Jump to content

Jamesrhblack

Members
  • Posts

    896
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Jamesrhblack

  1. [Morera was certainly faultless but she did not excite me. I found her lacking in energy and the essential pertness which I can imagine Lise needs. She was effortlessly outdazzled by Muntagirov" I rather agree with you, penelopesimpson. The joie de vivre with which Muntagirov danced the role meant that I couldn't take my eyes off him, and if Morera was taking the subtle approach, it was too subtle in comparison to her partner. It was very sweet, but it highlighted to me their age difference, not something that I would normally think about. There is a rather grudging review of Morera in today's links from the Sunday Express. Having also been a little less impressed than I'd hoped after the first might and reading penelopesimpson and cavycapers, I am trying to determine what might be amiss and wonder if it is to do with the injury she suffered last season and also, ungallantly, a matter of seniority. On the Insights Evenings for both Frankenstein and Anastasia she comments on the fact that she has been around for a long time (or words to that effect) and I wonder if the slightly muted impression is a combination of these two factors. Injury takes longer to heal in a more mature dancer and, sadly, technique and stamina seem often to fade just as an artist's interpretative insight is maturing most fully.
  2. Nor me. It seems evidence of a coarsening of tone that has crept in, other symptoms of which concerned me on the first night.
  3. The Two Pigeons Blu Ray has arrived and, as anticipated, it is Kaneko not Morera, despite the listing on the ROH website.
  4. I can recall almost nothing of this (I was five years old at the time) beyond being allowed to watch with my parents who thought I'd get bored but sat entranced throughout it and then demanded to go to ballet class (which didn't happen for nearly a year) although a trip was expedited to Nutcracker at the RFH and I do remember asking my father as we walked out of the matinee if they would ever do it again and when he replied"This evening" asking if we could go back in. The following year, there was a matinee of Giselle. It was Sibley's London debut in the role and my most abiding memory of that is the sheer number of flowers on stage afterwards.
  5. Good to be back at the ROH for Fille and I enjoyed the evening very much although not unconditionally. There seemed some tension in Act 1, understandably as it was the first night of the ballet season, and even some unwonted overplaying which turned to coarseness. Alain's bottom wiggling with the flute is simply crass (and it's not what Alexander Grant did originally as can be seen on the original cast recording now available) and some of Thomas' groping of Widow Simone was heavy handed indeed, literally. I was surprised to see the normally fastidious Gary Avis indulging in this. The problem with such exaggerations is that they distort the tone of the ballet. Yes, its touch is light but its emotions (not just between Lise and Colas) run deep at times and if an audience is conditioned only to see comedy even such tender moments as Lise's little bourrees en l'air as Colas lifts her through the farmhouse door raise an unwanted laugh. That Alain is genuinely hurt by the denouement is shown very clearly in the extraordinarily twisted forwards and back lunges that Ashton choreographs as Lise and Colas plead with Simone; it's not just funny. Something seemed to go awry on two of the big lifts too, one in the first scene in a dismount and a second in the Essler coda which didn't happen at all. Nevertheless, after the interval things seemed much more settled and here the affectionate relationship established between Laura Morera's feisty Lise and Thomas Whitehead's pleasingly unguyed Simone achieved moments of real intimacy adding resonance to the emotional truth of the evening. There was a lovely moment in the first act when in mutual frustration they struck the same pose in mirror form on the bench. This Lise was indeed her mother's daughter. I was pleased to see Morera in a leading role again. She can certainly bend and the neatness and detail of her placement and the sincerity of her acting are always a real pleasure to watch. Her frustration, boredom, then almost rapturous tenderness in the Act 2 mime scene were absolutely beautiful and her embarrassment on being discovered read true as well. For me, she did not, on this occasion, match the sheer technical exhilaration and brilliance that I recall from Collier, Jenner, Marquez and Nunez but her partnership with Muntagirov had true sincerity and connection. I imagine it would be hard for any Lise to dominate dance wise against the wonderful Muntagirov whose effortless virtuosity allied to long limbed lyricism and a joyously natural stage personality seemed to glow ever more brightly as the evening progresssed. Previous preferred Colases (Baryshnikov, Campbell, Jeffries, Mukhamedov, Wall) have been more compact physically: indeed, I don't think I've ever seen such a tall and 'leggy' dancer in the role but his technical command is absolute, his stage manner winning. I'm anticipating a greater emotional frisson at Marquez's farewell (nobody can say goodbye like a ballet audience and her partnership with Campbell, rather like Collier's with Mukhamedov, is one of those that I'm truly sorry not to have seen able to be developed further), but for all the niggles, it was a lovely evening from the red in the morning, whose warning comes true in the storm that interrupts the harvest festivities, to the singing exit and Alain's delight in finding his umbrella, and the orchestra seemed on notably positive form under Barry Wordsworth's always affectionate, sympathetic baton.
  6. It states on his Assistant Ballet Master page that he retired as a dancer in 2016. Sander Blommaert has also left.
  7. Morera is listed as the Gipsy Girl on the ROH DVD / Blu Ray release of Pigeons. It was Kaneko in the cinema surely...
  8. It's definitely long, danced to three complete symphonies (albeit with some internal cuts, two by Tchaikovsjy and one, shorter, by Martinu). I'd anticipate the full three hours ....
  9. With respect, I dislike the assumption that just because people are able to seat in the more expensive seats their interest is essentially social. Cultural awareness isn't restricted to those on a tight budget and those of us who are lucky enough to be able to afford to sit in the lower parts of the house are through our higher ticket prices subsidising the cheaper tickets.
  10. Delighted that one of my artists has been invited to sing Katharina Schratt next season. It's not clear if this will be single or double cast but I'm very pleased
  11. Not only is Soares not appearing in Beauty now, but he's out of Fille and Nutcracker (not sure if he did Fille last time but he's certainly danced it in the past) too. Of course, last time, with Osipova's injury, Choe danced more Auroras than anyone else....
  12. With respect,David Wall did dance Beliaev. Indeed, his last full season performance was of this role in 1984 with Sandra Conley (his absolutely last performance was a one off Mayerling at the start of the 1984/1985 season). I'll need to dig out the programme but I think he danced Raymonda Act 3 with Sibley in the first part of the bill but I'll need to dig out the programme....
  13. Absolutely, Sibley and Dowell together were a wonder but in some ways her partnership with Wall was even more emotionally compelling: wonderful memories of Cinderella and Raymonda in particular and there's that astonishing Manon pas de deux on YouTube. Did they ever dance Month together?
  14. So pleased to see the Hayward / Campbell partnership continuing and Takada / Hay and Naghdi / Ball seem really to be establishing themselves too. Disappointed that Stix-Brunell isn't getting her chance, but there are at least four casts here (Cuthbertson / Clarke the fourth) that I would love to see (and, sadly, I doubt that I will manage that so it's now a question of priorities...). Will hope to catch Nuñez / Muntagirov at my local Kino.
  15. I still remember that Sibley, Wall performance really vividly. There's a wonderful Manon Bedroom Pas de Deux with them also late on showing exactly what Floss mentions: you might quibble technically but the performance is so compelling so scarcely notice....
  16. Fille is surely one of the perfect ballets. Not too long, charming score, blissful choreography and (I'm paraphrasing, I think, Mr Macaulay), "the subject may seem light, but the treatment is anything but." Muntagirov with Morera or Nunez will undoubtedly be great but Marquez and Campbell my top tip and as it's her farewell performances there could be some emotional scenes which would also be great fo a ballet novice - nobody can say goodbye like a ballet audience. I think Anastasia is a most interesting piece, and don't subscribe to the argument that it has lost its value now that we know Anna Anderson was not the daughter of the Tsar. It seems to me to have validity as an exploration of memory and identity too and the last act, to that astonishing Martinu score, is tremendous. Sometimes, a new viewer can be more entranced by something that doesn't necessarily conform to expectation, but it is long and undoubtedly responses to background work, which is not necessarily something to which a relatively new viewer might commit. I hope your friend enjoys their visit, whatever you decide, and returns for many more.
  17. One would tend to assume that it was, given their greater knowledge of the demands of repertoire and casting as well as promise shown from within. Obviously, not infallible but likely to be better informed than any of us....
  18. No I didn't. I still feel that if promotion were going to happen it would have happened after that but agree with an earlier poster that it seems strange that management felt confident to put her in her first season as Aurora on for Osipova if they were not intending to promote her.
  19. I have to say, and I'm not an unconditional admirer of Ms Choe, that I thought this was very beautiful dancing. I don't think I have seen her perform quite so impressively in London....
  20. Has Edward Watson intimated that this is a possibility?
  21. Poignant indeed... She's doing the Philip Glass next season (one of my conductors is 'carving") but I do wonder if Marguerite and Armand might be the last we see of this fascinating dancer and actress (and will she get Bolle for that if it is the last show?).... Given that she's not cast in Anastasia, for which she would surely have been obvious as the Tsarina, I wonder if she will dance a limited "Guest Principal" schedule next season. Probably wrong to speculate and apologies if any offence caused. I think she's a most distinguished artist.
  22. It's probably also true (although one should never speculate) that she was given her choice of role (given the repertoire) and partner... I, for one, would have been very sad if she has not been dancing with him.
  23. Why unfortunate? They were fantastic together in it last time round as they were when dancing together in Don Q, with onstage chemistry to burn.
×
×
  • Create New...