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CCL

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Posts posted by CCL

  1. 35 minutes ago, Candleque said:

     

    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

    I hope so Candleque! I did wonder why the titters here - and the titters when Giselle’s veil is removed on her first appearance as a wili…

    4 hours ago, Emeralds said:

    Arrieta's interpretation starts off low key but builds up strongly and his grief at Giselle's death rivals Lady Capulet's.  But the big wow is his Act 2 solo: it's like Muntagirov and Nijinsky and Baryshnikov were all on stage in the same person at the same time

    Nicely put, Emeralds. I was really impressed with his Act 2 solo. 

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  2. Thanks for your kind message Emeralds! Fortunately a friend of my younger daughter (they are all young adults) was able to use my ticket. I’ve more or less recovered now and am raring to see Giselle on Friday 12th - fortunately not from the balcony!

    I completely understand forum members’ reservations regarding the ENB Nut. There are bits that I really like but the bareness of the stage in Act 2 is something I really don’t like. I can’t persuade my daughters to try a different production though - it’s ‘what we do’ at Christmas and that’s that!

    • Like 1
  3. 27 minutes ago, Sim said:

    RB:  Fille, Onegin, Sylvia, La Bayadere (wishful thinking, but maybe if enough of us show that we would like to see it, they will listen), Serenade, Symphony in C

     

    BRB:  Fille, Giselle, Coppelia, The King Dances, The Moor's Pavane

     

    ENB:  Please revive Swansong

     

     

    YES to Swansong!

    • Like 3
  4. 1 hour ago, capybara said:


    Having been ENB’s first Freddie, Joseph Sissens moved from Tring to the RBS.

     

    Yes, I think the first ENB Nutcracker I saw in 2010 had Joseph Sissens as Freddie! I wish I could re-live that performance, as it also featured Vadim Muntagirov as lead in the waltz of the flowers…

    Sadly I can’t fit in any RB Nuts this year, but was hoping to make up for it next year. Disappointed to hear that won’t be the case, although I’m already excited about Cinderella.

    • Like 2
  5. I thought last night’s performance was absolutely thrilling! There was so much to take in that I am sorry not to be seeing it a second time. The dancing and music combined were, at various times, menacing, joyful and lyrical - I had no idea that Sabbath had made a piece of music as beautiful as Laguna Sunrise- it made for a gorgeous pas de deux between Tyrone Singleton and Celine Gittens. As for the ending - pure euphoria!  My husband couldn’t believe his eyes when Tony Iommi appeared! I loved seeing the dancers have a ball - what a fantastic evening! 

    • Like 5
  6. Fonty, I too was an opera newbie last year (I still am, really). I’d seen a couple of Carmens  and Bohemes previously but didn’t really think it was my ‘thing’. Seeing La Traviata last year changed me completely- I thought it was thrilling and since then I’ve seen several more, namely: Madama Butterfly, Cav/Pag, Tosca, Tannhauser, Turandot, Aida, Le Nozze de Figaro and Das Rheingold (the latter was the live cine cast). I have genuinely loved every single one. I’d recommend Cav/Pag, which is at the ROH some time before Christmas. Do let us know if/when you go!

    • Like 3
  7. I attended last night’s performance. I sat in the middle of row C in the second tier, which I thought was an excellent seat for the price. I really enjoyed my evening- two out of the three pieces I thought beautiful. Themes and Variations was pure, joyful sunshine from the moment the curtain rose on the beautifully placed group of dancers and I loved the way the momentum built and built to that wonderful finale - my face hurt afterwards from my permanently beaming face! 
     

    I did not enjoy Les Noces, I’m afraid. I really tried to get into it and I admired the attack and commitment of the dancers but I found the subject matter and the music really grim and after about fifteen minutes I had just had enough. That being said, there was clearly a sizeable section of the audience that enjoyed it, it was just not my bag. 


    Four Last Songs was a revelation to me - I had thought I might be a bit on the fence about it, but I found it absolutely exquisite and so emotive. I liked the dreamlike, abstract nature of it and the feeling of yearning that came from the dancing and music combined. Madeleine Pierard’s singing was intoxicating and I was deeply moved by the way she connected with the dancers. I’m so glad to have seen it.
     

    Despite not enjoying Les Noces, I thought this was an excellent triple bill! 

     

     

     

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