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Pacific Northwest Ballet at the Joyce Theater


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To my NYC "friends". Naturally all the dancers scheduled to perform are worthy of your attention, but allow me to point out a few that I think you will enjoy focusing on (not because one is "better" than the others, but for very particular reasons I will mention):

Carla Korbes -- goes without saying why those of you in NYC will focus on her

Carrie Imler -- for my money Carrie is the best all around dancer at PNB; she can do anything, and has a professional quality (in the sense of complete commitment to quality) that one can't help but admire; technically she is 2nd to none; her acting is superb in a subtle sort of way

Lindsi Dec -- a rising star (incidentally recently married to Karel Cruz)

Laura Gilbreath -- what she does with "tall" is amazing

Lucien Postlewaite -- no male dancer at PNB has more artisty in his dance than Lucien

Barry Kerollis -- IMO a young dancer destined for star status; his grace and power practically define masculinity in dance

I could go on and on of course, and I don't mean to slight any of the other fabulous dancers (great dancers even) in the PNB group at NYC, but I think these dancers above each have something unique to watch for.

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Very fine company, but I'm afraid I was never excited much nor moved either. I thought the company looked best in 3 Movements, which seems to be where you can see more of what their specific style is. Maybe Jonathan Pueretta is a star, his movements are marvelous, although I didn't care for that piece either, 'Mopey'.

Frankly, to me the company looked good in everything, but never quite came to life for me, except for sparks in 3 Movements, which I thought a good, though not great piece. Most disappointing was the Tharp piece, which I thought undistinguished and academic. A good way of showing off superbly-trained dancers, as these were, but it made me think of Graham's 'Adorations', which is far more imaginative; I was surprised at how boring I found this piece. And for the first time ever I noticed over-smiling, which I'd never thought about before. I think I've only seen one other Tharp piece, the one she did for Baryshnikov, I think it was called 'Push Comes to Shove', and if these two are at all representative of her work, I really just don't get it, period, it just seems pedestrian and derivative. I once saw her dance herself in a film, and always remember what a phenomenal dancer she was, she could do amazing things with her body--yes, it surely happens sometimes that a choreographer is actually a better dancer than creator.

The company has a glassy bright sheen, and I'd much rather have seen them do Balanchine. They are not ever messy, and they must do Concerto Barocco especially well (do they do it?) and quite a number of others, as well as much Robbins. I guess these works were chosen partially with the limitations of the Joyce in mind, I believe some of you mentioned that.

There were a number of Seattle people in the audience who had come for the run.

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I was there on Tuesday night, and I had a good time. The feeling I got from the company in both the Tharp and the Millepied was that it was a group of friends who enjoyed being together. I was seated in Row B, which was not good for seeing the whole stage picture, but I saw dancers smiling as their eyes caught their colleagues' across the stage or right beside them, and it felt like they were sharing the excitement of the moment.

I liked Tharp's Opus 111 -- or what I was able to make out of it. Again, I would have had a better sense of it if I had been further back and higher up, but ... Patrick, you'll probably find this hard to believe, but it was much more coherent than many of her more recent pure-dance works (I haven't seen her Broadway stuff).

The three non-Tharp pieces all showed a debt to her -- shoulders that slumped or shrugged, isolations, movement initiated from the back of the pelvis. I don't know whether this was part of the programming strategy, but it captured my opinion.

Would I call any of the pieces on this program great? No. But unlike much new choreography, all of it was worth seeing. At a talk the previous night, dance historian Linda Szmyd Monich said that the program had been planned with attention to what would be familiar but new to New Yorkers. Tharp is famous, both Millepied and Liang are familiar to NYCB audiences (Liang's Fur Alina having premiered at a NYCB Diamond Project program), and Mopey was on the program when Peter Boal & Dancers had its first season at the Joyce.

Who was that musician who famously said that the music doesn't happen with the notes, but with the space between the notes? Well, with Edward Liang's Fur Alina, to an extremely spare score by Arvo Part, there was more space than there were notes. Korbes and Cruz were a loving couple apparently coping with loss, lots of reaching out, empty embraces, pullings away. A poignant pas de deux, but I too often found myself waiting for the next note.

The most interesting aspect of Millepied's Three Movements appeared to be the formations he made from the assembled company. Again, I would have liked to have seen this from a distance. I remember enjoying the central pas de deux for Korbes and Bold, but 27 hours later, I can't remember anything specific about it.

I think the best way to judge a company is to see it in familar works, but I understand Boal's desire to return to New York with his acquisitions. The company is still largely the same dancers he inherited from Stowell and Russell. I don't really know the company, but from the looks of things at the Joyce, he is serving his dancers well, they are serving their audience in kind.

Carrie Imler -- for my money Carrie is the best all around dancer at PNB; she can do anything, and has a professional quality (in the sense of complete commitment to quality) that one can't help but admire; technically she is 2nd to none; her acting is superb in a subtle sort of way
A few years ago, Stowell and Russell brought a small contingent of PNB dancers, Imler included, to the Guggenheim for a Lecture-Demonstration. She instantly became a favorite of mine. I was dismayed to see that she only has one role in this run.

I was glad I went. This is an excellent company. I can't wait for their return, hoping that this spring's two-night stand at the Guggenheim's Works & Process isn't the last for a long time.

I look forward to reading others' reactions.

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Who was that musician who famously said that the music doesn't happen with the notes, but with the space between the notes? Well, with Edward Liang's Fur Alina, to an extremely spare score by Arvo Part, there was more space than there were notes. Korbes and Cruz were a loving couple apparently coping with loss, lots of reaching out, empty embraces, pullings away. A poignant pas de deux, but I too often found myself waiting for the next note.

That's very interesting, never would have thought of it, because it was this one in particular I couldn't quite figure out why it didn't move me. If there really is all that much 'more space', it could be that even their fine dancing could not fill it with enough emotion--and that was the impression I got, that they were trying to, but not quite managing.

The most interesting aspect of Millepied's Three Movements appeared to be the formations he made from the assembled company. Again, I would have liked to have seen this from a distance. I remember enjoying the central pas de deux for Korbes and Bold, but 27 hours later, I can't remember anything specific about it.

Yes, and I did see it from a distance in a quite ideal seat. This one I would probably really like if I saw it a few times, and their technique is impossible to fault. I didn't see anything sloppy even in what I didn't care for as choreography.

Also, thanks for pointing out about the 'debt to Tharp' of the other pieces. I wouldn't have known that either, and could explain some of my surprise at seeing wonderful dancers in works I just couldn't enter into very much.

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I was there Thursday and had a lovely time. The company felt happy and it was refreshing to me to see a new and good ballet company, since usually I see NYCB or modern stuff.

I also liked the Millipied/Reich work the most (although I was nervous some of the dancers were going to leap right off the corners of the stage a few times!). It had energy and propulsion, admittedly hard not to given the music, and the dancers looked sharp and happy. It had a little bit of a Symphony in Three Movements meets Westside Story vibe, but that’s not bad. Millipied moved groups of dancers around in interesting and varied ways.

Tharp I think is not my cup of tea. The dancers seemed relatively undifferentiated; I didn’t get a sense of much of a relationship between any of the couples and since basically everyone got the same steps, eventually, they seemed almost interchangeable. And the Liang piece was pretty, but sort of dull, too. I've seen stuff like this before.

None of the choreography struck me as particularly original, but it wasn't bad -- probably the most original was Mopey, but I think I was the only person in the theater last night that liked it.

The dancers looked uniformly terrific. I think what this program shows is that there aren’t a lot of great choreographers out there, which we knew, and so an AD, like Boal, who is trying to develop/support new works is not always going to have topflight ballets on offer. Which is OK, and admirable, because you don’t want nothing but warhorses, either. And new works are probably part of the reason these dancers look so pleased and on top of things, which is not to be undervalued. I too hope they get back to NY relatively often because I’d like to see more.

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I went to the Joyce last night to see PNB. I enjoyed Opus 111 very much. For me, Tharp's work can be very hit and miss. I hated the Rabbit and Rogue she did for ABT, for example. Opus 111 was a definite hit in my opinion. All the dancers were marvelous. Fur Alina was a lovely trifle; Carla Korbes can make the most pedestrian choreography look good. It was nice to see her dance again. We miss you at NYCB Carla! I could have done without the pretentious gimmick of turning the lights on and off in Fur Alina. I hated Mopey. Mopey was dopey. I liked the Millipied work, but for me the Steve Reich music is very monotonous. I spotted Sebastian Marcovici in the audience, and Peter Boal was out and about saying hello to old friends during intermissions.

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Maybe Jonathan Pueretta is a star, his movements are marvelous, although I didn't care for that piece either, 'Mopey'.

He is. I wish he had better material than "Mopey". He's getting wonderful things to dance from Olivier Wevers.

Frankly, to me the company looked good in everything, but never quite came to life for me, except for sparks in 3 Movements, which I thought a good, though not great piece. Most disappointing was the Tharp piece, which I thought undistinguished and academic.

I agree about the Tharp. That's why I keep harping on my disappointment in PNB having brought this Tharp. If both casts of "Afternoon Ball" had come, you would have seen a completely different Chalnessa Eames. (Who is also getting wonderful things to dance from Olivier Wevers.)

The company has a glassy bright sheen, and I'd much rather have seen them do Balanchine. They are not ever messy, and they must do Concerto Barocco especially well (do they do it?) and quite a number of others, as well as much Robbins.

"Concerto Barocco" and "Square Dance" are great works for them, especially when Carrie Imler dances them, or Kaori Nakamura (not on this trip) in "Square Dance". At the same time, they do a killer "Jewels".

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Very fine company, but I'm afraid I was never excited much nor moved either. I thought the company looked best in 3 Movements, which seems to be where you can see more of what their specific style is. Maybe Jonathan Pueretta is a star, his movements are marvelous, although I didn't care for that piece either, 'Mopey'.

Frankly, to me the company looked good in everything, but never quite came to life for me, except for sparks in 3 Movements, which I thought a good, though not great piece. Most disappointing was the Tharp piece, which I thought undistinguished and academic. A good way of showing off superbly-trained dancers, as these were, but it made me think of Graham's 'Adorations', which is far more imaginative; I was surprised at how boring I found this piece. And for the first time ever I noticed over-smiling, which I'd never thought about before. I think I've only seen one other Tharp piece, the one she did for Baryshnikov, I think it was called 'Push Comes to Shove', and if these two are at all representative of her work, I really just don't get it, period, it just seems pedestrian and derivative. I once saw her dance herself in a film, and always remember what a phenomenal dancer she was, she could do amazing things with her body--yes, it surely happens sometimes that a choreographer is actually a better dancer than creator.

The company has a glassy bright sheen, and I'd much rather have seen them do Balanchine. They are not ever messy, and they must do Concerto Barocco especially well (do they do it?) and quite a number of others, as well as much Robbins. I guess these works were chosen partially with the limitations of the Joyce in mind, I believe some of you mentioned that.

There were a number of Seattle people in the audience who had come for the run.

I would tend to agree. I was there on Wednesday and found much of the evening wanting. While the dancers were OK, none stood out especially as distinguished. Korbes stands out as she is the one blond in the bunch. OK, there was one other girl with light hair, but most of the women were interchangeable. The men seemed just OK. While they are all seemingly well trained, no one stood out as a person to watch. Good corps de ballet dancers, is about it. From my seat (row M, center) no one seemed to be connecting to the audience or each other. Let alone the choreography. They just did the steps. The Tharp came across as overly busy without much content or resolution and for me the dancers simply had too many bones in their bodies. They didn't capture the Tharp movements at all. While the Millepied piece had energy and action, I preferred his piece that he did for ABT this past Fall at Avery Fisher. That was risky! And a recent showing at the Guggenheim by Larry Keigwan's company (also to a Reich score) captured the sense of urgency and urban rush to a dance work that this piece lacked. Again, lots of steps, waving of arms, more steps, etc. The less said about the two short middle works the better. A Forsythe pas de deux would have perked things up! And while I can appreciate the decision to bring more contemporary works to be seen in NYC, PNB still is and should be seen in a little more of a classical vein. I could have forgiven the other stuff had there been one Balanchine. This company is starting to look an awful lot like a lot of other companies. We don't see much of these companies from elsewhere in the country (regrettably). But in my mind, Eddie Vilella and the Miami City Ballet got it right when they recently performed here. Now there was a company to remember and long to see again! It's only Friday and PNB has slipped mostly from my memory .

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I could have forgiven the other stuff had there been one Balanchine.

You hit the nail on the head with that, because it's sharper than what I said along the same lines. That programming just doesn't seem smart. I just looked at the Playbill again, you would have seen Benjamin Griffiths in 'Mopey', and James Moore is also appearing in the role. What that piece is good for is seeing what the boy can do, and you could see what Puerretta is capable of even with this rather silly piece. I am glad to hear from Helene that he is getting some better material, because I even noticed him a bit more than the others in the Tharp. What the program needed was something that would allow them to be much more expansive, to luxuriate more, than these rather tight pieces.

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Who was that musician who famously said that the music doesn't happen with the notes, but with the space between the notes?

Miles Davis, I believe.

Maybe Jonathan Pueretta is a star, his movements are marvelous, although I didn't care for that piece either, 'Mopey'.

He is. I wish he had better material than "Mopey".

I agree with Helene. Mopey shows Jonathan (it's Poretta BTW) well in some aspects of his dance, but there is so much more that you don't see about him in this piece. If you ever see him in, say, "Rubies", you would get a far better idea of who he is as a dancer.

That's why I keep harping on my disappointment in PNB having brought this Tharp. If both casts of "Afternoon Ball" had come, you would have seen a completely different Chalnessa Eames.

As I indicated earlier, both Helene and I preferred "Afternoon" to "Opus 111" when they premiered here in Seattle. Opus 111 is fine, but the power or excitment, many of you NYC'ers seem to feel was missing, might have been satisfied with "Afternoon" I think (or alternatively, you might not have liked "Afternoon" at all since it is definitely not for everyone's taste).

The company has a glassy bright sheen, and I'd much rather have seen them do Balanchine.

I have little doubt that all of us in Seattle would prefer that the program contained a Balanchine. Balanchine would have been a sort of "standard" that you all could have used to see PNB in light of other companies you see on a more regular basis. Not only that, but IMHO one of the strengths of PNB is fully realized when you see a program that moves from something like "Square Dance" to "Opus 111" and then maybe even on to something like Robbins "The Concert". I presume Boal picked the pieces he did for many reasons (the Joyce Theater being only one of them).

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This will be a minority report, but I may be one of the few people who doesn't think Korbes looks better at PNB - at least not in this repertory. She was so suited for Balanchine's "White Goddess" roles and she looked forced and yet still bland in Tharp (less so in Millepied's piece.) Seeing Mearns in Titania the next day at NYCB reminded me how interesting Korbes (also) was in that role.

A single viewing doesn't tell a whole story, but the ex-NYCB'er who seems to have really profited from the move was Sarah Ricard Orza, who looks infinitely more memorable than she did when at NYCB.

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This will be a minority report, but I may be one of the few people who doesn't think Korbes looks better at PNB - at least not in this repertory.

I never thought the Tharp role played to her strengths. I thought she was wonderful in "3 Movements" on the McCaw Hall stage, and I think she might have been coming back from injury and was especially energized. She didn't have the same impact for me this afternoon.

"White Goddess" Korbes was flawless last year in Diamonds.

I wish I could have gotten myself to Seattle to see her Anita.

So far, the most beautiful things I've seen her dance were "Diamonds", the Verdy role in "Emeralds", and Odette, but her Anita was also a thrill, and she was sensuous as all get-go in "Fancy Free".

I think she's too liquid a dancer for most of the contemporary works. She seems to like to dance them, but she's interchangeable in many, while she's anything but in classical and neoclassical rep. She was a beautiful Lilac Fairy, and according to a recent interview, she's learning Aurora now. That will be an interesting stretch for her.

Peter Martins made an entrance at today's matinee, wearing shades, climbing up an orchestra side aisle to his seat. After watching today, if I were he and hadn't remembered the context of the PNB programs to which many New York critics have given glowing reviews, I'd be tempted to dismiss them altogether or to take them personally. Not that the company hasn't been dancing well, or that the program isn't indicative of many of the new works, but it isn't what they do best, which is too big for the Joyce stage. I never thought I'd write this, but I think the company looked better in the Kylian they did this fall ("Petite Mort"), and the pieces, with the exception of "3 Movements", are tepid* compared to the Forsythe, Robbins, Balanchine, and even "Red Angels".

*Edited to add: I was surprised, because the program sounded stronger on paper.

A single viewing doesn't tell a whole story, but the ex-NYCB'er who seems to have really profited from the move was Sarah Ricard Orza, who looks infinitely more memorable than she did when at NYCB.

I still don't like Opus 111 very much -- it takes forever to really get going and keep going -- but it looked much better, and much more vivid, on the Joyce stage than at McCaw Hall. Ricard Orza, who was second cast in the program in which the work premiered, and Barry Kerollis were both superb. I liked her very much when I first saw her in the role, which was made on Jodie Thomas, and I think it was her PNB breakout role. This afternoon, she was even better, bigger and more dynamic than when she first danced it. Kerollis was a delight, his elegance boosted by a tad of the manic energy he had in "West Side Story Suite".

"3 Movements" didn't translate as well, because it needs more stage depth, and while from our seats in the Joyce, row R (on the rise), dead center, the patterns were as clear as they were in McCaw Hall, there was too much congestion. I hope this is revived in Seattle soon. This is the work on the program that, if PNB were a visiting company, would have made me buy tickets for a second and third view.

"Mopey" is never going to be a favorite of mine, but watching Benjamin Griffiths dance it, I'm reminded again and again of how in the most awkward, self-conscious, self-hating, crazily hormonal cocktail that is the adolescent boy there are glimpses of sublime grace and beauty.

If I am indifferent to Rachel Foster in a contemporary work, in this case "Fur Alina", I think I'm safe in concluding there's not much to the work.

I'm terrible with faces, but I think I saw Benjamin Millepied in the audience. The short women with short dark hair who attended with Peter Martins looked so familiar -- Rosemary Dunleavy, maybe? -- and a man who looked very much like Charles Askegaard managed to avoid decapitating a tiny old lady with his gym bag on the way to his seat. There were a number of dancers there, but without name tags, I'm lost.

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I wonder if after seeing "3 Movements" at Ballet Across America, the cries from the audience and critics to BRING BALANCHINE ALREADY will intensify, and whether Boal will heed them. I think Tobias' sense of desperation over Korbes would be relieved by a trip to Seattle where Korbes is more expansively cast and in context of a season that includes three full lengths, two of them classical or neoclassical, an all-Balanchine, and "The Nutcracker" out of seven programs. Boal brought Boal & Company II -- I'm not sure whether it's "plus Tharp" or including Tharp -- to the Joyce, which makes sense for the theater. I don't think the Joyce makes sense as a venue for the company, which could have performed "3 Movements" and two Balanchines with the same number of dancers on a larger stage.

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I wonder if after seeing "3 Movements" at Ballet Across America, the cries from the audience and critics to BRING BALANCHINE ALREADY will intensify, and whether Boal will heed them. I think Tobias' sense of desperation over Korbes would be relieved by a trip to Seattle where Korbes is more expansively cast and in context of a season

But they COULD have done at least one Balanchine (you tell me which) even on the Joyce stage, couldn't they have? Looking back now at the responses to something we'd all expected to be dazzled by, I'm in slight disbelief at such programming. I don't believe this program--again if there had been at least ONE Balanchine--makes since on any level. Because even 'Three Movements', the best of the works, is no masterpiece. But I agree with Leigh and Tobias on Korbes as she appeared here: She was not charismatic or outstanding in any way in these pieces, just very good like the rest. I saw nobody but Poretta who somehow looked like he could transcend these mediocre works--and that IS the mark of a star. I can definitely see him as very fine in 'Rubies', he is noticeably short, but not too short.

I can't imagine Boal not taking heed of these complaints about the program, because it was a real miscalculation. We were expecting electricity not only because we'd heard about it, but because it was certainly possible. And the opportunity was lost for the moment. mimsyb would probably not have said 'PNB is beginning to look like a lot of other companies' if one really good work had been put on. 3 Movements was good, but not great, and IMO the other three were worthless.

A less important angle, but automatically occurring to me since I have become this sort of 'Friend of the Joyce' is that not only that stellar Chinese group from Taiwan I saw back in November, but even the Ballet Hispanico came across light-years better in this space. I never got a chance to write much about BH, but their 'couples dances', that generic sort of 'entertainment ballet' with a few couples out there being charming, were so much more inventive and charming and engaging than that Tharp business I cannot even tell you. And there was excitement in some of their pieces (although one was awful), not just in the excellence of their dancers (and theirs were too.) If Ballet Hispanico does a program that much better than PNB at the Joyce, maybe something needs to be thought about--esp. if even 3 Movements seemed too cramped at the Joyce. Well, I think we all could have stood for some 'cramped-looking Balanchine' more than we could stand for that absurd 'Fur Alina', which looked like something you'd see in an experimental space back in the 70s, derived from old modern dance programs, except that it was fresh then. 'Fur Alina' was like a simulation, it had no flavour or real colour.

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Is there any likelihood of companies like PNB forming themselves into what are, in effect, two overlapping groups, each with its own brand name, programming, scheduling, and (presumably) constituency?

This would take an enormous check to accomplish. I've often wished that PNB could perform them in workshop settings. Most, although not all, of this rep is performed in Seattle interspersed with stronger works, and I'm along for the ride, but it would certainly be easy for me to decide which company to see. What PNB showed at the Joyce, I would be happy to see once a year, with repeats for a program with "3 Movements".

The second section of the program in particular was soft. It took this time seeing "Mopey" to realize that for all of the angst, it's actually a soft work. (To an extent, so was the Tharp, although it was also dry. The other Tharp was not. It was great theater.) Most of the Dove is soft. It's not only PNB: a lot of the modern dance done in Seattle I find falls in the soft range. It's not my stuff.

I'm miffed at myself for thinking that Tharp would go over because it's Tharp -- people screamed and shouted at the end of "Movin' On", which was two hours of my life that I'll never get back -- and serious Tharp, and that the Joyce audience would like "Mopey". I was so wrong.

But they COULD have done at least one Balanchine (you tell me which) even on the Joyce stage, couldn't they have? Looking back now at the responses to something we'd all expected to be dazzled by, I'm in slight disbelief at such programming.

There are a handful of Balanchine pieces they could have done at the Joyce, I think: at least "Apollo" -- PNB does the truncated version, without the birth and the platform, which I saw at the 300-seat Vancouver Playhouse when National Ballet of Canada brought guests to Ballet BC's fundraiser at the end of the September -- and "Square Dance". Barocco might have been cramped, but it leaves out the men. The company doesn't do any of the Balanchine stand-alone pas de deux or solos, like "Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux" or "Sonatine", at least as far as I can remember.

The issue with the Balanchine may have been that the company would have performed them to taped music.

I've been thinking a lot about this, not knowing the issues about rights i.e., whether there is a ban on performing it within X miles of the Koch Theatre, and I think the best program would have been "Dances at a Gathering" and "3 Movements". Performing "Dances" in NYC would have been go for broke and would have given a much better indication of what the dancers can do.

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I've been thinking a lot about this, not knowing the issues about rights i.e., whether there is a ban on performing it within X miles of the Koch Theatre, a

But Ballanchine is done regularly at City Center (by ABT, and recently The MT ) which is much closer to Lincoln Center than the Joyce.

And ABT did Balanchine at the MET last Spring/Summer :shake:

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Has anyone reading this thread, who lives in or near NYC, seen PNB in Seattle at our opera house (McCaw Hall) in the last 3 years? What was your reaction (therefore taking Joyce Theater and this particular program out of the equation)? It would be particularly interesting if someone, who normally sees several companies in NYC (certainly the NYC based companies), has seen PNB in Seattle during the last 3 years, and saw the performance at Joyce recently.

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I've been thinking a lot about this, not knowing the issues about rights i.e., whether there is a ban on performing it within X miles of the Koch Theatre, a

But Ballanchine is done regularly at City Center (by ABT, and recently The MT ) which is much closer to Lincoln Center than the Joyce.

I was thinking of the Robbins, because I know little of how the Robbins Foundation handles rights. I know there was some problem with a visiting company performing "Les Sylphides".

PNB often performs versions of Balanchine ballets that are not seen in NYC, but "Apollo" isn't one of them, because they do the abridged version, not the full. But there are enough companies that perform Balanchine in the area that I don't think there's a rights issues with his ballets. For his, I think it may have been the issue over taped music :shake:

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Reading this thread, I can't help but think that Peter Boal achieved the perfect storm of "negative crossover" -- the Balanchine/City Ballet lovers found the program too "contemporary dance" by half and the Cedar Lake crowd found the program too "classical dance" by half (if they even showed up at all.)

In Peter Boal's defense, I give him credit for at least trying to present the classical ballet as a forward-looking art form. This is not a program I would ever pay money to see but I respect him for the attempt.

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I've been thinking a lot about this, not knowing the issues about rights i.e., whether there is a ban on performing it within X miles of the Koch Theatre, a

But Ballanchine is done regularly at City Center (by ABT, and recently The MT ) which is much closer to Lincoln Center than the Joyce.

I was thinking of the Robbins, because I know little of how the Robbins Foundation handles rights.

For what it's worth, the program for the Baryshnikov Arts Center's Grand Opening of the Jerome Robbins Theater on 2/16 will include "Sarabande" from A Suite of Dances and "Grand Waltz" from Dances at a Gathering. Of course the foundation may have made an exception because of the theater's name.

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Sorry if this is a little off topic - I would like to see a larger scale Balanchine festival of some sort in NYC- invite the full troupes that perform it best into the city for a great 2 weeks of dancing in January. Miami, PNB, NYCB, Suzanne Farrell Ballet, Dutch National, etc.

Maybe do it once every 4 years (like the Olympics). I think of NYCB as the original tree trunk, and the original dancers have branched off into other cities to form troupes that honor Balanchine, but also try new things. It would be a fantastic tourist draw in January for balletomines to visit the city, traditionally a slow time of the year. I would love to see a few of the midsize troups combine to perform Viennese Waltzes with the NYCB sets and costumes!

I know they have an occasional festival to invite a few principals from other companies, but I am thinking on a grander scale....

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