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Jane S

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Everything posted by Jane S

  1. I think that was probably a uniquely Bournonville-packed season, John, as they had to get so many ballets back on to the stage . The next season, so far as I remember, they only did Kermessen in Bruges and maybe one other and that has been the rule ever since. There were 3 Bournonville Festivals, 13 years apart, and #4 would have been next year - but Hubbe doesn't like the concept as he thinks it reinforces the impression in the outside world that the Danes only do Bournonville. The plan for a week that shows off a selection of work from the whole season is actually a return to an older custom and it will be interesting to see how it works. (Though I do think they might have given Napoli a run earlier in the season rather than just putting it on for 1 performance.)
  2. It's set in the 1700s, apparently - so a rococo launderette at least.
  3. Next season in Copehagen includes; Raymonda, produced by Nikolaj Hubbe A full-evening Queen of Spades by Liam Scarlett A new version of the Kylian evening Silk and Knife Reruns of Swan Lake, Giselle, Kim Brandstrup's Shaken Mirror, Balanchine's Nutcracker, Akram Khan's Vertical Road A new piece for the RDB School by Gregory Dean A portrain of Sorella Englund AND A week's Festival in the first week of June, including Napoli but not limited to the Bournonville repertoire. Full details here
  4. There was a link to the right page on the theatre's website this morning but I can't find it now - worth checking here again in the morning, or otherwise, as mentioned above, try the theatre's Facebook page. NB it's at 10.00 Danish time, i.e. 9.00 UK time. Also it's for the whole theatre - ballet, opera and drama.
  5. SFB has put online the video shown at Lorena Feijoo's farewell earlier this week it shows her virtuousity but doesn't really bring out the musicality and stage presence which made me a life-time fan within 10 seconds of the first time I saw her, dancing Balanchine's Tchaikowsky pas de deux at the gala that opened SFB's first Sadler's Wells season. She had a grown-up glamour and authority which made me think of the ballerinas of the Ballets Russe era, and of my great regrets is that I didn't see more of her.
  6. Anyone fearing withdrawal symptoms when the RB's run of Jewels ends on Friday could pop over to Copenhagen on Saturday and see the Royal Danish Ballet's first night! They haven't danced it before so everyone is new to it - there are some nice photos online and although unfortunately the company seems to have stopped adding captions to identify the dancers, anyone who's caught the recent online Giselle or R&J will recognise at least some of them,. I'm hoping to see a performance later in the run, but if someone sees it before then, please report back!
  7. They may look hilarious to our eyes but they are like that for a reason - each one of the men is dressed to resemble a fashionable 'celebrity' of the time - I can't remember who they all are except that one is Liszt. (And incidentally I saw a young man in London this week who had exactly the hairstyle and moustache of one of them, worn for stylishness rather than irony by the look of him!)
  8. No to all those. We'd get there by a process of elimination in the end, but in fact the dancer in question is Akane Takada, A fine dancer whose rise to principal level got remarkably little attention in the press, so it's good to see her getting a bit of the limelight. But why just now, I wonder? (Of course the headline may just be an attention-grabber and not reflect the actual article at all - we'll see tomorrow.)
  9. Today's Times is trailing a feature in tomorrow's T2 under the title 'Meet the Royal Ballet's new sensation' Just out of interest, and assuming you don't already know, who would you guess this might be?
  10. The RB only did Taming of the Shrew because their planned first run of Onegin had to be cancelled very late on because of a problem with the fire-proofing of the sets and they had to find something else to do. It was dropped after a brief second run in the next season.
  11. The dancers in blue were Caroline Baldwin and Jonathan Chmelensky, the set designer is Maja Ziska and the costume designer is Mia Stensgaard
  12. Pacific Northwest Ballet, which has had Jewels in its repertoire for some time, is reviving it next season with new costumes by Jerome Kaplan - so it's not actually that uncommon for the Trust to allow changes. And yes, Alison - Lacroix
  13. I haven't seen much about this yet, although it's next month and sounds mildly sensational: The Mark Morris Dance Company will be appearing at the Royal Court Liverpool from May 25th - 27th in a new work, Pepperland, set to a score inspired by Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It's part of Liverpool's Heading for Home Festival and details are here
  14. Odd, though, that when you get to the page about him he's not described as a 'guest artist' - as is Galeazzi, for instance - but as 'former Royal Ballet Principal'. Later - actually I see he's listed as a guest artist on one list and not on another so I guess they just haven't completely finished their updating.
  15. On Sunday April 2nd at 8 pm BBC4 is showing a 1-hour programme called Giselle: Belle of the Ballet, in which Tamara Rojo uses ENB's two productions as a basis for an examination of "the cultural and social background to the ballet's genesis in 1840s Paris, and the spiritual themes that have fuelled its success over the last 175 years." There's a clip showing the first 3 minutes of the programme here
  16. Just a footnote to the Lilac Fairy discussion: I'm a bit surprised to see Monica Mason's name mentioned so often as so far as I know she only danced the role a handful of times, over a year or so quite late on in her dancing career. I only saw her once (her debut, I think) and don't remember being blown away by her. By far my best memory is of Deanne Bergsma, who gave 70+ performances, starting when she was 19 and still in the corps de ballet. Bergsma made her debut on the same day as Vyvyan Lorrayne (aged 21 and also in the corps de ballet) and Dance & Dancers (Clive Barnes, I'd guess) featured Bergsma as its 'Dancer you will know' the next month: " June 11, 1960, will probably be remembered in Royal Ballet annals as the day the Lilac Fairies came to Covent Garden. With Vyvyan Lorrayne in the afternoon and Deanne Bergsma in the evening, the company produced a brance of lilac ladies so promising, so assured, that even the the fiendish ingenuity of Oliver Messel's new costumes could not extinguish them. .... As the Lilac Fairy [bergsma] brought to the role a young, almost shy dignity, a sort of reticent expansiveness, a blazing personality still obscured by the clouds of inexperience. Her dancing was a similar mixture, with its unusual blend of fluency and gawkiness. She was like a gracefully clumsy foal that is clearly going to become a thoroughbred racehorse. It was a most exciting debut." A wonderful description - Bergsma was 7 years away from being a principal and I really don't believe that the most senior dancers we've seen in the role over the decades were necessarily the best. Nunez excepted, obviously.
  17. I've seen it most often with The Lesson in Denmark, but also with Etudes, a piece by Jorma Elo, and Symphony in C. I'd really like to see it paired with Balanchine's Donizetti Variations (which, incidentally, the Royal Ballet really ought to get for Sambe and others).
  18. Didn't the RB do it with Les Rendezvous one season?
  19. Bennet Gartside being the obvious example. Though maybe he could do Siegfried sometime if that's what it takes...
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