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Mary

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Posts posted by Mary

  1. I agree:  a lovely, elegant performance from Nunez  and Soares-whose long arms and panther like jumps are always a pleasure, -and I thought the corps at today's matinee were absolutely superb. They seem to me better than I have seen them for years. Tight, precise, and especially dramatically very effective, as others have said, in Act 2.

     

    What did others think?

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  2. This reminds me that I miss Kobborg /Cojocaru very much- but how lucky I was to see them in all their best roles (Midsummer Night's Dream-most beautiful perhaps of them all).He was the finest actor of all the male dancers I have seen and I am sure he still is. She was the most exquisite Giselle ( and Juliet and..and..) I do agree. Their partnership=pure poetry, Joyful memories!

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  3. For "mad" perhaps read-"driven to distraction"  -she has what we now call a nervous breakdown- the excess of her emotion temporarily deprives her of normal reason...

    Not an uncommon situation -?

    Ballet-like opera- is really all about life and that's why we cry?

     

    Albrecht just has to react which is always difficult to make interesting.

    I agree with Don Q fan that McRae was  far the  most moving.

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  4. Yes I agree. The Matthew Bourne was fun, ( and often visually pleasurable and imaginative) but somehow unsatisfying,- too many predictable and obvious /modish features like the naughty nightclub,vampires, 'anyone for tennis' scene-and not enough  good, sharp dancing- so for me the juxtaposition with RB Don Quixote really emphasised the joy of watching good ballet.The quality of dancing  just sang through  - and so made me forget the - all right, admittedly rather weird lilac dresses!

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  5. Enjoyed watching Matthew Bourne's Sleeping Beauty followed by Don Quixote- what a  nice Christmas treat.

    S.B was fun though I could have done without some of the tackier parts ( oh please, not vampires). I liked the park bench rose adagio pas de deux- and many other very imaginative and expressive  moments.

     

    But then the real thing...

    Marienela Nunez beyond praise in Don Q in my humble opinion. The whole piece seemed to work-well paced, full of life, happy- some superb and a lot of excellent dancing; I found myself wondering why there had been moans about the windmill/lilac dresses etc. ?

     

    A good choice for TV, surely bound to appeal widely and perhaps find some new audiences for ballet.

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  6. Indeed Bruce, and I am glad there is room for all, but your comment made me think, and recall the American literary critic Margaret Fuller's dictum  that a good critic "should teach us to love wisely what we before loved well"

     

    Probably most of us would like to have seen many more performances/dancers/interpretations than we have been able to see, and it is always good to hear the views of someone who has been able to see a very large number of the best of everything (lucky soul!)

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  7. It may have got to the point where the theatres have to do more about this such as blocking the use of all devices. The experience is so marred by some people .

     

    At ROH for the Jewels Saturday matinee the people next to me looked round bemusedly as if they weren't sure why they were there. They were still texting, and apparently watching videos (!!) and fishing in their large bags for refreshments ( how to get through half an hour eh) when the conductor walked out. I caught flashing lights from my sideways vision, and eventually had to nudge the one next to me who looked at me in amazement.

    Then during a very quiet moment an usher rushed down and reached across me to the middle of the trio hissing: "No filming" and I realised what the light had been- so disturbing me again-and  I felt like saying to my neighbours-"This seat cost £50! and I am not a millionaire, please refund me"

     

    Luckily they left in the interval.

  8. I am sure many of us were moved to tears by Diamonds today. Nunez was indeed very fine, Soares was at his most panther-like, landing from big leaps with incredible softness.

    Rubies was amazing-Mc Rae's now signature extreme spinning at its best. Lamb/McRae is an excellent partnership: they are well matched physically and seem to strike sparks from one another.

    It's Emeralds I always find hardest to like but not today-it was danced with more convincing expressiveness than I have seen before.

     

     

    I agree with David-ballet heaven.

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  9. I had no problems at all, managed to get tickets in between various tasks at work! But I wasn't buying that many. I wonder what causes the difficulties? I always wait until about 11 and never have any robems. Maybe there is a log jam first thing?

     

    Hard to decide what casts to go for for Sleeping Beauty, for which trying to see multiple casts is a bit expensive.  In the end McRae won as usual but I  also wanted to see how the home-grown talent is doing, so Pennefather/Cuthbertson.

     

    Winter's Tale is perhaps a gamble but must be worth a try.  I confess the choice of music does rather make my heart sink .

  10. Here is one RB regular who was at Mark Morris today and loved it. I have seen his opera work before. This I found hugely more satisfying.

    I agree with all of the above and I think what stands out for me is the musicality- the live music and the way musicians and dancers work together is clearly key to his work- and the joyousness of much of the dance.

    Socrates was not joyous  exactly, but it was celebratory in its tone. (What a shame applause could not have allowed just a moment's pause at the end of this profound piece, also alas that Socrates' solemn death drinking the cup of hemlock had to be accompanied by a woman slurping double supersize latte in front of me).  All three works were distinguished by movement that was inventive and energetic yet graceful, fluent, natural to the human body (McGregor are you listening.) I agree that there are Ashtonian echoes in the joyful folkdance moments with humorous undertones. I didn't much care for some of the more obviously humorous repeated gestures. But that is a minor point.

     

    I did find the subtitles in Socrates distracting. So I need to see it again perhaps.

     

    Come back Mark Morris.

  11. Meunier I HAVE seen The Judas Tree-twice! and I was sneakily not mentioning it.

    I didn't like it overmuch...

    But- that is one work among so many by Macmillan I have found endlessly enjoyable .

    Whereas McGregor hasn't done even one work I want to see again.

     

    I don't object to nudity or "rudeness"_I think we are all objecting to a kind of dehumanising/objectification/lack of depth, superficial sensationalism.....that lacks the human angle.

  12. this piece.

     

    I have just read the review by Alastair Macaulay of some recent Wheeldon work-attached above--thanks so much John Mallinson for attaching it- how very well put and it says what I was trying to say much better-I do commend it to anyone who hasn't got round to it yet. What Macaulay says about how an audience identifes with both the ballerina and her partner is spot on.

     

    I do think some of these  choreographers are young men without perhaps very much knowledge or understanding of grown-up women, and they are  working in a culture that has gone backwards fast in some of its attitudes, notably in defining women as sex objects.

     

    I agree with everything said about Macmillan, whose work rises above all this, shows characters not objects, involves us on every level..(but  I wish he didn't have to have to have the same old "harlots" in every piece...and the costume dept I swear give them the same red curly wigs...)

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  13. I didn't receive any acknowledgement, no- and I was disappointed- I have been going to RB for 40 years ( on and off!) am a Friend and a huge supporter and have to say that normally I am enthusiastic abut new work (well except Alice), but 7 Deadly Sins I really found offensive.

    McGregor I just find slightly boring now- because as has been said it is so repetitive, and there is no emotional narrative-I don't mean a story, but -it is all on the same level, there is no tonal variation. Also there seems very little if any development in his style and concerns- you could mix up chunks from all his works , give them different coloured vests,and call it 'Contortions 3' and plenty of people would   not realise it was old work-including me.

    I don't like the way his work presents women dancers- or the men- because it seems to me dehumanising.

     

     

     

  14. Hello everyone

     I rarely post but am moved to do so-pleased that I am not alone in feeling just the same as you all do.

    I actually wrote to RB about Tuckett's Seven Deadly Sins, as I felt it was actually quite offensively misogynistic and made me feel very uncomfortable, in fact angry-and I recall saying something like- "Can you really not find a better use for the superb talent of the sublimely elegant Ms Yanowsky?"

     

    Perhaps I was a bit pompous, but.  ....

    I have also written to them to suggest they find some women choreographers. (No reply)

    Macmillan may have been guilty too at times but- a) that was a while ago now and things should have improved; B) there is also a great deal of very interesting choreography for women in his work of course and there is often great depth and insight, in my opinion.

     

    Things should have moved on, shouldn't they?

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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