Jump to content

Coated

Members
  • Posts

    754
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Coated

  1. I saw the performance on the 1st (and met Sabine for some nice interval chats) and was quite taken with the Cranko version. The scene where Juliet is lowered into the crypt is particularly stunning, I thought its staging was a masterpiece of theatricality.

     

    The Carnival King and his slightly bonkers entourage was fun, and I might prefer that to the Macmillan version (would need to see the Cranko another 8 times to decide :) ). Murilo Gabriel made it all look easy and high octane at the same time.

     

    I guess I'm a little spoiled with excellent casts from RB and BRB, but I didn't really get engaged with the performance and characters like Tybalt barely registered for me. I do love Gary Avis eating the scenery as Tybalt and accept that not all Tybalts will be that fulsome, but I expect a little more drama than I got that night. Polina Semionova and Alejandro Virelles were not an ideal match in my opinion, starting with him being too short for her which made some of the lifts look very earthbound and a little clumsy to me. When I saw Virelles in his last performances at the ENB, he seemed very disengaged on stage. Thankfully he appears more switched on with Staatsballet Berlin, but I still couldn't connect to his Romeo. There was some fine dancing, and I'd like to see a bit more or Semionova one day, but I won't race back to Berlin to see more R&Js in a hurry. (I'll be saving up my pennies to see their fantastic Bayadere again instead)

     

    @squadron I think Mercutio takes a bit too long to die in most (all?) productions partially due to the music that no one seems keen to cut for that scene, but for the R&J death scene it depends on the cast whether it's breathtaking drama or flopping about with additional stabbing.

    • Like 1
  2. There's an interesting New York Times article from 1978 about Baryshnikov's Don Q and how he chopped and changed the ballet. His changes might have been more drastic that the average new production, but it gives a nice flavour of how ballet develops over the years

    https://www.nytimes.com/1978/05/21/archives/dance-view-ballet-theaters-new-don-quixote.html

     

    There's also an excerpt from the Don Q program on the ROH site

    https://www.roh.org.uk/news/the-spirit-of-don-quixote-a-history-of-the-ballet

     

    The Petipa society also has a fair bit on Don Q history

    https://petipasociety.com/don-quixote/

     

     

    • Like 1
  3. 1 hour ago, alison said:

    No, I haven't seen any sign of discounts for Two Pigeons, despite the fact that - surprise surprise - it hasn't sold that well.  I get the feeling they'd prefer to cut off their nose to spite their face rather than try and get more bums on seats. 

    I think we might need to qualify what 'not sold well' means.

     

    There are currently 111 tickets out of 2256 available for the last performance, or just under 5% of tickets. That is a very very good number of tickets sold and nothing that requires papering.

     

    Yes, the RB can sell out a Nut 4 month before the performance, but that doesn't mean that 2 Pigeons is selling badly if it's scraping in near capacity 9 days before a performance.

    • Like 1
  4. It would be very useful if the ROH could put up a well sized notice board showing either the full cast or just changes, or put up some easily detectable signs in more than one location with the changes. The current method of small notices on (some) busy desks or showing something on screens that is not seen by all attendees is the main problem for me. There are no screens when coming in via bow street and then going to stalls or stalls circle. Not everyone has the time to wander the halls at the off-chance that they might find some information. 

     

    I'm perfectly happy to not have change slips as long as the information is easily available elsewhere. In terms of environmentally friendly, it would be much more beneficial if the ROH stopped printing cast lists, programmes and magazines on glossy paper. And stopped sending random appeal letters that could just as well be emails.

    • Like 11
  5. 3 hours ago, Amelia said:

    Those who are not tired of “The Nutcracker” yet can watch now the streaming of a new production from the Perm Opera & Ballet Theatre. Choreography by Alexey Miroshnichenko:

    https://yandex.ru/?stream_channel=1544436449&stream_id=45af40d466b1aa08a677cfb39d3a59a4

    Thanks for linking to this. I've not seen Perm Ballet before and rather enjoyed their Nut on a wintry Sunday afternoon. Would love to see more of the company some day, they looked rather interesting to me. 

     

    The flower costumes were quite something, perhaps a bit bulky but on a level of kitsch that I enjoy entirely unironically.

    • Like 2
  6. Ah, the power of Muntagirov. Made a friend watch Swan Lake on Christmas Day (not entirely involuntary, but it involved a fair amount of sweet talking and promises to switch off after the second act if she can't take it) and she started watching with what I can only class as derogative comments about Vadim's princely handsomeness (I didn't even strangle her for the comments...very cristmassy of me, I though).

     

    2 acts later she is glued to the screen demanding act 3 and declaring Vadream to be most marvellously glorious  :)

    • Like 11
  7. It would be disappointing if the Russians stopped coming or only brought Swan Lakes in future years but with the Bolshoi and SFB visiting this summer, a glorious (well, I assume they will be) run of ENB Swans and Manons coming up and scheduled London residences for Ballet Black, ENB, BRB, NB and other visitors at Sadlers, I don't feel I'd have much time to squish in performances outside of London even if I had a larger budget. 

×
×
  • Create New...