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AnneL

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Posts posted by AnneL

  1. 11 hours ago, jmhopton said:

    Haven't watched RB yet but that's a treat to come over the next few days, also Stuttgart rehearsing Onegin.  However I have seen the ENB doc about Raymonda which looked very promising and exciting.  It's one of the few ballets I thought could actually benefit from a compete re think as the original plot and characters are very boring (to me at least). Just wish they'd announce the casting.

    I watched the Stuttgart Onegin rehearsal and I can thoroughly recommend it. ( I did miss a bit of the Giselle rehearsal as a result, but I can catch up with that.)  it was a reminder of the magnificent Cranko choreography which is less familiar to me than some other works which I have seen performed more often. I now dream of traveling to Stuttgart to see it! 

    • Like 4
  2. On 06/09/2021 at 14:49, LinMM said:

    I’m going to this tomorrow so very much looking forward to it! Am pleased to see some Royals dancing as well like Matthew Ball Cesar Corrales and Mayara Magri and a couple of ENB dancers too. 
    It is a great shame it’s only on for one night though as if it wasn’t for a friend I would have missed this so don’t think it’s been that well advertised. 

    Do tell us what it’s like. I can’t go as I am on holiday.

    • Like 1
  3. Yesterday evening was my first live ballet for 15 months and 4 days so it was going to be a great occasion whatever happened. I was thrilled especially to see Apollo for the first time ever, as I have great enthusiasm for major early 20th century works such as this. But what surprised me was how lovely it was to hear music played live again! I have listened to the Stravinsky score many times on CD so hearing it live and seeing the superb dancing on stage made the evening as memorable as I wanted to be.

    I have no comments to add to those of others on the pdd. I enjoyed DaaG but it will never be a favourite ballet of mine - not even my favourite set to the music of Chopin (that is Les Sylphides, which never seems to be performed these days). But to my inexpert eyes the dancers all seemed to be on great form in Dances and displaying their joy in dance and movement as well as their skill. Therefore it was a pleasure to watch. 

    However it’s the memory of Apollo that will linger - the marriage of music, choreography and beautiful interpretation from the talented cast. 
     

    • Like 6
  4. On 21/04/2020 at 10:30, alison said:

     

    As I've said before, it took me about a decade before I actually "got" Mayerling, so I wouldn't necessarily rule it out for all time :)

     

    I found this thread while looking for another one, realised I hadn't read most of it because I was intending to comment, and thought I'd bump it, since we have plenty of time at present to look back and remember.

    Yes, I gave it another go when it was shown on television recently, and although there are parts of it I *quite* enjoy, overall it doesn’t really work for me. But I keep trying! 

    • Like 1
  5. 4 hours ago, Julie 2 Milner said:

    I came on here after watching the live screening last night expecting nothing but universal praise and "wow" for "The Cellist". I had not read any reviews so I'm rather surprised at the large amount of negativity. I loved it. Unfortunately Tunbridge Wells also lost the last few minutes which was actually gut wrenching. I'm usually fairly sanguine when these things happen but not this time which I think shows how much it had swept me up. I do love this style of dance and for me, I simply thought it amazing and so incredibly moving. I even looked up to see if there were still tickets as I cannot go to the recorded screening. I did think though some might not enjoy the style.

    Re "Gatherings" yes it was great. Lovely to see some of the most senior members of the Company together. It is a pure celebration of dance. However, and there is one, I think it is around 10 mins too long. I thought this must just be me but in the interval heard a lot of others saying the same.

    Back to "The Cellist" and a complete segue, the group seating next to me obviously knew Hetty Snell. Very lovely listening to their excited comments.

    The mixed reactions, I guess,  really do show "one man's meat" etc and that can only be good for any artistic endeavour.

    Sorry to hear you missed the end! Just down the road in Maidstone we had the whole thing. I have been to several of the screenings there now, and there have never been any problems, I am glad to say. it must be very annoying when it is cut off. 
     

  6. I have just booked to see this when it comes to the Marlowe in Canterbury in Easter week. I saw it previously during its first Sadlers Wells run and enjoyed it enough to give it another go. So far I have avoided the Swan Lake because I am such a devotee of the classical ballet that I am not sure how much I would really like it. But in my view the Red Shoes film is better source material for a show like this. 
    After I booked, a trailer for the show appeared on my Facebook feed which amused me since it was a group of celebs effectively describing the Red Shoes as ballet,  ‘but don’t worry folks, it’s still good’.  An odd way to promote it, in my view! 
    I notice also that the cinema showing will include Adam Cooper in the cast, so I will definitely try to see that. 

  7. I thought Nuñez gave a great performance last night, remarkable when one realises how little rehearsal time they must have had. She is such a versatile dancer - I have seen her in many different roles and styles. Her characterisation was convincing to me. I don’t think Onegin will ever be a top favourite work of mine, but it was an absorbing evening nonetheless. 

    • Like 3
  8. My first highlights were in 2011 - a Cuban National Ballet Nutcracker and  a mixed programme from BRB of Checkmate, Symphonic Variations and Pineapple Poll at Sadlers Wells. I also appreciated their revivals of Daphnis and Chloe and of Miracle in the Gorbals this decade.

    2013 was a big year for great performances for me. I was entranced by an ENB Swan Lake - the leads were  Klimentova and Muntagirov. Then in the autumn I bought a ticket on a whim for Acosta’s new Don Q and suddenly I was back into going to the ROH after a gap of about 10 years! I haven’t stopped since.   Acosta’s  farewell La Fille was a great evening which lingers in my memory. 

    Recent revivals that have brought me great pleasure include The Firebird (Magri), Enigma Variations, Les Patineurs. 

    Best new ballet for me was Broken Wings (ENB). In fact their whole programme of women choreographers last Spring was good.

     I am not the greatest Macmillan fan, but the Sambe/O’Sullivan Romeo and Juliet was great and I have enjoyed Manon performed by Nunez and Bolle. I recently enjoyed Concerto and also liked the ENB Song of the Earth a few years back. BUT....

    This brings me to my lowlight - I know this is controversial - because it’s Mayerling! I first saw it in the late seventies and hated it, but decided to give it another go in 2018. It turned out my opinion hadn’t altered! 

    Overall, I am very grateful to all the great dancers I have seen, and my daughters for keeping me company on many but not all these occasions. It has been a fun decade of dance watching. 

    • Like 2
  9. On 03/12/2019 at 16:41, Lynette H said:

    It was a very long run in 2000. (I think that's what Jane was referring to.) Details are in the ROH performance database here. (scroll down) You can see how many performances Benjamin did. 

     

    http://www.rohcollections.org.uk/production.aspx?production=1929&row=1

     

    I thought I recalled seeing Sarah Wildor also paired with Kobborg, later in the run and I did. I don't think they danced together otherwise. 

     

    I see Morera, Nunez and Galeazzi were all friends of Swanhilda at that time. 

     

     

    Thank you for posting the link. However not all the performances are on this list - I have a programme for 28 December 1968, but that isn’t on there. It featured Diana Vere and Keith Martin in the principal roles and Lesley Collier was one of Swanilda’s friends (I think). My daughter says we also saw Coppelia in the early 2000s - perhaps one of the performances in that long run! 

  10. I agree with much of the above. Osipova did a great job with the rose adage and vision scene, and Hallberg was a convincing lonely prince. I am seeing a different cast on Thursday so it will be interesting to compare. I would add that the ‘fairy group dance’ (for want of a better term - pas de six maybe?) in the prologue was beautifully done. 

    Unfortunately I could write an essay for the ‘audience behaviour’ thread on the basis of what I saw in the stalls circle yesterday evening, especially re mobile phones :(

    • Like 4
  11. 1 hour ago, JNC said:

     

    ROH programmes are expensive but I think good value for money - decent articles, usually some lovely pictures as well (although I always want more) and printed on good paper and sturdily built. So a solid 30 odd pages of content. Compared to the £5 you may spend on a few bits of matte paper with a cast list and one article (short) if you’re lucky and some random photos you get for most plays (usually 10 pages of content if you’re lucky). 

    I do agree, although I was a bit put off last year when I bought a Mayerling programme and found it contained a reprint of the article in my 1979 programme of the same ballet! But this time, like last night’s performance itself, the programme  was right up my street. For example there is an article about Ninette de Valois, one of my greatest heroes. 

    I can confirm the synopsis in the programme is more detailed and explains the wheat ear part. 

    • Like 5
  12. 24 minutes ago, bridiem said:

    Given my unfamiliarity with Coppélia, I bought a programme (for once) and so I was able to compare the longer synopsis there with the one on the cast sheet. I did wonder in advance if the 'wheat thing' would be understandable to those who didn't buy a programme, though as I watched I did think it might have become clear as it went on (just as the Giselle flower becomes clear, I think, even if you don't know what it means in advance) - but clearly not, here. It would only take an extra couple of lines in the cast sheet, so it would seem like a good idea to add it in. I did think that the programme (though very expensive, of course) is very good and I think well worth buying (for once...).

    I also bought a programme (I obviously don’t get them all the time with ballets I have seen a lot recently) and I must say it was really good value this time - articles by Judith Mackrell and Alastair Macaulay (both writers I enjoy reading) - and more. Agree with others about the performances, with Act II really special. The exaggerated mime was just great for me in row N of the amphitheatre since I had forgotten to bring my Opera glasses! 

    • Like 3
  13. 2 hours ago, Sassenach said:

    Thanks AnneL for your thoughts, what exactly did you find unsuccessful about Hamilton’s Raymonda? I find her almost always sensational 

    I just thought the Concerto choreographic style suited her better. I certainly didn’t find her unsuccessful in Raymonda- perhaps I worded this badly- it was more that I thought she was so good in Concerto and had been raving about her performance in it during the first interval, that the Raymonda didn’t quite hit the same peak. 

    • Like 2
  14. I really appreciated the varied programme yesterday afternoon. I was most looking forward to seeing Enigma Variations as I have only seen it once before, nearly 50 years ago, with mainly the original cast, and it made an indelible impression on me. I wasn’t disappointed but there were one or two performances in it that could have been a little bit better. As others have said, Arestis, Avis & Whitehead were on top form, Campbell also. 

    The other two pieces were new to me but I did enjoy Concerto - lovely music and piano soloist- despite the fact I am not MacMillan’s biggest fan (with the obvious exception of Romeo and Juliet and also Song of the Earth). Melissa Hamilton was superb, although not quite as successful in her Raymonda solo, in my opinion. 

    I am hoping to see the programme again at my local cinema! 

    • Like 7
  15. I really enjoyed this BRB Giselle production yesterday evening. I haven’t seen it for many years and had forgotten the lovely scenery in both acts ( the Bastide-style gateway which gives the first act a real French countryside feel and the gothic church style in the second) but I hadn’t forgotten the horse! Both music and dancing throughout the company was excellent as was the orchestra. I think this may be my favourite production. I was just a little disappointed that Marion Tait wasn’t in last night’s cast - I gather she was on Friday from comments above. The principals both performed well, especially Mathews, who made the madness and death of Giselle very convincing. Both acts ended on the right emotional and dramatic note.

    • Like 5
  16. I read about her in a little book of famous dancers I was given as a child, over 50 years ago - and the book wasn’t new then! When I visited Havana with my daughter in 2011 we went to a performance of the Nutcracker and everyone in the audience  stood and clapped when she took her place in the auditorium. She was a great legend of ballet for sure. 

    • Like 5
  17. 58 minutes ago, Springbourne3 said:

    One of my all time favourite ballerinas - the best Sugar Plum Fairy of all in my opinion.

    I agree entirely. Yoshida’s Sugar Plum always lives in my memory. I also saw her dance Lise in ‘Gardee’ with Mukhamedov as Colas at Covent Garden and will never forget the perfection of their performance together.

    It does sound like it was a wonderful gala. 

    • Like 3
  18. I also noticed the absence of Le Tricorne. Massine apart, isn’t de Falla music and Picasso designs enough to make something a great artistic work of the 20th century? I would also put in a word for Spectre de la Rose by Fokine. Yes, it is very short, but I would hate to see that lost. 

    I could also make a case for Miracle in the Gorbals (Helpmann) - maybe a bit dated, but of historical importance with a score by Arthur Bliss. I found it impressive when BRB revived it a few years ago with Gillian Lynne’s help.

    Finally, a couple of comic works which I think need preservation: Ashton’s Facade and Cranko’s Pineapple Poll.

    • Like 4
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