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Jamesrhblack

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Everything posted by Jamesrhblack

  1. Really looking forward to an afternoon of beautiful music and wonderful choreography with some of my favourite dancers: Campbell. Hayward, Hay, Mendizabal. Definitely worth a dawn start from chilly East Sussex :-)
  2. I'm going on 13 mat too. I've really enjoyed Wheeldon's abstract work and think it could be a usually and choreographicallh rich afternoon .
  3. Was about to mention mot only that but that it also refers to the Deborah Davis book of the same title on the subject of Sargent's painting,
  4. "Hanging there like sheets." Isn't that the point? I thought they were meant to be shrouds....
  5. in due course, I am sure she will become a Principal but doesn't she need to be tried and tested in a couple of major classical roles first? I would imagine that Akane Takada is next in line for promotion among the ladies...
  6. I hadn't realised that Michael Kaiser has been behind Fiona Chadwick's departure, but I do still remember the awkward frisson during The House the interviewer closed in on her en route to the stage to dance Juliet and she said words to the effect that she didn't want to talk as she just been told her contract wasn't being renewed. It always seemed such an uncharacteristically cruel thing for Anthony Dowell to have done if the timing was as she described it,
  7. As I recall, Maria Björnson had been commissioned to design Katya Kabanova for the Royal Opera and The Sleeping Beauty for the Royal Ballet at the same time.
  8. I hugely enjoy reading Floss' posts which are informed, informative and eloquently expressed.
  9. Sorry, that should be "almost" not "al.out." Editing on dodgy river wifi didn't work; if a moderator could oblige I'd be grateful..."
  10. Posted 05 December 2015 - 03:08 PM " I could not agree with you more Fonty. I was lucky enough to see Merle Park dance Aurora in the early 80s and the moment of her arabesque at the start of the act 1 variation is one of those freeze frame instants that has remained in my memory ever since. I also have very happy memories of Collier, Penney and Whitten in the role. They all danced with such a wonderful combination of great foot work, musicality and attack. Just because they were not 5'9" with extensions past their ears does NOT make their performances anything less than superlative." I saw Park a little too late in this role (1980, although her Giselle from that year with David Wall is one of my happiest memories) but do remember how beautifully fluid Penney was in that exquisite Ashton variation in the Vision Scene, Whitten's dazzling almost off balance renversés in the Act 1 Coda (I think people forget what a brilliant combination she was of technique and musicality) and, of course, Collier's effortless accomplishment. I was very sad that she did not dance her London performances with Mukhamedov but treasure the clip of the Pas de Deux available on an ROH DVD. There is a moment towards the end of the first section where Mukhamedov gazes at her with what can surely only be described as adoration.
  11. Don't forget Morera. Apart from R & J she seems to have principal roles in everything, including Giselle and Nutcracker, as well as the new Carnen (admittedly by default) and Frankenstein....
  12. Now on the ROH website... http://www.roh.org.uk/news/bryony-brind-a-look-back-at-her-life-with-the-royal-ballet
  13. Being an agent for opera singers, although dance was my first love, I'll definitely be looking in ;-)
  14. How very sad. I still remember the excitement generated by her 1981 debut in Swan Lake (not withstanding slipping over as she rushed too hastily to protect her Swans in Act 2) and then being chosen to partner Nureyev, despite the fact that she was rather too tall for him, in Bayadère. Im also sure, unlikely as it might seem from the size perspective, that she was partnered by David Wall in his last few weeks as a full time member of the RB in Beauty, don't know if anything else quite lived up to those thrills and a difficult run in Ballet Imperial apparently affected both her personal confidence and managent's confidence in her but relatively late in her Covent Garden career I did see her as a memorably affecting Giselle, capturing an intriguing mixture of fragility and vitality in Act 1 and a really other worldly delicacy in Acr 2. She certainly had a magic about her and even if eariy promise wasn't entirely fulfilled she will be remembered fondly by many who saw her dance who will also mourn her untimely passing.
  15. Was anybody at last night's performance? I do hope Roberta had a good send off - it seems to me that there's something very unpleasantly disrespectful about the way this situation has evolved and the ROH's confirmation of what many of us has suspected late on a Friday afternoon less than a week before her final performance seems only to emphasise that.
  16. I'm sure I'm not the only person who hopes she will be dancing with Alexander Campbell....
  17. No, she wasn't cast in Nutcracker (nor n Pigeons or Giselle) so the situation seemed very clear from management perspective; I just wonder why it has taken so long to become official. One could speculate but one has learned not to do so ....
  18. I think the dismay is occasioned, quite as much as anything else, by the way n which she has, seemingly, been side lined....
  19. She wasn't always one of my favourite dancers but I thought her Lise was outstanding and, perhaps unexpectedly, her Manon. I also think it's a great pity that her partnership with Alexander Campbell, which was so delightful in Don Q and Fille, wasn't extended into Two Pigeons. Looking at the 15/16 casting this news is scarcely a surprise though and I too am surprised that the ROH has left it so late officially to confirm what so many of us were, perhaps improperly, speculating on several months ago...
  20. Corrected below as couldn't edit for some reason .... In some ways the most sheerly involving emotional moment seemed to be that between Romeo and Benvolio after Juliet's supposed death and I don't think that's quite the right emotional arc.
  21. Slightly modified rapture this evening possibly because of jet lag (I flew back from NYC overnight in Tuesday) and a vertiginous seat (front row of the very steep Grand Tier) but more, I think, because of my feelings about Nureyev's production. The sets and costumes are very handsome and I thought that the English National Ballet Philharmonic played really well under Gavjn Sutherland (no squally brass), a fact acknowledged by the seemingly grateful dancers. I'd not seen this particular choreographic text since the early '80's and still remember the astonishing power of Juliet's breakdown as portrayed by Patricia Ruanne. Unfortunately, nothing this evening registered as true or as strongly as that memory, possibly embellished by the rose tinted memories of yesteryear. This evening, too much of Nureyev's choreography seemed over busy, even fussy and the emotional temperature on stage seemed low, although I'm absolutely willing to blame some of that on my own physical condition. Some seems inept too. The inclusion of Father John's murder scarcely registers and given that Juliet has established no relationship at all with Mercutio, why does his ghost come to her to persuade her to take the potion? Nureyev might have shared the Soviet distrust of mime but the dancing out of Friar Laurence's instructions to Juliet te the potion by a singularity unconvincing double just didn't work for me, whilst the rush to stage out Shakespeare's reconciliation and bring back the figures of fate from the start in the closing bars registered as messy. I also struggled to feel any true stage chemistry between Alina Cojocaru and Isaac Hernandez, however technically accomplished their dancing. For me, the best performance came from James Streeter, dangerously feline as Tynalt, and Fernando Buffala, elegant and roguish (despite some embarrassing choreography - the bottom wiggling, the mincing around in the Nurse's veils) as Mercutio. No some ways the most sherry involving emotional rise seemed to be that between Romeo and Benvolio after Juliet's supposed death and I don't think that's quite the right emotional arc. Sadly, for me, as a choreographic expression of Prokofiev's ever thrilling score it fell rather flat. I'd be interested to know what others may have felt and want to emphasise that this is a purely subjective response under less than ideal physical conditions.
  22. Oh dear. I booked a trp to Manchester specially to see Max as Romeo on Friday afternoon and cannot switch to the evening performance :-(
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