For the second time this season, Meryl Davis and Charlie White performed their "Giselle" Short Dance, this time at NHK Trophy in Sendai. For those who are unfamiliar with the Short Dance format, it's a poor compromise between the old Original Dance, in which skaters had to perform a program to at least two of a list of pre-defined rhythms, allegedly related, and sometimes to a given theme, and the Compulsory Dance, a set pattern that all skaters had to perform, usually twice in succession, but sometimes three, to the International Skating Union CD for the pattern, which cycled around four-six musical tracks. (The skating order determined which track the skaters would use.) The requirements for the Short Dance are to use the pre-defined rhythms and to included, in addition to a lift, a set of twizzles (side by side moving turns on one leg), and a pre-defined type of footwork (this season non-touching), a Compulsory Dance pattern, to music of the skaters' choice, but to a defined meter. This year's Compulsory Dance pattern is "Yankee Polka," which was created from a longer program by Judy Schwomeyer and Jim Sladky from the '70's.
Choreographer and coach Marina Zoueva, who has a credential from GITIS, created "Giselle" from three Act I excerpts. Davis/White perform the "Yankee Polka" section at the end.
It's remarkable how many Ice Dance teams manage not to make dances out of the material, but here's a lower-ranked team, Penny Coomes and Nicholas Buckland -- their coach is Evgeni Platov, the 1994 and 1998 Olympic Ice Dance champion (with Oksana Grishuk) -- which performed to a different type of dance, with the Yankee Polka starting before the halfway point:
Daisuke Takahashi just can't stop dancing:
I have a paid subscription to TVTeka to be able to watch the Russian "Sport" channel live, but I love going back to YouTube, just to listen to the Italian commentary. Not that I understand much beyond "Fantastico!" and "Que programma," but they sound so musical and like they like things they see.
Dance-Related Figure Skating Programs, 2012-13 Season
Started by
Helene
, Nov 23 2012 02:29 PM
8 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 23 November 2012 - 02:29 PM
#2
Posted 23 November 2012 - 02:43 PM
NICE twizzles from Davis and White!
#3
Posted 24 November 2012 - 02:02 PM
Thank you for the videos, Helene. I think Davis and White translate Giselle to the ice very well.
And Tchaikovsky is well represented this season: 1 Nutcracker, 2 Sleeping Beauty, and about 3 Swan Lake/Black Swan programs!
And Tchaikovsky is well represented this season: 1 Nutcracker, 2 Sleeping Beauty, and about 3 Swan Lake/Black Swan programs!
#4
Posted 24 November 2012 - 03:15 PM
It's true: I was waiting some better performances of the Tchaikovsky attempts before posting, but Asada ("Swan Lake") had a very weak outing earlier today at NHK Trophy. (Maybe she'll be stronger at the Grand Prix Final in a couple of weeks: it's being held at the Olympic venue in Sochi.)
#5
Posted 26 November 2012 - 06:12 PM
I watched again, and while there are a bunch of programs to ballet music -- in the final group at the NHK Trophy Ladies Free Skate last weekend, there were "Don Q," "Sleeping Beauty," and "Swan Lake," none of them convinced me that they had to be using those scores. Two small exceptions were Elene Gedevashvili's circular footwork, in which the combination of steps and interpretation matched the music beautifully, and some swan arms by Asada that were subtle and well done.
The only program that I think matches the music and tries to do a figure skating version of classical ballet, in this case "Sleeping Beauty," is Gretchen Donlan/Andrew Speroff's Pairs FS; unfortunately, they haven't performed it that well this year, but here was their performance from last year's US Nationals:
They've changed it somewhat this season to adjust to the rule changes, but it's substantially the same, with element highlights on the music, which is not the typical murderous collection of death by 1000 cuts.
The only program that I think matches the music and tries to do a figure skating version of classical ballet, in this case "Sleeping Beauty," is Gretchen Donlan/Andrew Speroff's Pairs FS; unfortunately, they haven't performed it that well this year, but here was their performance from last year's US Nationals:
They've changed it somewhat this season to adjust to the rule changes, but it's substantially the same, with element highlights on the music, which is not the typical murderous collection of death by 1000 cuts.
#6
Posted 29 November 2012 - 11:54 AM
Not a program, but I was tickled to discover that Daniil Simkin is tied via Twitter to a number of figure skaters, re-tweets some of their tweets, and recently re-tweeted a photo of him and Japanese figure skater Tatsuki Machida (who won Cup of China earlier this season) after a performance of "The Nutcracker" with Tokyo Ballet.
#7
Posted 06 December 2012 - 06:21 PM
I was wondering what you all thought of Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir's Carmen FD. In interviews they have mentioned how they are going for a more modern approach and that they've worked with a modern dance choreographer, Jennifer Swan. If I have done the link properly, here is their program from the Cup of Russia:
I think this program has the potential to be great. It's extremely difficult, but quite different from what they have done in the past.
I think this program has the potential to be great. It's extremely difficult, but quite different from what they have done in the past.
#8
Posted 06 December 2012 - 08:20 PM
Thanks for posting this clip. My TV station (NBC) only shows the singles competitions. As a result, I have not been able to see any pairs or ice dancing performances this season.
#9
Posted 06 December 2012 - 08:20 PM
There's been a lot of discussion about how much input coach Maria Zoueva had on the program, or if it was mostly Swan, and whether Alonso's version for Plisetskaia or Ek's version were influences. (Swan isn't listed as one of their choreographers on their ISU biography, although their work with Swan has been discussed in print.)
In a separate interview, Igor Spilband, Zoueva's coaching partner until this year, said that he was influenced by the ballet for Plisetskaia in his version (also using the Shchedrin score) for Anna Cappellini and Luca Lanotte, but I don't see it.
There are many clips of the Grand Prix series on YouTube, mostly from Russian Eurosport and Italian RAI, and just about every competitor in each event has at least one video.
In a separate interview, Igor Spilband, Zoueva's coaching partner until this year, said that he was influenced by the ballet for Plisetskaia in his version (also using the Shchedrin score) for Anna Cappellini and Luca Lanotte, but I don't see it.
There are many clips of the Grand Prix series on YouTube, mostly from Russian Eurosport and Italian RAI, and just about every competitor in each event has at least one video.
0 user(s) are reading this topic
members, guests, anonymous users
Help support Ballet Alert! and Ballet Talk for Dancers year round by using this search box for your amazon.com purchases:



