed to be a bit wrong & her hand bumped into his shoulder rather than the presumably intended feather-light touch. Maybe it's a good thing this production doesn't have the big balance lift though given the circumstances. As the veil was whisked off Giselle, I thought that it could have been rather amusing if the cast change hadn't been announced & they'd left it for the audience to find out at the unveiling! (Yes, I know unprofessional & would never happen.)

     

    Getting to see McWhinney, who was my first Manon 5 years ago, was a bonus. I thought she was very good, especially considering it's her first role back from maternity leave, but I felt Suzuki on Friday was a bit better inherently suited to the role. I was glad I liked Dowden as Hilarion, as he was the only lead cast member who appeared in both his scheduled performances. (A thought that came into my mind during Hilarion's first appearance today: was the Medieval equivalent of Say It With Flowers, Say It With Pheasants?!)

     

    When the casting was first announced my first choice cast was Oliveira/Frola & my second choice cast Khaniukova/Arrieta however the way their dates worked out I would have had to see the former pair first and then the latter pair. Based on last year's Swan Lake, where I saw Arrieta & then Frola and was very pleased to have seen them in that order on the save-the-best-til-last principle, I didn't want to do that, plus I was broke at the time casting was announced so I decided to just book for the one cast. Ironically all the cast issues ended up with me being able to see Arrieta & Frola in that order! And yes, again it was definitely the best last.

     

    I don't know if more expert ballet-viewers will agree but in my opinion if you have to see Giselle from a restricted view seat then auditorium right is definitely the side to go for.

    Skeaping went back to Gautier's original conception of Albrecht not as a cad but as a young man caught between two loves (a very Romantic notion).  Indeed Gautier in his musings has Albrecht wonder why he cannot marry them both!  Skeaping therefore reinstated the complete pas de deux for Giselle and Albrecht in Act 1 (Pas des Vendanges) and, as far as I am aware, is the only choreographer/producer to have done so, as it is really an expression of their love for each other.  Of course, it is up to the individual as to whether they portray Albrecht as totally smitten with Giselle or as a pleasure-seeking cad, but I know which one Skeaping preferred! 

    • Like 8
    • Thanks 4
  6. 6 hours ago, Lizbie1 said:

     

    I doubt that we're talking about the same dancer but you've reminded me that I was meaning to be brave about this after I'd seen the production again.

     

    This all comes with the caveat that I only saw her once in Giselle and it was in this ENB 2017 run. I don't know how representative this is of her Giselle in general, or in this production or in the later part of her career, but I didn't love Cojocaru in the role.

     

    I should make clear that this had nothing to do with technique but was down to characterisation. One thing in particular sticks with me: while the peasant pas de deux was going on Cojocaru made a circuit of the onlookers, to show them her new necklace. I thought this wasn't just bad stage manners - quite distracting for the audience - but would have been bad manners in Giselle the character. For me it tipped Giselle over into the wrong kind of childish (over-indulged and perhaps simple-minded) and coloured the whole thing for me.

     

    I'm bringing it up on this thread because people have mentioned her above as an exemplary Giselle and I'd like to know if seeing her earlier would have shown me something else - those who've seen her throughout her career might have an interesting perspective. Also, I like to see minority opinions aired so I shouldn't just leave it to others to be brave.

     

    I should probably delete my account now!

    Sadly, Cojocaru did not embrace the Skeaping production.

    • Like 3
  7. 6 hours ago, Jamesrhblack said:

    I booked this Giselle for the production rather than any particular dancers, having seen the Skeaping version nearly forty years ago when I knew much less than the little I know of the historical background of the ballet, and then again in 2017 when I was so flummoxed by an unexpectedly disappointing performance from a highly regarded dancer that my memory is of that rather than anything else.

     

    Having seen the current RB Peter Wright production many times, it wasn’t until I saw Ratmansky’s production as danced by United Ukrainian Ballet that I realised that there were other possibly preferable solutions to the challenges posed. It may be that I enjoyed that as a production even more than today, but I was very pleased to have an opportunity properly to appreciate this classic production from an excellent, if leg-restricted, seat in the front centre of the Upper CIrcle.

     

    As with Ratmansky, it was good to hear the fuller version of the score, which is what I grew up on as my father had the Bonynge Monte-Carlo LP’s. Others better informed than I will be able to comment more appropriately but two details particularly caught my eye.

     

    In Act 1, as Giselle sought reassurance from Albrecht (or rather Loys) in front of Bathilde, rather than meeting her eye his gaze was locked on Hilarion who had penetrated his disguise. At that moment, Giselle “knew.” This tiny anticipation of the truth, precipitating her breakdown, was really striking.

     

    The other was in Act 2 when Giselle lures an exhausted Albrecht back to the dance. Is somebody able to explain for me the intent? It read to me as Giselle saying, “Remember, I love to dance,” her inner Wili surfacing, but it could equally have meant, “Remember, I love you. Now dance,” which isn’t quite the same thing.

     

    I thought Fernanda Oliveira exquisite, although I remarked to my companion at the interval that she seemed very fragile. I’m not sure whether that was her characterisation or a symptom of the indisposition that took her out of her first performance and out of the Second Act today. The gentleness, but also the coquetry were there, and her Giselle visibly grew in confidence in her relationship with Loys, making her betrayal very poignant.

     

    Again, might somebody who knows better advise as to whether her modification of the hopping sequence in the Act 1 Solo is Skeaping or a very effective alteration necessitated by her weakened health (I’m also sure that Laura Morera took this sequence on the other side and foot).

     

    Kudos to Erina Takahashi for saving the show with a new partner, minimal notice and no doubt whilst in anticipated recovery mode after dancing last night. Her technique seems more obviously steely and brilliant than Oliveira’s making for some thrilling moments of height and flight, yet beautifully softened in the Pas de deux. I wish that over the years I had come to know more of both these evidently very accomplished ballerinas.

     

    I didn’t get a lot of sense of emotional involvement from Francesco Gabriele Frola, nor did I think he strung his Act 2 solo into a sequence rather than individual moments (I’m not sure how better to express this), but those moments were certainly impressive.

     

    The extended version of Myrtha’s entrance, so akin to the 19th Century Recitative-Aria-Link-Cabaletta is thrilling to behold. I didn’t find Alison McWhinney as baleful or menacing as memory still tells me Monica Mason was, but she sure can jump and her stamina was impressive too. In terms of lighting, I thought a couple of moments were the darker side of atmospheric, but Myrtha leaping through the ranks of the Foresters was terrific.
     

    Unqualified praise for the ladies of the Corp de Ballet in Act 2, never betraying any sense of the exhaustion they must surely be feeling at the end of the week (again, can somebody explain to me the significance of the heads facing over the shoulder and out during the travelling arabesques in opposition rather than looking down) and just about for the orchestra too, apart from a couple of horn fluffs, under Daniel Parkinson’s fluent baton, without any of the over slow tempi that seem to plague The Royal Ballet’s musical response.

     

    I really enjoyed it very much and hope it won’t be too long before this beautiful production returns.

    In the section you refer to in Act 2, Myrtha commands Giselle to get Albrecht up after he has fallen to the ground.  The mime Giselle says is "You remember how we loved and how we danced" in the hope that this will get him to his feet again, as she knows she must keep him dancing until dawn or the Wilis will kill him.  The beautiful supported series of temps levées following his next solo are again to keep him moving.

     

    The sharp-eyed in today's audience may have noticed a slight limping by Oliveira towards the end of the mad scene and this is unfortunately why she had to withdraw from the rest of the ballet, as she had a problem with her calf which sadly prevented us from seeing her beautifully ethereal Act 2.  Heartfelt thanks to Erina Takahashi for taking over!   

     

    In Giselle's first Act 1 solo (she has two in the Skeaping production), there is an alternative to the diagonal of hops which Oliveira did today and Khaniukova did on Thursday and Friday which I actually prefer as it makes this interpolated solo (from around 1880) slightly more Romantic in feel and less of a show-off number. And yes, dancers who choose to do the whole sequence of hops can use either diagonal,  for whichever supporting leg is stronger.

     

    Myrtha does not have to appear baleful or menacing in her first solo.  Wilis, when mortal, had an overwhelming love of dance, and, in death, this passion is indulged.  Therefore, this solo (longer in the Skeaping version than in any other because it uses Adam's music for this almost in its entirety) is meant to portray this passion, building to an almost ecstatic climax, and is what Gautier intended.  Myrtha becomes menacing only when confronting potential male victims.  

     

    In the 'travelling arabesques' (a much nicer description than Alistair Macaulay's reference to them as cow-hops!), the Wilis look to the audience to indicate that they hypnotise/seduce their potential victims with their beautiful eyes.  Therefore, the arms are in third arabesque, rather than first, to allow the head to turn to the audience.

    • Like 7
    • Thanks 13
  8. 11 hours ago, Dawnstar said:

     

    I didn't have a problem seeing the peasants on Friday, albeit I was sat front row stalls, but I was puzzled by their second appearance. I recall in the UUB production them being there at the start but not their reappearance being chased later by the wilis, while I don't recall them at all in the RB production. Is this my memory being useless or do they make an extra appearance in this production? It seems a bit much having not only Hilarion but also half a dozen other men killed in a single night!

     

    Still no cast list up for this afternoon. I'm on a train to London in the hope Oliveira & Frola are indeed on but I haven't yet bought a ticket in case they're not. I really hope there will still be tickets available by the time the cast is confirmed.

    The second appearance of the gamekeepers is in Adam's original score (and there are wonderful stage direction notes in the 1842 piano reduction of that) and was reinstated by Mary Skeaping (long after it had been jettisoned in Russian productions) to reinforce Heine's point that the Wilis are out for revenge on any man who crosses their path, not just those who have wronged women!  Never fear, the gamekeepers are not killed but are just used for sport by the Wilis!  In fact, in the original scenario (and Skeaping's original 1953 production), they were actually a different group of men (villagers returning from a party), accompanied by an older man who, realising they are becoming enthralled by these beautiful creatures whom he recognises as Wilis, tells them all to flee.  Skeaping probably changed it to the same group of men in her 1971 production for budgetary reasons (i.e. not so many costumes to make!), as well as a tighter storyline.

    • Like 3
    • Thanks 8
  9. 12 hours ago, Emeralds said:

    I agree- the audience missed a stunning double tour from Erik Woolhouse as Hilarion because it was in darkness. 

     

    Also, the scene with the male peasants and Hilarion in the forest in front of and near Giselle's grave was so dark that a few audience members had to switch on their programmes to work out what was happening....an unfortunate consequence of saving on lighting! Less disruptive to have more lighting on the stage and less in the auditorium. They all missed Hilarion miming that he still loved Giselle and missed her. They could have a bit of light (not a powerful spotlight but dim ones) over Giselle's grave to suggest there's moonlight on it and one on the peasants to suggest their lamps are working. We'll still be able to discern the wilis frightening them in the dark.

     

    I don't remember it being this dark in the last run. I thought perhaps it was my eyesight going with age (!) but the teen in our group with the robust eyesight of youth said, "no it isn't you- it's much too dark." Maybe someone at ENB could mention this to Mr Mohr to turn up the lighting a bit in this scene.....

    The original lighting in 1971 was by Charles Bristowe and was recreated a few years later by David Mohr.  It is now under the supervision of ENB's chief lighting technician, David Richardson.  The lighting has always been quite dark at the beginning of Act 2 and then there is meant to be a special effect when the gamekeepers return, with the Wilis being lit from the waist up to give the illusion of flying around the gamekeepers.  However, the computer-led technology of the 21st century does not seem to be able to be as accurate as the traditional lighting board of the 20th century!

    • Like 10
    • Thanks 4
  10. 6 hours ago, Candleque said:

    Thanks for all the reviews above. I love Giselle and was delighted to get to see opening night. Have been a fan girl of Aitor Arrieta since Emerging Dancer 2017. I didn't miss the entrechat six so much, but was truly bummed they didn't do the iconic horizontal lift in Act II. The aptly named angel lift. It's my fave moment in ballet period. I guess it isn't in this version? (I was holding my breathe for it and it didn't happen lol.)

    Don't have a good memory of Berthe's mime in other versions. If I didn't already know the story, I would not really understand what she is on about. 

     

    To me, the audience chuckles when a Wili goes flying by, et al, are more an automatic appreciation of the stagecraft than finding the show funny. They don't bother me. And I felt lots of love and appreciation in the audience for the dancers.

    Want to give a shout out to debutantes Ivana Bueno and Daniel McCormick for a fab Peasant pas de deux. Wish I could see his Albrecht.

    I am truly grateful to be booked for two more casts. Thanks to reasonable prices to begin with, and ENB allowing great offers on the public discount sites, I get to see Giselle three times in top tier seats, for less £££ than one stalls seat in the ROH. Bravo ENB.

    The angel lift was introduced to the west by the Bolshoi Ballet in 1956, three years after Mary Skeaping's initial production of "Giselle" for the Royal Swedish Ballet and Ballet Alicia Alonso.  It is a 20th century invention and therefore had no place in her recreation of the Romantic era.  Instead, she  uses a more delicate lift.  This can also be seen in the archive film of Markova and Dolin dancing in his production for the newly formed London Festival Ballet.

    • Like 6
    • Thanks 4
  11. 4 hours ago, CHazell2 said:

    I hate the hover lift, so showy. I prefer the vertical lift as it is more authentic. 

     

    Are the Giselles doing the diagonal after their Act One solos this time around or the pique turns? As when I saw it in 2017, they were doing the piques, and I just wondered if they were doing the Diagonal again

     It is up to each Giselle to decide which version she does.  Shiori Kase will be doing the diagonal.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  12. Just to answer a few questions, Fernanda Oliveira unfortunately is indisposed but is planning to do her performance this Sunday.  Francesco Gabriele Frola is fine!  Due to the company's punishing "Nutcracker" schedule with so many double-show days, by this evening, there had been four stage calls of "Giselle" in three days (including the dress rehearsal) to cover this week's casts.  With both the Lee/Haw casts and the Takahashi/McCormick casts having their first performances tomorrow, the decision was made this morning, when it was clear Oliveira was unable to perform, to ask Khaniukova and Arrieta to step into the breach which, in my opinion, they did brilliantly, especially as it meant they had danced the complete ballet three nights in a row!  

     

    With regard to Berthe's mime of the story of the Wilis, there is a full explanation in the programme of the gestures.  In the Royal Ballet's current production, it is longer than Skeaping's as she edited it slightly.  Tamara Karsavina was the source for both versions.

     

    Albrecht's solos in Act 2 are not set in stone by Mary Skeaping, as each dancer is allowed some freedom, as long as they remain in the Romantic style and do not perform the 32 entrechats six, which Skeaping abhored.  The series of 32 were first introduced into the UK by Nureyev and are certainly not part of the Sergueyev staging for the Camargo Society or Sadler's Wells Ballet.

     

     

    • Like 8
    • Thanks 18
  13. 2 hours ago, Blossom said:

    Lovely to see Alison McWhinney back on stage post maternity leave at the working stage rehearsal this evening- I have missed her.

     

    @Irmgard interested to know if you have any information on costumes for this production, particularly the ‘regal’ party attire… Men seemed to be wearing Tudor costume but the ladies’ costumes did not seem to be from the same era so would love some more insight.

    These are David Walker's designs and suggest the early Tudor period for the ladies, as well as the gentlemen, before ruffs and farthingales.   Yes, it is lovely to have Alison back dancing again.  If you were still in the auditorium when a loud cheer went up behind the curtain, it was all her colleagues, led by Aaron Watkin, cheering her for he fabulous return to the stage.

    • Like 6
  14. On 04/11/2023 at 16:37, Emeralds said:

    T

     

    Giselle was a very early lead role for Shirori even before becoming principal, so she has a lot of experience in the role, while Katja has danced Giselle as a guest in Kyiv with Jeffrey Cirio pre-pandemic and during the  United Ukrainian Ballet performances in Netherlands (both different productions to ENB) so the role has a lot of emotional significance for her. 

     

    Both the Skeaping and Wright productions are quite traditional. The ENB Skeaping one has the peasant divertissement as a pas de deux instead of RB's pas de six; the traditional version is indeed for only 1 couple- it's meant to contrast their uncomplicated, trusting relationship with Giselle and Albrecht's complicated one.

     

    There is an extended passage of dancing in Act 2 for Myrtha set to a fugue that is in Adolphe Adam's score which works really well and is danced beautifully at ENB. Most of the production you will recognise and enjoy. 

     

    Shiori Kase has never danced Giselle before.  This will be her debut in the role.  Katja Khaniukova has danced the Skeaping Giselle before, but only one performance in Belfast.  This will be her London debut.   

     

    Myrtha's extended passage of dancing is actually her first solo which is much longer than in most productions and uses almost all the music Adam composed for her.  The Fugue is mainly danced by the Wilis when Myrtha commands them to get Albrecht away from the cross. When they fail, she uses the final few bars of the Fugue and commands Giselle herself to move away from the cross and dance.  The Skeaping version also includes the Pas de Vendanges in Act I in its entirety.  This is the big central pas de deux for Giselle and Albrecht composed by Adam which not even Ratmansky in his "historically informed" version attempted to include.  It includes solos for Giselle and for Albrecht, both choreographed by Skeaping, and comes at the height of the festival, just after Giselle is crowned.  Both Acts in Skeaping's version are approximately one hour long, certainly making it longer than Peter Wright's production for the Royal Ballet. 

     

    As we are currently rehearsing the Skeaping production, I am pleased to report that our lovely Wilis do not resemble cows in any way as they perform the 'shunts' across the stage, and all our Giselles fly beautifully in their temps levés supported by their Albrechts ☺️.

    • Like 6
    • Thanks 5
  15. I attended the matinée on 30 September to see the final cast change (for me) in the first and last ballets.  The named cast for “Les Noces” has remained the same throughout, but I have noticed a couple of changes in the supporting cast.  All have given their hearts and souls to this work but I would like to give a special mention to Erik Woolhouse, who was certainly in every performance I saw, for his dynamic, powerful dancing.  I still feel this work would have been better presented using the original Russian text, as the chorus at times sounded like an English choral society (no disrespect to either) instead of animated Slavs.  Choreographically, I found much to admire, although I felt the silences and additions to Stravinsky’s music could have been jettisoned to tighten it up a bit.

     

    This was my first chance to see all the new dancers from Dresden in “Theme and Variations”, as Anna Nevzorova and Vsevolod Maievskyi appeared as Demi Soloists.  The principal couple were Sangeun Lee and Gareth Haw, who gave a polished, elegant performance, although Haw’s dancing was not quite as clean as Lee’s.  With such long legs, Lee negotiated the allegro solo extremely well but I prefer the quicksilver brilliance a compact dancer like Khaniukova brings to the choreography.  It was lovely to see Angela Wood as one of the Demi Soloists, always catching my eye with her radiant smile, and Breanna Foad sparkling in the corps de ballet before yet another tour-de-force performance as the Chosen One in “Les Noces”.

     

    For me, this performance of “Four Last Songs” was sublime.  Fernanda Oliveira, who joined the cast on Thursday night, was partnered by Aitor Arrieta in the pas de deux of the third song (“Beim Schlafengehen”) and looked as if it could have been created on her, so meltingly beautiful and expressive was her dancing, with Arrieta partnering her exceptionally tenderly.  Again, Khaniukova impressed with her musicality, radiance and achingly beautiful backbends, and Takahashi shone throughout, especially in the final song.  The moment when she was carried offstage by the men, with her body arched and her arms spread behind her like wings was pure magic. The rest of the cast (Minju Kang, Georgia Bould, Julia Conway, Daniel McCormick, Skyler Martin, Jose Maria Lorca Menchon, Noam Durand and Archie Sullivan) rose to the occasion of dancing with these stellar artists in a truly memorable performance which deservedly received a standing ovation from a surprisingly full house, given the transport issues and a dress rehearsal down the road.  What I particularly liked about this cast, and similarly when Ivana Bueno and Lorenzo Trossello danced the third pas de deux on Wednesday, was the way they reacted to each other throughout the whole piece so that there was a tangible, almost spiritual link between each song.

     

    I am pleased to report that Emma Hawes had recovered from her injury to appear in the evening’s performance of “Theme and Variations”.

     

    “Our Voices” has been a bold and very positive start to Aaron Watkin’s artistic directorship. I have thoroughly enjoyed watching the company tackle three extremely different works with gusto and it has been wonderful to experience the audience’s loud ovations for each piece at every performance I attended.  There was definitely something for everyone, and the look of joy on the dancers’ faces as they took multiple bows said it all.

    • Like 12
    • Thanks 1
  16. 4 hours ago, Dawnstar said:

    I can't say I could identify many of the dancers. I think the bottom left couple are Gareth Haw & Saegun Lee. I think the man bottom right is Matthew Astley but I'm not sure about the two women. Paging @Irmgard, who I imagine will be able to name every single dancer with ease!

    Top photo from Theme and Variations: Eireen Evrard, Anna Nevzorova, Angela Wood, with Minju Kang at the front.

    Photo from Four Last Songs:  Maestro Sutherland, Julia Conway, Skylar Martin, Eric Snyder, Daniel McCormick, MInju Kang, Erina Takahasi, Lorenzo Trossello, Ivana Bueno, Madeleine Pierard, Archie Sullivan, with Noam Durand, Katja Khaniukova and Georgia Bould at the front.

    Bottom left; Gareth Haw and Sangeun Lee

    Bottom right: Claire Barrett, Matthew Astley and Rebecca Blenkinsopp

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 3
  17. Making the most of a day in London, I went from the matinee of Kyiv City Ballet at the Peacock Theatre to the evening performance by English National Ballet at Sadler’s Wells, mainly to see the new casts in “Theme and Variations” and “Four Last Songs”.

     

    “Theme and Variations” should have seen the débuts of a new set of Demi Soloists but, due to Adriana Lizardi and Jem Choi being off through injury, it was only Chloe Keneally and Francesca Velicu who made their debuts amongst the females, with Haruhi Otani and Emily Suzuki from opening night covering for their colleagues.  Keneally, in particular, brought her beautiful legato quality to the adagio choreography and Velicu sparkled in the allegro sections.  The gentlemen seem to have fared better with regard to injury and illness, so this marked the débuts of Noam Durand, Shunhei Fuchiyama, Miguel Angel Maidana and Rhys Antoni Yeomans as Demi Soloists, all taking up the challenge of Balanchine with great enthusiasm.  There was another scintillating performance from the exquisite Katja Khaniukova as the ballerina. I thought the adagio section of balances en pointe was even more sublime than at her début and she made the fiendishly fast and furious choreography of her solo look effortless.  Once again, Francesco Gabriele Frola tossed off all the complexities of the choreography with consummate ease, gaining great height in his jumps, and giving us another set of immaculate double tours en l’air.  This ballet does get more thrilling with each viewing!

     

    I spoke with Maestro Sutherland before the performance, and he assured me that the only amplification that there should be is a very modest one for the chorus in “Les Noces” so that they can be heard over the 65-piece orchestra and, sitting in the stalls, I only noticed their amplification at one point during the piece so hopefully those sitting higher up also benefitted from only minimal amplification in “Les Noces”.  I was assured that the amplification of the other two pieces had been removed after opening night, and I was certainly aware of hearing the music in its ‘natural state’ at this performance and last Friday.

     

    In “Les Noces”, I concentrated on the music and the choreography and ignored the words as much as possible.  Once again, I appreciated the tour-de-force performances of Breanna Foad and Rentaro Nakaaki in particular, and marvelled at the gut-wrenching performance of Alice Bellini.  Francesca Velicu looked so tiny and vulnerable as the next victim and showed the fabulous capacity for these dancers to move from the height of classicism in the Balanchine to the raw movement language of Andrea Miller.

     

    This was the second performance for the second cast of “Four Last Songs”, having made their débuts the night before.  Due to the indisposition of Shiori Kase, Minju Kang was given the opportunity to shine in this piece, as was Georgia Bould, a stalwart of the corps de ballet for some time.  Khaniukova took the lead in the first song, partnered for the most part by Durand, and I was struck by the way she completely inhabited the music, which seemed to flow throughout her body making the movement look utterly seamless.  The radiant serenity she expressed was the transfiguration I had been longing for!  In fact, all the ladies in this cast looked radiant, with a delicious femininity which brought a different colour to the choreography which was very uplifting.  The central pas de deux in the third song was meltingly beautiful and danced with great spirituality by Ivana Bueno and Lorenzo Trossello (both taking on their second roles in this ballet).  Bueno is most definitely a ballerina in the making and has been rewarded with the opening night of “Nutcracker” at the Coliseum – a performance not to be missed!  In the final song, Khaniukova was partnered at times by Daniel McCormick who brought a beautiful, soft quality to all his dancing, including the little spins on demi-pointe around the stage towards the end of the ballet – different from the powerhouse dancing of Frola but equally moving.  Central to this final song was the exquisite Erina Takahashi (also taking on her second role in the piece), bringing a tenderness to the choreography which was intensely poignant.  As well as McCormick, Trossello and Durand, Skyler Martin, Eric Snyder and Archie Sullivan made up the sextet of men who remain largely anonymous in this ballet but provide the very skillful partnering required to make the choreography flow so beautifully.  Again, I noticed that there is something new to discover in it on each viewing.

    • Like 8
    • Thanks 3
  18. I attended the matinée on 27 September and it was a very enjoyable way to spend a Wednesday afternoon.  This gallant little company of twenty dancers has been homeless since they flew from Kyiv to Paris on 23 February 2022 to start a European tour, unlike the United Ukrainian Ballet in which dancers fleeing from Ukraine were given a home and rehearsal premises in the Hague.  It is to the credit of directors Ivan and Ekaterina Kozlov that they have managed to find enough work and support to keep their company going and is a testament to the indomitable Ukrainian spirit.  Looking at the ladies of the corps de ballet, I noticed how very young they are to be separated from their families during what is such a traumatic time for all Ukrainians.   With any small touring company such as this, there is a varying degree of technical ability but what is noticeable about this group of dancers is their evident love of dance and how happy they are to be able to perform.  They gave a very good mixture of excerpts and stand-alone pieces which were well received by a very enthusiastic audience.

     

    The company has six principals, and I recognised Kristina Kadashevych, from Kharkiv, from my visit to Kyiv in October 2021 for the Ballet Festival and Competition where she and her partner were awarded the pas de deux prize for their very steamy performance of the pas de deux for Crassus and Aegena from “Spartacus”.  At the matinée, she struggled a little with the balances in the Act II pas de deux from “Giselle” but sparkled mischievously in the little bit of fluff which was the pas de deux “Sirtaki” choreographed by A. Rubina to what we know as the theme from “Zorba the Greek”, partnered by an equally cheeky Yevheniy Sheremet, the plot of which seemed to be what two Greek statues get up to when they come to life.  She and Vladyslav Bosenko opened the second half of the programme with a dazzling performance of the pas de deux from “The Talisman”, accompanied by the graceful ladies of the corps de ballet.  The company has several very tall male dancers, including Bosenko who covered the whole stage in just two jetés on the diagonal, and I would love to see what they can do on a much larger stage.  Bosenko also impressed in the pas de deux (done here in the pas de trois version) from “Le Corsaire”.  Unlike recent productions, Andrii Havryliuk as Conrad was not given a solo but acted solely as a ‘porteur’ for Oksana Bondarenko as Medora.  She suffered from a rather unflattering costume, which demonstrated how much better the Petipa choreography for her (here attributed to Perrot) looks when done in a traditional tutu rather than harem pants.  Bondarenko and Havryliuk also gave us the pas d’action for Gamzatti and Solor from “La Bayadère”, one of three segments from that ballet given in the programme.  There were three pieces of new choreography, firstly “Servant of the Muse” danced by Kateryna Floria and Artem Shoshin to the Intermezzo from Mascagni’s “Cavalleria Rusticana” and choreographed by V. Kastsel which seemed to have a plot slightly similar to “Le jeune homme et la mort”, with the young artist at the mercy of a dominating female.  Secondly, “Next to you” choreographed by the dancer Shoshin and performed by him with Floria to music by Beethoven which had a lot of contemporary movements and lifts in it which was very warmly received by the audience. Lastly, there was an excerpt from “Tribute to Peace” by company director Kozlov to the Nimrod variation from Elgar’s “Enigma Variations” which was a very charming piece danced by Kadashevych and Bosenko.  The Ukrainian Cossack heritage was very much on display in the Ostap dance from “Taras Bulba”, thrillingly danced by Nykyta Chudovksy, and in “Men of Kyiv”, choreographed by P. Virsky to Ukrainian folk music.  Danced by all the male dancers, it began rather tamely but soon livened up as they had a dance-off, with each dancer competing to show us their most spectacular steps.  I only wish it had been longer, but it was an exhilarating end to a packed and very entertaining afternoon which also gave us a variation from “Laurencia”, “The Dying Swan” and a fragment from Alberto Alonso’s “Carmen Suite”, danced with panache by Kateryna Floria and Mykhailo Shcherbakov. Rail strikes and public transport issues notwithstanding, I would recommend this as a great entertainment this weekend for anyone wishing to get a taste of various classics with a dash of the modern and folk dance.

    • Like 12
  19. 4 hours ago, Dawnstar said:

     

    Lovely to meet you last night but it may have been a good thing that we met up beforehand rather than afterwards as we would have certainly disagreed on the programme!!

     

    Having finally managed to see Themes & Variations at my second attempt last night I enjoyed it far more than the other two pieces. In fact in a way my very delayed train did me a favour as it meant I inadvertantly saved the best until last. If I'd seen the programme in the order it should have been seen then I think I would have disliked Les Noces even more than I did. As it was I left on a high last night, and got home at five to ten just as the performance would have been finishing! I also had a far better seat for the same price, unrestricted front stalls compared to restricted view front circle.

     

    I thought Khaniukova & Frola made a really good pair. I'm surprised they're not paired together more, given she looks the perfect height for him compared to some of the other female dancers I've seen him with who have been a bit too tall for him. I thought their fairly long pdd was lovely. I did wish that Balanchine had given both of them rather longer solos, but I'd need a time machine to request that!

     

    I was slightly surprised to see Khaniukova's changed her hair colour again. In the last couple of seasons she's gone brunette to blonde & now back to brunette - it's no wonder she's a dancer I sometimes have problems in recognising when she's part of a group!

     

    Another slight favour the delayed train did me was that last night's group of demi-soloists included rather more dancers who I like than Friday's group would have: Velicu, Suzuki, Yeomans & Durand. I could only identify some of the corps dancers but I was a bit surprised to see Downden among them, given he has one of the biggest roles in Les Noces. Though I suppose the male corps aren't on stage for that long in T&V. Does anyone know if it was the same 8 male & 8 female corps dancers in every performance or if the company have been rotating?

     

    As no-one has yet posted any curtain call photos on this thread, a couple from last night. I know the tutus have divided opinion but I thought they were really nice.

     

    P1650247.jpg

     

    P1650255.jpg

    To answer your question about the corps de ballet in Theme and Variations, there are several casts but some dancers appear in more than one cast, others rotate, especially as a few dancers are unfortunately injured and therefore need to be replaced.  Nakaaki, who has such a huge role in Les Noces, alternates as a Demi Soloist and corps de ballet in Theme and Variations. Thanks for the lovely curtain call photos. 

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 2
×
×
  • Create New...