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AnneL

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Posts posted by AnneL

  1. 23 hours ago, Fonty said:

     

    Herman Scherman?  Was that the one where Sylvie Guillem was wearing a see through top?  

     

    Of the Forsythe I have seen I usually love the movement and hate the noise they are doing it to.

    For me, this touches on a fundamental point. I fell in love with ballet as a child because of movement (choreography) AND music, working together. The 20th century ‘modern’ works like Cinderella, Les Noces (which others have mentioned) have wonderful scores by Prokofiev, Stravinsky and so on. Ashton set his works often to great classical music ( E.g. the Dream) so these ballets also hit the spot for me. I usually also enjoy contemporary ballets if the music appeals and excites me - I liked Corybantic Games with its Bernstein score and I enjoy some contemporary composers too. But too many of the new offerings in recent years have had so-so choreography and less than wonderful music - a deadly combination. And of course, design also matters, including lighting! I have high hopes for the Cinderella costumes as I loved the ones in the recent Emma film - and the jewellery was superb. 

    • Like 6
  2. I first saw Mayerling in 1980 at the age of 22 and I am not sure I was old enough even then! More seriously, I really didn’t enjoy it and didn’t give it another go until the last run in 2018, only to find it no more likeable than when I first saw it. I get that other people love it, and it’s great that we can all have different opinions (while on this theme, I would like to say I love the Firebird, including the tableau at the end!) Mayerling is the Marmite of ballet, I think. My problem with it is the totally unlikeable characters - I just can’t make myself like or sympathise with any of them. I can see that they are great roles for dancers, but they all leave me cold. Even though Manon is a flawed character, it is possible to feel that I can understand her and her world and the ballet is a satisfying thing to watch. Not so Mayerling- for me. Yet here I am, once again thinking of giving it another go - maybe another cast can make it work for me? 

    • Like 6
  3. I have enjoyed what I have seen of the work of Annabelle Lopez Ochoa although I admit I haven’t seen that much, just A Streetcar Named Desire by the Scottish Ballet and Broken Wings, which of course was done by ENB. I will certainly look out for her work being performed in future. I am missing the current contemporary triple bill at the ROH,  so can’t comment on that. I usually like Wheeldon’s work, however. (But with Swan Lake and Peter Grimes this month I couldn’t fit in another Covent Garden trip.)

  4. Just home from today’s matinee and it was a wonderful performance. Great dancing from the principals and all the rest of the cast. As others have said, we had two Von Rothbarts! I am hoping Gartside will recover soon. I loved Magri’s Odile: she didn’t overdo the ‘evil’ side, instead appearing to be really charming until the deception was revealed, and then she was transformed. It really worked for me as an interpretation. 

    • Like 8
  5. My advice is GO! See it! I was blown away at the rehearsal. Yes, it’s a depressing tale, but the performances by the all the principals, soloists and the chorus were magnificent. I loved the music, especially the interludes which were the only things I was familiar with. I haven’t seen another production to compare it with, but this one seemed great. The modern setting clashed a little with the libretto but that was my only reservation. 

    • Like 3
  6. On 08/03/2022 at 00:30, alison said:

     

    When I went out on the amphitheatre terrace for the second interval, part of it was closed off for a "private event".  I don't know if that was it, or whether it was for something else.  Might have been a bit nippy at that time of night!

    I can confirm. Bonelli’s parents were in the same row as me - 2 seats away - and they were heading to the terrace afterwards. It’s lovely to know that they could all enjoy a party afterwards, it was a proper leaving ‘do’. I thought his words from the stage were very moving and sincere. It always seems a shock to hear dancers talk, since their art is so silent on their part.  But Bonelli seems a good communicator, which bodes well for his new job. 

    • Like 12
  7. On 07/03/2022 at 17:16, bridiem said:

    Well it does say 'Further information on plans for English National Ballet’s spring/ summer 2023 performances will be announced soon.' Maybe that gives the new director the chance to make some choices? Otherwise, the only programme I will book for is Swan Lake because it's an excellent production.

     

    This does seem a disappointing announcement. Likewise, it seems that it will be Swan Lake only for me. 

    • Like 2
  8. I just want to add my praise to the chorus for last night’s performance. This was the only Romeo and Juliet I shall see in the current run, other than the general rehearsal (in which Kaneko and Bracewell gave an exceptional account of the title roles) and I feel very fortunate to have been there on both occasions. 
    Last night was a really special debut by both Magri and Richardson and it will live in my memory for a long, long time. I appreciated no only the drama and characterisation they brought to the roles but also their sheer talent, and I am aware too of all the hard work they must have put in. Not that they made it look like hard work, but such is the magic of ballet. 

    • Like 7
  9. 23 hours ago, Pulcinella said:

    The casts for Don Q for performances in Birmingham, Salford, Sunderland and Plymouth are now on the website.

     

    https://www.brb.org.uk/whats-on/event/don-quixote-2022

    Thank you for posting this! I have booked a Sunderland performance and couldn’t be happier with the cast, especially since I had no choice which performance to go to. Now very excited! 

    • Like 3
  10. On 26/01/2022 at 13:13, ctas said:

    I was indoctrinated at an early age; baby ballet lessons, being taken to Covent Garden is one of my earliest memories. @AnneL (my mum) is probably the more interesting story and it was her love of ballet that got passed on to me! 

    So I suppose I should tell my story! However I am not sure where it began. I did ballet class as a young child, but didn’t stay with it all that long. I do remember loving being on stage in the annual show and I still have the blue and green tutu I wore aged five (I was a bluebell!) I guess I must have been exposed to ballet on television- in the ‘60s we only had 3 channels and I am pretty sure it was mentioned on shows like Blue Peter. Fonteyn and Nureyev were A list celebrities and household names, we all knew about them. So I pestered my mother to take me to the ballet and she chose the Royal Ballet because she thought it must be the best. We went to the Sleeping Beauty at Covent Garden 2 days before my ninth birthday.  Mum saved up for stalls seats because of my poor eyesight. Anyway, that was it - I fell in love with ballet that afternoon, watching Nadia Nerina as Aurora, and Christopher Gable as her prince. I still remember the impact the bluebird pdd had on me that day, and the Act 1 waltz. But really the whole thing - it was love at first sight.
    Over the next few years Mum took me to The Festival Ballet Nutcracker and Swan Lake and more shows at the ROH, including Fonteyn and Nureyev in Giselle. My favourites were Sibley and Dowell who we saw in The Dream and in Cinderella. I started reading ballet books - fiction and non- fiction- and by my early teens was reading Dancing Times to see what was coming next season and book ahead. I started to enjoy mixed bills and all the less obvious stuff!
    Mum continued to be my companion until her death, and before then we were joined by my daughters. However I do go on my own sometimes, notably a Don Quixote in 2013 which got me back into the ROH  habit after a gap of about 10 years. ( I did see ballet at Sadlers Wells, Coliseum etc in that time). I am glad to have had a lifelong interest in ballet and seen so many amazing dancers and memorable performances! 

    • Like 8
  11. 10 hours ago, Emeralds said:

    I liked the Walker ones, but wouldn’t mind a new designer if legal reasons prevent the use of them. 

     

    I discovered (belatedly!) the clip of Anna Rose O’Sullivan and others dancing Ashton’s choreography to Glazunov’s music for Raymonda, called Raymonda Variations (or something like that). I’ve love to see that in an Ashton Festival! 

     

    Also, I’d love to see Daphnis and Chloe, Birthday Offering and Les Rendezvous. 

    I second that!Especially Daphnis and Chloe which has a great Ravel score. I have just been watching a clip of it featuring Bonelli and Nunez in a seductive pdd. 

    • Like 4
  12. On 16/11/2021 at 10:48, LinMM said:

    As far as I can see Nutcracker is sold out for all performances before Christmas I think there are seats for early January though. 
    I don’t know why but I don’t like seeing Nutcracker after Christmas!! Though I might if I was travelling abroad somewhere or there was a visiting Company had always wanted to see etc. 

    Ha ha I am the complete opposite - I love to go for a January treat! It is such a dull month otherwise. 
     

    • Like 1
  13. As promised, my report on The Beauty of the Ballet. It was a very pleasant evening. Whereas 2 years ago the programme was all Tchaikovsky, this time there was greater variety of composers, all Russian. Principals and soloists from Birmingham Royal Ballet performed Swan Lake Act II pdd (Celine Gittens and Brandon Lawrence- both excellent); Nutcracker grand pdd (Yu Kurihara and Lachlan Monaghan); Don Quixote Act III pdd (a fortaste of next year’s BRB production, danced here by Beatrice  Parma and Mathias Dingman); the MacMillan Romeo and Juliet balcony pdd (Yaoquin Shang and Max Maslen) and finally the Balanchine Tchaikovsky pdd (Momoko Hirata and Cesar Morales). 
    In addition, there were several orchestra-only pieces, notably the Spartacus and Phrygia adagio and the 1812 overture, which somewhat randomly (since it’s not ballet music) closed the show. I suppose it’s used for its popularity and impact as a literal showstopper. The orchestra, conducted by Barry Wordsworth, was in great form, especially (in my view) in the Spartacus piece. Although this pdd was not danced, I could visualise in my mind watching the ballet on the Covent Garden stage,  as I did a few years ago. I find the music thrilling even without the choreography.

    Another highlight was the participation of second year students from the Royal Ballet school who performed the Garland waltz  from Sleeping Beauty. They did very well, especially given that the stage didn’t look all that roomy for eight couples. This was the first time the students had performed at this event, and it was lovely to watch them.

    From a ballet point of view, I suppose it was an experience akin to a gala. I didn’t have the best view as the seats my friend, who organised our trip, bought are behind the stage! However, we are reasonably close, and I was very impressed particularly by the way the Romeo and Juliet pair really got into the characters of their roles just for the one pdd extrapolated from the full work. The Don Q pdd is anyway great gala fare, as is the Balanchine. I don’t think the audience were all necessarily big ballet fans like me, the lady next to me told me she had seen Swan Lake once. I couldn’t even tell her how many times I have seen it as I lost count a while ago! But the audience were appreciative and gave dancers and orchestra a standing ovation at the end, so it ended with a happy atmosphere. Perhaps it will encourage people to buy tickets for other BRB performances? 
    I am happy I went and will go again because it is a great opportunity for those of us who live in London and the south east to see some BRB principals in action. 

    • Like 9
  14. On 01/02/2021 at 18:10, Jane S said:

     

    It's in colour, assuming it's from the tape.

     

    Nice cast, too.

    Thanks to those who posted about the release of 1969 recording of Ashton’s Cinderella, I now have my own copy on DVD. I couldn’t be happier as I saw the same cast perform the ballet at the ROH roughly 10 days after the recording was done. It is like having the permanent version of one of my earliest and still most vivid ballet memories.  

    • Like 7
  15. 9 hours ago, Christine said:

    You should translate your dream into reality! If you do, you'll have to hurry a bit, however, as unfortunately, the current run is a short one with the last performances of Onegin on 14 November. The first cast - that is the plan - will dance only on 23rd and 31st of October. Anyway, Onegin is bound to come back again sometime in the future, so I am sure there will be opportunities! 

    Yes, it will have to be another time, but it’s definitely on my wish list now. 

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