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Posts posted by Jeannette
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5 hours ago, Beryl H said:
I had been anticipating the new RB Bayadere Blu-Ray and received it yesterday from Amazon, wonderful performance and good picture quality, although still darker than it looks onstage, ...
I, too, was surprised at the darkness, compared to the bright and crisp filming of the previous DVD ROH release of this ballet with Rojo as Nikiya.
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I can’t wait to see The Cellist in cinemas, even if we in the USA have to wait a bit longer.
Thanks for the link to the touching and insightful BBC review, Bridiem! I couldn’t agree more with the concept that Beauty is not treasured as it was in years past. When did “Beauty” become an ugly word?
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The St Petersburg Theatre Museum, near the Vaganova/behind the Alexandrinsky Theater, has a sizable ballet collection and often holds special ballet-themed exhibitions, such as the one celebrating Petipa’s 200th birthday. If you dig into their website (Eng and Russian), you’ll see that they currently have a 19th-C ballet exhibit in one of their satellite spaces (a private mansion). Check this site:
theatruseum.ru
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On 07/02/2020 at 16:53, Darlex said:
At least they are showing Dante Sonata at the Linbury this season. Doesn't look so good for next season.
All I have to say: Thank goodness for Sarasota Ballet and Mr& Mrs Iain Webb...not just in their regular season but in an upcoming tour to NY’s Joyce Theater, August 18-23, 2020, in which the troupe will present an all-Ashton Triple bill consisting of Birthday Offering, Dante Sonata and Varii Capricci. How cool is that?
www.joyce.org
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Did I blink and miss an Ashton?
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An additional thought occurred:
Imagine seeing a richly-decorated classical full-evening work that has nary a projection. Yes, it has some lovely mood lighting that varies with each scene but all of the design elements are solid and real. Real staircase, real palace walls, real foliage, etc. The old-fashioned way.
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Oh, Canada has delivered. Balletomanes in London are truly in for a treat next summer with this magnificently-luxurious and impeccably performed Sleeping Beauty. I caught last night’s repeat starring first-cast Heather Ogden and Harrison James.
Oozing charm as well as technique - oh those balances and multiple pirouettes! - Ogden performed as Washingtonians have long known, from her years as a guest artist with the Suzanne Farrell Ballet. Ogden is a true gem of a ballerina. The big surprise was the aplomb and razor-sharp technique of James’ essaying of Nureyev’s five (5!) ultra-difficult solos for Prince Florimund. Bravo!
Kudos, too, to gracious Hannah Fischer as the lady who dances what’s normally the Lilac Fairy variation; Miyoko Koyasu and Siphesihle November as the most charismatic Pussycats to tread a stage; and the ravishing Elena Lobsanova and Naoya Ebe in the Bluebird pdd. The corps de ballet acquitted itself extraordinarily.
Rudolf Nureyev must be smiling from a special place, seeing the luscious production restored and this company, which he championed for so long, performing so well! Perhaps one small caveat would be also my one complaint: the stately Sarabande that normally opens the final act (and is led by the monarchs and Sr courtiers) was cut. Hopefully it will be restored for London.
Not-to-be-missed luxurious visuals seldom seen on any balletic stage nowadays, coupled with high-level classical dancing — the Canadian troupe’s Sleeping Beauty is one for the ages!
Davis Briskin led the Kennedy Center Opera House Orchestra.
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1 hour ago, Sabine0308 said:
The website still lists Sleeping Beauty as postponed, I keep my fingers crossed.
Right...so maybe in the 20/21 season? I guess that it will depend on the wishes of the incoming AD and his/her budget. I, for one, am grateful for not only Bayadere having been kept/returned by Ohman but also the historically-designed Nutcracker (the Duato out). AND some of the newer soloists are magnificent, e.g., Evelina Godunova!
I hope to keep up my Lufthansa frequent flier miles between Washington DC and Berlin. Great city in so many ways, not just ballet. 🇩🇪
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I’m wondering what these changes might mean for the fate of Marcia Haydee’s Sleeping Beauty - originally on tap for this spring in Berlin, then cancelled (postponed?) and replaced with performances of the existing Swan Lake.
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Sad. Everything looked so promising after the premiere of Ratmansky’s La Bayadere in November 2018.
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I’m looking forward to seeing the Ogden/James cast in DC on the evening of Feb 1. Also, the designs should be treat, from what I’ve read...this level of luxury is rare in the 21st century. Report forthcoming!
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Thanks for all of the reports. I can’t wait to see this in the US!
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Ah...just one top performance in 2019. Sorry, Bruce!
APPARITIONS revival in Sarasota. Marcello Gomes and Victoria Hulland starred.
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Just one more, very dear to my heart, in my Puerto Rico: 🇵🇷
April 2018. Attending the first ballet evening produced in the wake of Hurricane Maria (which ravaged our island in Sept 2017), at the Centro Bellas Artes. San Juan: Ballets de San Juan in three new classical works, including a fascinating Carmen set in a sugar mill.
Sobrevivimos, senores!
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General best-trends observed during a decade of traveling for ballet, including performances on all continents minus Antarctica, eg, the Americas, Africa, Europe, Asia, Australia. No worries, as I’ll stick to generalities.
* Historical Petipa-era reconstructions galore! - from the Berlin Ratmansky Bayadere, to his Zurich Swan Lake, to his Beauty & Harlequinade In NY. Even his very own The Seasons for ABT continued the evocation of Tsarist aesthetics (in steps). I also attended the latter Vikharev premieres, most notably Raymonda in Milan.
* Sarasota & Ashton. Need we say more? The 2014 Ashton Festival, for starters. Dante Sonata & R&J coming soon...but that’s the next decade.
* The ever-turning kaleidoscope of invention at NYCB, particularly the emergence of Justin Peck (Principia, Belles Lettres, etc), plus Ratmansky’s spot-on creations for the troupe (Odessa, Namouna).
* Artists? Natalia Osipova my ballerina of the decade. Aplomb and versatility. ‘Nuff said.
* Stanton Welch’s creativity-within-classics. Bayadere in Sydney 2014 comes to mind.
* AD Marcia Haydee’s stewardship of the Cranko oeuvre in Chile’s Teatro Municipal Santiago.
Kudos too to Paloma Herrera’s newish directorship of the Colon in Buenos Aires...and a special honor to Mme Tatiana Leskova’s guidance of recent revival of Les Sylphides in Rio’s Teatro Municipal. (May they survive current challenges.)
* Witnessing first-hand Asia’s love for ballet. The Korean Natl Ballet and Universal Ballet’s - both seen in Seoul - spotlight the nation’s commitment to classical excellence. Also loved witnessing the passion of Japanese ballet fans at the last Tokyo Quadrennial Ballet Festival!
* Last but not least: Ballets in Cinemas!
Thanks for the memories. Vive le Ballet!
I’ll ignore the few lowlights.
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I enjoyed the recent Heritage Triple Bill at the ROH, plus Osipova’s Pure Dance, both in London. All of the Sarasota Ballet’s performances, particularly Apparitions, were joys. Finally, trips to NYC revealed a bounty of treasures at ABT (Ratmansky Evening, including The Seasons) and NYCB (new Peck work).
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I thoroughly enjoyed it. Francesca Hayward so beautiful and expressive. McRea also excellent. Well done!
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So sad, even if or a surprise.
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Yesterday, Director Simone Noja was relieved of her duties at the Vienna State Ballet Academy amid allegations of abuse of students. According to this article, the alleged abuse revolves around weight, such as making children give their first names and clothes size before speaking. Yikes!
(trying to paste a link...it’s on Yahoo News, NY Times and, I’m sure, other periodicals)
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1 hour ago, alison said:
"relieves-passes". I like it! Not sure how relief-ful they are, though, especially if you stay on the one leg!
Good ol’ spellcheck.
I think that Raymonda alters legs in that section?
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3 hours ago, HelenLoveAppleJuice said:
By saying Osipova's 2nd solo, does Raymonda have 2 variations in RB Act III?
Plus do we have the famous multiple entrechats...
Raymonda has only one true solo here (bourrees & claps). She also dances alone for 15-20 seconds within the Coda of the Classical Grand Pas (the sharp relieves-passes to a famous Hungarian folk tune).
No entrechats solo for Raymonda here, as in Act II of the Vikharev La Scala version.
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2 hours ago, Xandra Newman said:
Hopefully the filming (and cinema relay) of last night's cast will produce a "Concerto/Enigma Variations/Raymonda" DVD.
This cast should have danced on Opening Night too (but one can't have it all ). A creme-de-la-creme cast.
Osipova was otherwise engaged in her “Pure Dance” program at Sadlers Wells through 26 October. I’m thrilled to read that she & Muntagirov will do the cinemas cast! All three ballets on tap are heavenly, in different ways.
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1 hour ago, Bluebird said:
I think that the lighting must affect the view from the Stalls Circle. The patterned flooring is definitely visible from the amphitheatre
Edited to add that if you look carefully at the photo of Vadim Muntagirov in Jann Parry's Dancetabs review, you can just about see the patterns.
https://dancetabs.com/2019/10/royal-ballet-concerto-enigma-variations-raymonda-act-iii-london/
THANKS for the link to the article & pics...a lovely souvenir.
Ok, Fair enough. That floor looked totally bare to me, yet was so pronounced from orchestra (stalls) in Sarasota.
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1 minute ago, capybara said:
I think that the floor is patterned with the RB, at least it looks that way from where I've been sitting.
Now to see the whole of the Bolshoi's Raymonda this afternoon.
It was plain beige from stalls circle. Not at all the bold checkered “carpeting” so apparent at Sarasota.
David Hallberg new AD of Australian Ballet
in Ballet / Dance news & information
Posted
Wonderful news! Congratulations to David Hallberg and The Australian Ballet. I’m sure that Hallberg is inspired by friend and mentor Michael Kaiser, as well as current Australian AD David McAllister and his team.