Jump to content

MildConcern

Members
  • Posts

    105
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by MildConcern

  1. While I didn’t see as many casts as some (only managed Kaneko and Lamb casts live and Osipova on replay) I agree that the principal standard was exceedingly high in this run.

     

    That being said, the corps were more ragged than I’ve seen previously - in particular, uneven 3 ‘gentlemen’ in Act 2, and the beggar boys didn’t fare much better. One of my favourite (?) parts of choreography is the women from boat at the start of Act 3 (where they clutch their heads), but I found some of the emoting in this sequence a bit half hearted in the casts I saw, compared to previous runs. And I think we are in desperate need of new inspiration at the Monsieur GM role (Avis can’t be on every night!)
     

     

    • Like 4
  2. I sat in row B recently for Manon. The rake of the floor of decidedly less towards the front of the stalls so if someone tall sits in front of you, they will block your view slightly. And unfortunately I couldn't see the dancers' feet very well in Manon, and I am above average height!

     

    My preference is always to sit more towards the middle of the stalls or - even better - at the side of the Stalls Circle which gives both the proximity to the stage and a view of the dancers' feet!

  3. 2 hours ago, jmhopton said:

    So am I,  and very put out. I'm not coming to see it as they haven't seen fit to schedule any matinées and I can't afford an overnight, especially for a triple I don't really know anything about. Also, Vadim isn't being filmed in A Winter's Tale. Must be one of the very few years (if not the only one) he hasn't been filmed in any cinema relay. Not a great way for the RB to celebrate his 10th anniversary. 

    While I also think Vadim is a very special dancer, a real jewel in the RB’s crown, I don’t think he should have an undisputed right to cinema relays.

     

    He has, together with Nunez, had the lion’s share of both first nights (with accompanying reviews in broadsheets) and cinema relays. While it is great for him, it really leaves slim pickings for the rest of the RB’s very talented stars. For instance, the small amount of footage that exists of Morera and Campbell in principal roles (not a secondary type character such as Mistress or Lescaut) is a real shame.

     

    We all have our favourites but I encourage the RB to share the unique exposure that cinema relays bring. 
     

    Moreover, I’m not sure it’s even in Vadim’s best interests. I noted in the Manon thread that I thought his Des Grieux was much improved from previous runs. But it is unlikely his interpretation of this role will be filmed again, given already filmed in 2018 run. So in the case of Winter’s Tale where he is making a debut, it really makes sense to see how he develops the role first.

    • Like 7
  4. It is really interesting to read Forum members' different reactions to the roles. For me, Osipova and Kaneko's respective Manons are very different (disclaimer - I have not seen Osipova this run, but I have seen virtually every one of her Manon performances in previous runs starting from her London debut with Acosta). 

     

    Osipova's Manon always came across as a real agent of her own destruction - she is a candle that burns brilliantly at both ends, seeking pleasure and never destined for a long life of contentment. I always feel her sexual liberation very keenly, and there is an eroticism to the bedroom pdd when she dances, a young girl discovering adult pleasures. When her downfall happens, I feel that she does not so much exhibit remorse, but more despair that everything she worked for has disappeared. The relationship with Des Grieux is one of blazing attraction and first love, but I don't necessarily believe that it was destined to last in any event. This is Manon with very much a capital 'M' - she is the sun around which everyone revolves and falls into orbit. In the final pdd, I feel she is throwing herself into the grave with abandon - one last reckless fling (and Des Grieux happens to one left who supports her to the end). 

     

    Kaneko's Manon (based only one run out so far!) is very different. I wrote about it above and as Sim says, her downfall comes about through a mix of brotherly manipulation and a predilection for luxury that sits uneasily with a private distaste of immoral means. There is an inner turmoil and a private battle of wills that is much more complex than 'I like him, but I also love money'. In Act 2, I think her sense of shame at being a courtesan comes across much stronger than most Manons I've seen. The bedroom pdd is flush with bright and promising love, not lust, and accordingly it comes across very differently. In Act 3, she is shell-shocked and catatonic at what has befallen her and vey much retreats into herself. Similarly, the final pdd is one saturated in regret and a doomed realisation at how she has caused Des Grieux to fall also. I came out feeling I'd experienced a real love story. 

     

    It really is a matter of personal taste and we're very lucky to have such range to choose from!

    • Like 15
    • Thanks 1
  5. 42 minutes ago, Scheherezade said:


    Yes, over the last couple of seasons he has evolved into the ‘complete’ performer. The sheer beauty informing his flawless technique has always been on another level but after his Rudolf in the last Mayerling run and now this DG, Vadim is delivering masterclasses in dramatic interpretation too. For which I think we should add a massive bravo to the coaches, too. 
     

     

     I cannot agree more. I was so thrilled by Vadim when he first joined the RB - the beauty of his first Des Grieux was a real shock to the system. Over the years, I found myself taking the stunning classicism of his lines for granted and wishing that he would emote more even beyond the natural beauty of his dancing. I also (she says quietly) never found his partnership with Nunez emotionally demanding and so inevitably saw him less the more they danced together. 

     

    Mayerling was a real turning point for my connection to him - I could not believe that this agonisingly tortured and consumed portrayal came from him. And he has gone from strength to strength since. HIs Des Grieux now glows, and when he looked at Kaneko's Manon last night, the love was from inside, not just his wonderful dancing. I am still agape - and counting the hours to Tuesday's performance. 

    • Like 20
  6. Lots of wonderful feelings from this evening - in particular, Muntagirov. I don’t think I’ve ever seen him stronger. His interpretation has changed greatly since the very boyish des Grieux at his debut with Lamb. This came across strongly in his first solo where he portrayed an assured young man confidently displaying his ardour, rather than an enraptured youth and it worked very well. His solos in Act 3 were heartbreaking - he is now as strong dramatically as he is technically, which is a heady and deadly combination! 

     

    The bedroom pdd and swamp pdd were “suspend time” sublime. The Muntagirov and Kaneko partnership is very different to the tender one she shares with Bracewell. This one is grand and buoyant, where everything from lifts to emotions are ‘large’ and it really soars in the pdd. The kisses and little touches of affection between them all felt extremely natural. I really look forward to seeing them together in Swan Lake.

     

    I was really sucked in by Kaneko’s Manon. Hers seems to feel familial bond more than perhaps the allure of gold. She never seemed as entranced by the jewellery as she did by Lescaut’s encouragement, and her first concern in the fight scenes was always for him. She displayed more coldness and ambivalence than most towards Monsieur GM - she was the puppet rather than the gravitational sun. Some of her acting really struck me - the way she bounced up full of beaming smiles immediately after bedroom pdd and also the sinuous slight disgust she had during the pas de trois with Lescaut and GM. Some of the acting in Madame’s parlour could perhaps be more varied, but it is a debut!

    • Like 16
    • Thanks 2
  7. I remember thinking it was a shame when Hayward was announced as the replacement for Takada for Manon, when there is Hamilton with one performance and also plenty of female principal 'Manons-in-waiting'. 

     

    This newest announcement makes it fall into place - it is fitting that Campbell's last performance is with a partnership that has brought us so much joy over the years. My favourite role of his remains his Bratfisch (he embodies it like no-one else) and I will be very sorry to never see it again. 

    • Like 5
  8. The surprise standout of the evening for me was Never Known, by Joshua Junker. I thought it suited the dancers extremely well, was thought provoking and innovative (definite shades of Pite though) and I found the final male pdd quite affecting. It also certainly got the loudest cheers this evening!

     

    Boundless and For What It’s Worth both somewhat tapered off after promising beginnings. In particular, I found Boundless numbingly repetitive and dull. For What It’s Worth had some highlights but I’m not sure the balletic language is really an effective one to convey Mother Africa.

     

    I had high expectations for Twinkle, but while very charming it didn’t quite reach the highs. Will and Fumi are my favourite RB pairing and yet the choreo didn’t really tap into the reserves they have. I found the opening Brahms solo for Bracewell particularly underwhelming, especially when we know his immense capabilities.

     

    An evening very well spent however! And I found the video projections before each piece a great way to transition the audience. 

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  9. The Friday Manon with Kaneko / Muntagirov might provide a new experience for me - an overseas-based balletomane friend will will be flying in and has asked if I would guide her to, and join her at, the stage door after the performance.

     

    Not having done this before in my 10 years of RB attending (always being perfectly happy to wander off into the night with fine memories and an earworm or two), would anyone have a rough idea of how long we might have to wait post-performance? The etiquette I would hope we would get right, but I don't think she is envisioning more than a hearty handshake and a few uplifting words about the performance. 

  10. I don't agree with this post. I enjoy Hirano as a performer and his partnering is one of the most secure of the current RB male principals. I think the latter point is particularly important in the later years of the a ballerina's career. 

     

    Moreover, they both have a sort of quiet maturity to their dancing that complements each other rather well.

     

    I doubt Lamb has no say over her partner - I would expect that of the current female principals, Nunez, Osipova, Lamb and perhaps Cuthbertson have more sway over their casting (look at Osipova's insistence on Clarke). I suspect the Lamb / Hirano partnership is as much her choice as anyone else's. 

    • Like 18
    • Thanks 1
  11. Thank you @Sim and @JohnS for providing the pre performance links!

     

    I needn’t have worried - I found the evening ‘divine’ indeed and remarkably easy to follow. In its premier run, I remember liking Purgatory but not much else. This time round however, it flowed as an intensely communicative piece.

     

    I confess I am usually partial to McGregor and find his dance language quite intuitive. I am aware it is not the same for everyone on the forum. But like some others earlier in this thread, I find it now sits very well on the RB and think it is a real boast for our flagship ballet company to have such a defined modern movement. 
     

    Bracewell was magic and the Act 2 pdd brought a tear to my eye. I found the soothsayers onwards to the end in Inferno very captivating. Paradiso is perhaps the weakest of the three but the score does much to lift it. My companion, a ballet newbie who hated Cinderella, loved this immensely. You see, there is something for everyone! 

    • Like 14
    • Thanks 2
  12. I also have the same feeling about at least one promotion being rather earlier than I would have otherwise expected. It isn't just about whether they have done enough 'big classics' in the repertoire, it's more a general feeling about their ability to command the stage and really excite me the way a principal should.

     

    For instance, I felt (and feel) very positively about the relatively speedy promotions of Hayward and Naghdi - their respective (very different!) star qualities were undeniable as first artists. And we have now been rewarded with many years of their debuts and performances. Kaneko, on the other hand, was beset by injury and not ready for promotion at an earlier stage in her career. Her promotion came at the right time for her and she is now my 'first choice cast' for virtually everything as everything she touches turns to gold. But I think that route should be a just reward for late bloomers with the same star quality as those young promotees, rather than a sort of service prize for a very good soloist. 

    • Like 3
  13. A very fine debut by Clarke and some excellent partnering (those lifts!). It was also great to finally see Osipova in her signature role - her Act 1 solo variation was truly sizzling and her Kitri has a very naughty demeanour. I also thought her excitement when watching the gypsy camp was very cute - dancing away in her chair.
     

    I have the slightly unfortunate (or very fortunate) condition of having seen the utterly superlative Kaneko and Bracewell cast twice now and the cohesiveness they portray really carries the ballet. With Osipova and Clarke, I felt they were always most focussed on technical fireworks which, once executed, was followed by a huge grin. While impressive, it really exposes how “bitty” this ballet is, particularly in the Acosta production.

     

     

    • Like 14
    • Thanks 2
×
×
  • Create New...