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Geoff

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Posts posted by Geoff

  1. I looked at the end credits, but it cuts out before they list them.

    (with apologies to Jane S who listed the fairies while I was preparing to copy from YouTube)

     

    According to comments on YouTube (some of the other comments are grotesquely rude, I am rather shocked):-

     

    Cast: Merle Park (Princess Aurora), David Wall (Prince Florimund), Monica Mason (Carabosse), Marguerite Porter (Lilac fairy), Jennifer Penney and Wayne Eagling (Bluebirds), Robert Jude (King Florestan), Rosalind Eyre (His Queen), Anita Young (White cat), Christopher Carr (Puss-in-boots), Wayne Sleep (Hop o' my thumb), Leslie Edwards (Cattalabutte). Conductor: Ashley Lawrence

     

    Fairies: No 1 Vergie Derman, No 2 Wendy Ellis, No 3 Alfreda Thorougood, No 4 Lesley Collier, No 5 Laura Connors, No 6 Marguerite Porter.

    • Like 1
  2. If you want some idea of how de Valois and pretty much everyone else thought that the Prologue and the rest of the balllet should look you should try to find the 1978 recording of the company dancing de Valois' new production at Covent Garden as part of her eightieth birthday celebrations. As it was not a film made for television, but a recording of a performance, it includes the Prologue.The images are rather fuzzy but you get a good impression of the way the ballet should look and how it should flow. If you are interested in searching it out try searching on Youtube for Wall and Park Royal Ballet Sleeping Beauty.See what you think.

    Thank you for the suggestion! Here is a link (I too had rather a lot of my Friday taken up with watching this, most illuminating and enjoyable):-

     

    http://youtu.be/H8L3l9KM9_0

  3. Reading through some of the comments, it seems I may not have been clear enough about ticket sales. At the risk of labouring the point, there were plenty of tickets available for PW's Insight evening from when they went on sale until the day of the event. By way of comparison the next season of Insights is currently going on sale to various categories of Friend, and all sold out before normal Friends got a chance, although a few more seats may be released in due course.

     

    By the way, I got the feeling that some students were given tickets at the last minute, which may explain the difference between sales and how the room looked during the evening. If true, this was a gracious gesture towards PW and MM (as well as good for the students) but I am still puzzling on how / why the "regulars" missed this unique occasion.

  4. Last night, just before the event started, there were still tickets available for the Insight conversation between Monica Mason and (89 years old, still working) Peter Wright. Why? ROH Insight events are usually sold out months before, so shame on us.

     

    Anyway it was a lovely evening. Some fascinating stories and, yes, insights. Sadly the recording won't get much of an airing: the Covent Garden tv people were filming but just with a single and unmanned camera, taping only for (presumably) archival purposes (when the powers that be like an Insight event, there are always at least three manned cameras and then a video gets put online). Hope someone was taking notes and can post more here.

     

    By the way we are celebrating 25 years of Peter Wright's BRB Nutcracker:-

     

    http://www.balletcoforum.com/index.php?/topic/11205-birmingham-royal-ballet-the-nutcracker-birmingham-november-2015

  5. Just back from the dress rehearsal for the new ROH production of Cav and Pag. No review or comments on the singing, but wanted quickly to post a note of reassurance.

     

    The reason is that the director is the same person (Michieletto) who did the controversial / booed / etc William Tell at ROH earlier in the year. This show is in a completely different league in terms of competence, stagecraft, invention, taste and so on. In other words, if you have been holding back from getting a ticket because of William Tell, don't worry: just go!

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  6. Lucia is such a wonderful score, the first question is whether they can sing it or not. Sadly she is not someone I have already heard so can't comment but you might find reviews of other performances online.

    Sorry to quote myself but, oh how embarrassing: just realised that it's Diana Damrau singing (for the April perfromances) so yes, you want to go to this, whatever the production.

  7. Just saw ENO Force of Destiny (Forza del Destino) and was forceably reminded of the fuss around the ROH William Tell earlier in the year. Leaving aside the general merits - or otherwise - of the two productions I just want to post my feelings about one particular scene.

     

    There is a scene on the stage of the ENO of ultraviolence, during which heavily pregnant women are forced to miscarry (with attendant blood and general misery). This is all, like the equivalent scene in Tell, set "ironically" to "jolly" dance music "to show the horror of war" (etc etc etc) but unlike in Tell, everything is shown explicitly at the front of the stage. So, directly comparable to Tell but even more shocking.

     

    Yet there has been not a word in the press (yes the scene has been mentioned in reviews but there has not been a general outcry, booing, complaints, story after story in the papers including tracking down the actresses involved, championing "victims" in the audience who said they were traumatised by what they saw) as there was with Tell before the summer. Why this disparity? Both are modern productions of 19th century operas by well-known composers, playing to major opera houses in the West End, by directors not known for traditional stagings. Still the reaction has been completely different.

     

    In one case it's the ENO, with its history of radical productions and (possibly) a slightly different audience; the ENO hired the better known quantity Bieito - and it's not "Rossini at the Royal Opera House", which probably sounds like something to take the grandchildren to.

     

    The distasteful scene - which added nothing to my appreciation of the opera nor told me anything I didn't know - is now seered into my memory and certainly reason enough to warn people off giving the ENO their money. I wish I hadn't seen this. Shame, as the conducting and some of the singing is worth hearing. Maybe it will be on Radio 3, which would be ok.

    • Like 1
  8. still not quite forgiven her for the ridiculous way she "signed" her book for me (and everyone else) it was so large in thick black pen as to be tantamount to graffiti what was she thinking?

    Just to say, I know something about arranging book signings and also a bit about dyslexia, and although no doubt pretty ugly/sloppy this may have been a tactful solution to an awkward situation. I am not this dancer's greatest fan but on this point, maybe we should give her a break?

  9. Re wobbles, having been to see the same M1,2 casts at the general the day before, I was somewhat on the look out during the first night. From where I was sitting (side amphi, so looking down and slightly at an angle) I saw wobbles. But these were of a kind which may not have been so obvious from front on, ie stalls. By the way a good example of how M2 can go (though a murky video) is on YouTube:-

     

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=C1iFPJdnFSo

  10. Anyone see this? I was there on Saturday but paradoxically found the supervisual production, though perfectly suited to the work, rather hard to take after a while. One might think such busy projections a great fit for the cinema screen but actually it seemed to me that this would have been more exciting in the theatre.

     

    But then it is a hard work, so maybe my reaction was a reflection of that.

  11. Sometimes I think I am the only person who found Kasper Holten's production a revelation, the first staging I have ever seen (and I have been going to productions of this work around Europe for nearly 50 years) which deals with at least two major, and very different, dramatic questions:-

     

    i) From the very opening notes the score is nostalgic, even sad - yet the drama starts upbeat, youthful and optimistic

     

    ii) To sing this work in a major house (not as the composer intended but as we tend to get it) one has to have singers of a certain stature and seniority - yet the characters start very young, teenagers even.

     

    My wife votes with the majority view and won't be going back. I however can't wait to see and hear this beautiful show at least another couple of times. I used to love the Gyldebourne production: when they revived it recently I went full of excitement - but kept wishing I was watching something as intelligent and sensitive to the music as Holten's production. A minority view I know, but I post it here in the hope of getting people to give this show a chance, or even a second chance!

    • Like 1
  12. .The way that performances have slowed down and the effect that it has only becomes obvious when you see old recordings of the same work. I recall some years back a discussion on this forum about the two recordings of Fille that were available one with Acosta and Nunez and the other with Coleman and Collier which raised the question whether the dancers in the older recording had been dancing more quickly than usual for some reason connected with the fact that it was being televised. The answer was quite simply that was the speed at which it was danced in the early 1980's. But any one who thinks that the Collier Coleman cast were fast should look at the BBC recording of the original cast in action.The earliest recording and the Acosta, Nunez recording look like completely different ballets. The recording from the 1960's has a joie de vivre lacking in the later one...If the Covent Garden company manages to give us casts as good as the first night cast of Pigeons and the revival of Fille earlier on this year we may not have too much to complain about

    ...apart perhaps from speed (again): as it happens we were able to compare the timngs of this year's Fille with the old BBC recording, and the difference was pretty striking. Perhaps conductors these days just don't think to go faster?

     

    In any case, a magnificent and most illuminating post FLOSS: thank you!

  13. Janet,I wasn't trying to wind you up.I do understand that towns and cities north of Watford are not one large undifferentiated place called "Up North". I apologise for my mistake but I was told it was Liverpool. I shall, in due course, take my informant to task.At regular intervals people who post on this site express amazement and concern that ballet programmes that they consider to be well worth seeing fail to attract audiences in the numbers that they expect.I have been to Birmingham on a number of occasions and been amazed by the number of empty seats at both matinee and evening performances of some mixed bills. The Ashton mixed programme was sparsely attended on the day that I went.It isn't just mixed bills that fail to attract audiences the RNZB Giselle at Canterbury had a very small audience at the matinee.Now I know that there is a quip that says you can sell tickets for any ballet as long as it is called Swan Lake but it seems to be increasingly the case that the average non balletomane is rarely tempted to buy ballet tickets and that if they do they are more likely to buy tickets for Nutcracker and Swan Lake than anything else.When companies go on tour their touring venues are usually towns which are hubs in their locality for shopping and entertainment within easy travelling distance of a significant population and yet companies often fail to fill the theatre for the duration of the visit. I know that BRB does smaller scale tours but even then the choice of venue is a town with a theatre which attracts audiences from the surrounding area.Do you think that the failure to attract audiences reflects a general lack of interest in ballet or a failure by companies to sell their product effectively.If it is a lack of interest in ballet when did the interest begin to decline and what, if anything, can be done about it? If it is a failure by companies to sell their product effectively what should they do to improve their ticket sales?

    Around 15 years ago Pete Long’s "Echoes of Ellington" toured with ENB doing Ellington’s Nutcracker. They had a few performances in Sunderland and were told by the Arts Council to keep their losses under £100.000 I think it was (those were the days). They sent a ballerina and a pianist into every primary school in the area over a period of two months and then covered the town with posters showing, if I remember right, a ballerina hugging a tradesman. The message was along the lines of "Come to the ballet, it’s only ten quid, why not try it?" Every performance was packed and they made £101,000, so just in the black.

    • Like 3
  14. I'm afraid we might just have to accept the sad possibility that the decision has been made somewhere that RB is, if anything, a MacMillan company these days, not an Ashton one.

    If this is true - and although I have no evidence I fear you may be right - it is a disgrace. This will also be v damaging long-term to the reputation of the RB, as Ashton is something we are known for around the world, and we have yet to grow a choreographer of equal stature for the 21st century.

     

    Does anyone know how strong the voice of the Ashton estate is at the RB? I mean as opposed to the power exercised by Macmillan's widow (a complicating factor when it comes to Kevin O'Hare's planning but this may not be the place to discuss that)?

     

    I haven't thought of writing to RB/AD with a wish list since Dowell's days...But I think all of us should do it since e-media does make it so much easier.

    Yes, count me in. Who is the right person to lead a petition, who will organise it - and where can I sign?!

    • Like 2
  15. Anyone been to this (and indeed the Insight evening)? We have been amusing ourselves finding online comment, here are just a few:-

     

    http://seenandheard-international.com/2015/11/haass-morgen-und-abend-is-a-new-existential-opera-exploring-life-and-death/

     

    https://bachtrack.com/review-morgen-und-abend-haas-royal-opera-london-november-2015

     

    https://operabritanniauk.wordpress.com/2015/11/15/haas-morgen-und-abend-royal-opera-house-november-13th-2015/

     

    http://www.musicomh.com/classical/reviews-classical/morgen-und-abend-royal-opera-house-london

     

    http://classical-iconoclast.blogspot.nl/2015/11/invisible-theatre-made-visible-morgen.html?m=1

     

    An exceptionally interesting collection of comments, certainly more fun to read than another piece of typing about another Traviata (although a great Traviata can be a wonderful thing - my friends who were at the unexpected Ekaterina Bakanova debut in July said that was one such night)

  16. Anyone can bring in a suitcase and leave it at the cloakroom without the suitcase being checked.

    In fact - please correct me if I have this muddled - I seem to remember that the planning for the redevelopment of the box office etc area led to an official ROH announcement some weeks ago (ie before Paris) saying that bags were no longer being accepted in the cloakroom. Perhaps this hasn't yet come into force though, can't remember.

  17. There are many audiences for London but we've only really mentioned two till now (those who know more about ballet and those who know less). Let me suggest at least one other division: people who book in advance and people who decide later, even up to the last minute.

     

    I don't know much about the "science" of marketing but understand that even the most untalented marketeers know to segment their audiences into numerous categories, and chase each in ways appropriate. All research shows that London audiences are making up their minds as to what to see later and later these days (so much choice, not enough money or time) so RB may well be factoring this in. As just one example of how tricky things can get, I can think of ROH shows that sold hardly at all until first night and then sold out.

     

    One stunt I hope they don't get into (the ENO are or at least were far too guilty of this): putting up prices in the hope of selling some tickets at premium rates, then discounting to get the rest of the audience in, thus making a bit more in total then if the prices started at the final level. A little too "dynamic" for most of us, I think (at the ENO one got used to waiting for the inevitable and often substantial discounts).

     

    How well the RB people involved are playing the hand they've got, that's a different matter and I am not competent to judge. But I'm going to the Pigeons General tomorrow, the first night and then at least twice more, so am doing my bit!

  18. I use a few examples (whether we like the results or not is another matter) to suggest things have moved on from 2006

    Gosh yes, anyone remember that Fire Exercise ballet, where the "backdrop" video was so sensational (all meanings) I for one missed the dancing completely the first time I saw the piece and went back, shielding my eyes so as to be able to concentrate!

     

    Yolanda might of course have argued that it was "visually blind" to try and mix live dancing with such imagary but I was amazed and excited by what I was seeing.

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