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Your Secret Ballet Guilty Pleasure


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I was rereading a piece Gia Kourlas wrote in the Autumn 2003 DanceView where she mentions that Peter Martins ballet Thou Swell is one of her greatest guilty pleasures. So what's your's? It could be a ballet that's cheesy, over the top or just plain dumb. A ballet or dancer your friends think is silly or useless but that you secretly like or even love, even though you're embarressed to admit it.

My quilty pleasure is an old Soviet era pas de deux called Spring Waters. It's really more acrobatics than ballet. The ballerina runs and launches herself headfirst into her partner's arms. There's lots of "ta-da" posing. Lots of very fast partnered spins better suited to an ice rink. And it has those lifts where the man holds the woman over his head with one arm. I call them five finger crotch grab lifts.

So why do I love it? Mostly because of the performers. I've seen the Boshoi do it. Because they dance it with such speed, energy and great flair, and they seem to be having the time of thier lives doing it, I can't help but start to smile and respond to it with enthusiam. :blushing:

So what's your ballet quilty pleasure?

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Just an echo here, but I adore Spring Waters. It's so quick and captivating, and I could watch it all day long. Have you ever seen that documentary (I think it's called "Ballet Adagio") that is a slow motion tape of Anna-Marie Holmes in Spring Waters? Fantastic!!!!!! I tried once to find a commercial copy of it, but could not.

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My guilty pleasure is definitely the hyper-flexible, "vulgar" ballerinas like Irina Dvorovenko, Sylvie Guillem, Allegra Kent, Svetlana Zakharova, even Alina Cojacaru and Alessandra Ferri. Although Ferri and Cojacaru are not "vulgar", just extremely flexible. Yes I admit it: the higher up the leg goes and the more the head can touch the butt, the happier I am.

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Frankly, I would love it if ABT does Spartacus. They have the male corp to do it.

Can you just salivate for the casts they can put together :blushing: !!!!!!!!! I know the guys would die to do either of the two lead male roles.......esp. the bad guy(Crassius?!). :yes:

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Eifman's Red Giselle, performed by his own company. Danced with the conviction that they are witnessing a Biblical miracle, and complete kitsch. Up there with soap operas, really trashy novels, and pizza with goopy cheese.

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Eifman's Red Giselle, performed by his own company.  Danced with the conviction that they are witnessing a Biblical miracle, and complete kitsch.  Up there with soap operas, really trashy novels, and pizza with goopy cheese.

His version of Hamlet is in the same vein -- I can't say that it's a guilty pleasure, because "pleasure" wasn't the experience I was having, but he's one of the few choreographers we see here (Seattle) that indulges in sheer "over the top" work. Kitten with a whip, indeed.

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Another Eifman confession: I enjoyed "Who's Who," his grandiose attempt to link the music of Duke Ellington and Rachmaninoff, and the American immigrant experience with the plot of "Some Like it Hot." It was the only Eifman I'd seen until "Musagete," about which nothing more needs to be said.

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My guilty pleasure is definitely the hyper-flexible, "vulgar" ballerinas..... Yes I admit it: the higher up the leg goes and the more the head can touch the butt, the happier I am.

Then Lucia Lacarra must really get you going! :(

My guilty pleasure was Balanchine's Afternoon of a Faun in the 1960's.

It was almost like being allowed to be a peeping-Tom, watching the very personal goings on of two people in their bedroom (which the set that depicted a studio reminded me of).

No matter who danced it -- Allegra Kent, Melissa Hayden, Patty McBride, Suzanne Farrell, Kay Mazzo -- with Moncion, Villella, D'Amboise, Ludlow, Martins, etc. as their partners -- I was mesmerized!

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Actually, that "Afternoon of a Faun" was Jerome Robbins'. It's not a "guilty pleasure" because it's an acclaimed masterpiece.

Now, my guilty pleasure was Jacques d'Amboise's "The Chase" set to Mozart's K. 447 Horn Concerto #3. It was a takeoff on Swan Lake transplanted to a fox hunt. It bombed critically, but I loved it! I especially liked the old Duke, danced by Shaun O'Brien, who was allergic to foxes, and the Fox-girl who had to be partnered while figuring in her tail!

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I have been searching my brain for something to top the "less-there-than-meets-the-eye" Sinfonietta by Kylian, but to no avail. Its end, with all those bodies leaping through the air, makes me almost giddy. Still, Sinfonietta is not bad enough to merit guilt. :(

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Actually, that "Afternoon of a Faun" was Jerome Robbins'.  It's not a "guilty pleasure" because it's an acclaimed masterpiece.

Whoops, right you are! I attributed it to my personal "Balanchine Era", hence the senior-moment mistake! And. two for two, it isn't a "guilty" pleasure, in the sense of the expression, but a true pleasure -- AND a masterpiece! :(

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Robbins' I'm Old Fashioned

I know it is a bit treacly and designed to be nothing more than a crowd-pleaser. Many people hate it.

But I just love seeing Astaire and Rita Hayworth on a big screen. And I also love the ending where the dancers just turn to watch them in salute. It appeals to my more sentimental side, but I don't care. It appeals.

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