Gala fare
#1
Posted 13 February 2007 - 02:45 PM
Swan Lake White Swan pas
Swan Lake Black Swan pas
Sleeping Beauty Grand Pas de Deux
Bluebird pas
Esmarelda pas
Diana and Acteon
Corsaire
Raymonda
Grand Pas Classique
Giselle pas
Peasant pas
Don Q
Pharaoh's Daughter pas
The Talisman Pas de deux
Satanella Pas de deux
Flower Festival at Genanzo: Pas de deux
Harlequinade pas
Manon pas (MacMillan)
romeo and Juliet balcony pas (Ashton or MacMillan or Lavery or any decent version)
Thais (Ashton)
Voices of Spring (Ashton)
Birthday Offering pas
Known By Heart pas
Light Rain
Sparticus
Herman Schmerman pas
In the Middle... pas
Dying Swan
Middle Duet
Beethoven Romance
Estatic Orange pas
Barber Violin pas
Tschaikovsky pas
Sylvia pas
Tarantella
Divert. Brillante
Diana and Acteon
Rubies pas
Diamonds pas
Stars and Stripes pas
Harlequinade pas de deux (the Tallchief one or the McBride)
Any others?
#2
Posted 14 February 2007 - 11:31 AM
#3
Posted 14 February 2007 - 12:43 PM
Taras Bulba gopak (explosive-but-brief male solo)...usually encored
Flames of Paris pdd
"The Blind Girl" by Yakobsen (a pdd-adagio to 'Estrellita' popular Spanish tune)
"Russian Souvenir" also by Yakobsen (a pdd - cutesy Russian dolls)
Other Yakobsen gems - such as 'Troika,' 'The Gossipy Women,' 'The Kiss,' etc....but 'Blind Girl' and "Russian Souvenir" appear the most often, it seems
"Narcisse" male solo by Goleizovsky
Ocean and Two Pearls pas de trois, from the Gorsky version of Little Humpbacked Horse
Bakhti pdd by Bejart - doggone it, it's all over Russia
...and the one that will make me scream if I see it once again, it is so over-used:
"The Fairy Doll" pas de trois
#4
Posted 14 February 2007 - 01:35 PM
Natalia, on Feb 14 2007, 08:43 PM, said:
Taras Bulba gopak (explosive-but-brief male solo)...usually encored
Flames of Paris pdd
Ocean and Two Pearls pas de trois, from the Gorsky version of Little Humpbacked Horse
...and the one that will make me scream if I see it once again, it is so over-used:
"The Fairy Doll" pas de trois
The first two are a lot of fun. I agree they are great gala choices.
I've never seen the pdt from LHH and would really like to.
But Fairy Doll????? You want to scream?
Me =
#5
Posted 14 February 2007 - 02:44 PM
richard53dog, on Feb 14 2007, 04:35 PM, said:
Other Dances is good between two high-powered displays. Also from Robbins, the three sailor variations from Fancy Free, although I suspect the rights are granted only contingent on the ballet being performed whole.
I've seen a sort of mini-divertisement DonQ with an ensemble of four women, the two flower girls dancing their variations, and Kitri and Basil dancing the grand pdd. It worked well.
I've often wondered why Gamzatti and Solor's betrothal pdd is never danced (to my knowledge) in these kinds of galas. I love the woman's variation there!
#6
Posted 14 February 2007 - 03:28 PM
carbro, on Feb 14 2007, 10:44 PM, said:
richard53dog, on Feb 14 2007, 04:35 PM, said:
I've often wondered why Gamzatti and Solor's betrothal pdd is never danced (to my knowledge) in these kinds of galas. I love the woman's variation there!
LHH is Little Humpbacked Horse. I wasn't familiar with that abbreviation until I read it here on BT and thought I was TOTALLY uncool for not knowing it!
I love the Gamzatti's variation too. But I haven't watched it in a while. It might need to have some arranging done to work as a pdd. Isn't there one point where Gamzatti is lifted by several guys?
#7
Posted 14 February 2007 - 03:40 PM
You're right about Gamzatti being lifted by four guys. I suppose for concert purposes a promenade or something could be substituted, rather like the Black Swan moment when Odile needs an emergency tete-a-tete with her dad.
#8
Posted 14 February 2007 - 07:55 PM
#9
Posted 15 February 2007 - 02:33 AM
Quote
By the way it isn't the Moscovite Waltz, it's the Moszkovsky Waltz named after the music's composer Moritz Moszkowsky. Moszkowsky is a neglected figure these days but he wrote a really sunny piano concerto and some wonderful solo piano works including the waltz.
For anyone interested in this forgotten composer there is some basic information about him on the Naxos website:
http://www.naxos.com...serinfo/716.htm
#10
Posted 15 February 2007 - 04:13 AM
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