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Alice Shortcake

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Posts posted by Alice Shortcake

  1. Does anyone remember a 1980s BBC show, the title of which I've forgotten, that was presented as the dance equivalent of the Cardiff Singer of the World competition? I vaguely remember that the programme featured young people performing ballet and contemporary dance, but I can't remember if it was a series or a one-off.

     

    As for Cheryl Cole, it's worth bearing in mind that anyone can edit a Wikipedia article...

  2. On 14/12/2018 at 03:37, Darlex said:

    It sounds like Peter Schaufuss' version 

    for Festival Ballet circa 1986 - 1991 or thereabouts. It was very confusing and replaced the lovely Ronald Hynd production of 1976. Schaufuss' was replaced by in turn by productions from Stevenson, Deane, Hampson, Eagling and hopefully something else soon. 

    I can't remember a thing about the Schaufuss Nutcracker other than that it involved a Sea of Lemonade and nutcracker dolls of various sizes. On the night I saw it at the Royal Festival Hall there were no programnes, and I had absolutely no idea what was happening on stage!

  3. 19 hours ago, Richard LH said:

    Techno geeks may correct me, but I am thinking that for many of us  it means any live TV viewing or  recording of the TV transmission, on Christmas Day,  won't be in HD due to the local transmitter not providing Freeview  channel 106 (only channel 9); although presumably the  programme will be in HD on the iPlayer for up to 30 days afterwards.  After that, we will have to wait for the Blu-Ray to come out for HD viewing. 

    Yes, it will be on iPlayer.

  4. I saw the production at York Picturehouse and also thought that the lighting was inadequate. And it's very annoying that after thirty years of complaints about Siegfried's dark tights making him blend into the background the new production makes exactly the same mistake! Otherwise I enjoyed the production tremendously, with a few reservations:

     

    1) Too much Benno, not enough Siegfried. I found myself wondering if the prominence of the prince's personable young friend at court was the real reason why the queen was so anxious to marry her son off to the first available princess.

    2) Glitter. Did we really need quite so much? Surely the queen has enough on her mind without risking a Glitter Gap between her own country and the adjoining fairytale nations.

    3) Rothbart's costume. Tatty wings, mangled head, exposed ribs...this is what happens when a large bird smashes into a speeding car (or would be if birds had ribs instead of wishbones). The word "roadkill" crossed my mind every time Rothbart appeared in his part-time sorceror outfit. I've never understood why, if Odette can appear in swan form without the aid of wings and a prosthetic beak, Rothbart has to be lumbered with avian - usually owl-like - characteristics. The result is invariably ludicrous, and a bit pointless if Rothbart already looks like Vladimir Putin's even more evil twin.

     

    On the whole, though, I thought the production was a vast improvement on the previous one. It's a relief to know that Siegfried's old tutor is now serving a lengthy prison sentence, or at least enrolled with Alcoholics Anonymous, and that Uncle Fester's pink opera cape is unlikely to be seen outside the walls of the Addams family mansion.

    • Like 7
  5. 16 hours ago, Darlex said:

    Can anybody tell me what was wrong with the production that Anthony Dowell replaced with his own version? It looks beautiful from what I have seen of it on film. 

     

    Slightly OTT, but am I right in thinking that there were two versions of the pre-Dowell Swan Lake? The choreography may have been identical but, according to a notebook in which I recorded my visits to the theatre in the early 80s, there were two sets of designs by Leslie Hurry, one of them darker and and more medieval than the other.

     

    All this talk of princesses in tutus reminds me of a fairly recent German Swan Lake set in the late 19th century, in which Rothbart was the Prime Minister with marital designs on the widowed Queen and the princesses wore tutus with their family coats of arms embroidered on the skirt.

    • Like 2
  6. 14 hours ago, balletbean said:

    Not ballet but certainly classical theatre. I was Duty Manager at the local theatre whilst a performance of a Wagner Opera was screened (one of those live screenings). 

    Whilst there was a very small 'select' audience in the house for the three + hours mammouth opera, I was shocked to see a couple near the back row open up their Picnic hamper and promptly tuck in to the full menu of sandwiches, cake and bubbly during the showing. But then I felt I would actually end up making more noise to reach them and ask them to stop than the noise they were actually making whilst eating the contents of the hamper. Fortunately they were not near any other members of the audience. A hamper is more appropriate when there is an open air performance in a park or similar. But hey an Opera needs all the audiences they can get in todays modern day fast pace society.  

     

    Bless them all at least they stayed and enjoyed the entire performance. 

    I think the couple you mention had probably been conditioned by years of attending Wagner performances on stage to bring large amounts of food to a cinema relay.  Perhaps they assumed that if patrons eat during an ordinary film they could do the same during a live opera relay.

     

    Years ago, just before seeing ON's semi-staged "Tristan" at Leeds Town Hall, I called at the bus station shop. "It's Wagner, isn't it?" said the assistant. "I can always tell because it's the only time I see well-dressed people with picnic baskets and backpacks."

    • Like 2
  7. I have the following DVDs for sale:

     

    The Nutcracker, Australian Ballet (the Peter Wright production also used by BRB) - £9

    Mata Hari, Dutch National Ballet - £12

    Giselle, the Fracci/Bruhn film - £8

    La Bayadere, Royal Ballet (Rojo/Acosta) £13

     

    All DVDs are as new and the prices include postage and packing. I can accept payment by cheque or Paypal.

  8. 20 hours ago, MAB said:

    I've DVD's of ballets I've never seen live and it whets my appetite to actually see the works onstage.  The Cranko estate is missing a trick.

     

    I couldn't agree more! Watching a performance on DVD and seeing the same production live are two completely different experiences. The argument that making recordings available will have an adverse effect on ticket sales seems absurd to me, yet it's still trotted out by the National Theatre despite the fact that the RSC and the Globe have been selling DVDs for years.

    • Like 1
  9. Well, I saw last Thursday's matinee and I'm sorry to say that the work left me cold - I left at the interval, the first time I've ever done so at a ballet performance.  NB artists can be relied upon to never give less than their best, but in my opinion they were defeated by the undistinguished choreography, the awful score, and - above all - a story so ludicrous it didn't move me at all.  I realise that the novel doesn't claim to be based on real events (I read it after seeing the ballet and found it so absurd and manipulative I had to restrain myself from throwing it across the room), but surely even the teenagers at whom it is aimed should know that a nine-year-old boy wouldn't have survived more than a few days in Auschwitz, let alone have had an opportunity to form a friendship with anyone on the other side of the wire fence.  Why don't the inmates take advantage of the convenient gap under the fence (which in reality was ELECTRIFIED with guard towers at intervals). Why on earth would the German-speaking Bruno misunderstand Auschwitz as "out-with", or Fuhrer - which means "guide" - as "fury"? I'm sure NB did the best they could with this lazily-written tosh, but I thought it was a complete misfire. And as for that Berlin street scene...I can't believe I was the only person in the audience inwardly humming "Springtime For Hitler".     

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