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ABT's Male Principal Problem


Promote From Within or Go On a Spending Spree?  

73 members have voted

  1. 1. To solve its looming shortage of male principals, should ABT:

    • Promote from within to fill the ranks
      45
    • Go out into the free market and hire male principals from outside the company
      28


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The Whiteside case is in my opinion a matter of size and urge for partners for the tall ballerinas, I dont think the tall and talented members of abt corps are as ready as he is to take on that task. I saw him only once, and I dont think is a bad idea at all, neither has to interfere with the development/promotion of inside members, as long as they are ready for it. I was surprised by Hammoudi's promotion, for example, he has a lot, lot work to do to justify his rank in the company today.

How tall is Whiteside?

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did any of you watch the BB youtube piece on Mr. Whiteside? He states he attend the ABT summer program for 2 years in a row, before moving on to other programs. So I think he was a known quantity to ABT. How is that any different than any of the corpsmen at ABT? I'm not sure. But I'd have to see him perform on stage (not just youtube) to have a better idea of his qualities.

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I saw Roddy Doble dance Solor's solo from the Kingdom of the Shades scene in "La Bayadere". He was a guest alumni performer at the final round of the 2009 New York International Ballet Competition. He isn't just big - the guy can move. His only mistake was that the stage was too small for his last round of barrel turns and he banged into the backdrop. He could do more. I suspect that Alexandre Hammoudi's precipitous rise to soloist was the need for a tall soloist from the corps. Several medium and shorter dancers who are way more polished and reliable technically than Hammoudi were passed over.

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Gottlieb gives all of the NYCB women a kick in the gut in passing.

That was the one aspect of the article I disagreed with; For me, also, the general slamming of NYCB at end of article seemed a little unfair if he was not going to back it up with some actual analysis as he had just given of ABT. Of course Gottlieb has more personal history with NYCB and, one suspects, greater emotional and intellectual investment in its traditions which may make him harsher or at any rate more inclined to find things "dispiriting" -- his word -- when he sees problems (which they do have). I suppose it's also possible that if he really found their season dispiriting he thought he was being less harsh by not detailing his objections.

For the rest, although I have not seen the range of performances he discusses (and that others on this board have seen) I found everything else he said completely persuasive based on what I HAVE seen. Completely agree with him about Semionova--so far at least. She's impeccable, but....--and right now, for me, it's a substantial "but." And though I did not see Boylston's Swan Lake I did see her Firebird and agree with his account of her as a thoughtful artist with real ballerina potential. Actually pretty much agree with him about every dancer he mentioned.

To get to men and topic of this thread:

Even Gottlieb's asides re ABT rang true to me as in his praise for Zhurbin's Kastchei -- which I did see and found better even than Hallberg's: more powerful melodrama villain, less glam rock wannabe. (Uh...that last comparison is me not Gottlieb, but he did make a point of praising Zhurbin's performance in Hallberg's "role" as he put it).

Re the men, too: I decidedly share the reservations about Stearns whom I found not only bland as Albrecht, if not bad at all and even much improved (this was in Chicago), but also bland as Katschei, which is a neat trick given Ratmansky's crazed vision.

And, despite having shown, for a nano-second, a genuinely Dowell-esque arabesque in The Dream, Stearn's Oberon completely missed the point of the key moment in the final pas de deux when Oberon lifts one arm over his head while supporting Titania w. another arm as she turns, as it were, under her own arabesque beneath him. At this moment, Oberon raises one arm then casts it down on her waist in a gesture of mastery (loving mastery if you prefer). Gomez did this with real command and Hallberg, though more gentle, still looked out at the audience as he lifted his arm--clearly asserting himself before placing the arm on her waist. Stearns could not even look up as he raised his arm but had to keep his eyes on the arm supporting the ballerina and just lifted his other arm up weightlessly en couronne then let it down as if he had no notion of what the gesture might mean or that it might mean anything. (None of the three men could really "master" Ashton's choreography for the irreplaceable Anthony Dowell, but in different ways Gomez and Hallberg gave excellent performances; the latter was especially otherworldly).

Edited later to add: I can't yet get behind the idea of Simkin as a leading male dancer in the 'canonical' repertory. Extraordinarily talented, yes; wonderful to watch in the right role, yes--but until and unless he can find a way to look like an adult on stage (even a short adult) he can't convincingly inhabit classic 'leading man' roles. I know people on this board were convinced by his Siegfried which I missed...but I remain dubious.

Would be happy to be proved wrong about both Stearns and Simkin of course.

Anyway, thanks for drawing attention to this essay...

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"Cory Stearns: Cory is developing - his Albrecht with Hee Seo showed strong improvement as an interpreter and in his technique. He has beautiful line and finishes his steps elegantly. He isn't flashy but has a long-limbed open lyrical style of dancing that has potential. I did not see his Romeo this year but did see the Siegfried and Conrad partnering Veronika Part. This is not a good combination. Her authority, womanliness and depth make him seem very bland and boyish - totally callow and out of his league. That is IT right now for the regular male principals. Let's talk about the male guests who papered over the cracks:

On the soloist level: Gennadi Saveliev is leaving which leaves us with:

Alexandre Hammoudi: Just promoted. Needs a lot of coaching. The charisma is there but not the technique. Not the greatest actor too though he looks great onstage.

Jared Matthews: Did a lot of fine work this season - particularly as Lensky in the "A-list" opening night cast of "Onegin" Losing the blandness and dancing better than ever. Go Jared!

Sascha Radetsky: Going nowhere at ABT - should possibly consider leaving ABT with his wife and seeing if San Francisco Ballet will take them.

Craig Salstein: I love him but not principal material Superb comedian and very versatile stylistically. His Mercutio showed what a fantastic dancer he is.

Daniil Simkin: I did not see the Siegfried with Boylston but read the reviews. Seems that he still feels and looks very young onstage. A boy wonder, not a danseur noble. Can do anything with his legs he wants to but is not yet a complete artist. Still he has done well in enough roles (Prodigal Son, Puck in "The Dream", Franz in "Coppelia") that he is worth continuing to develop. He will be promoted and soon.

Lots of potential soloists still in the corps: Mikhail Ilyin, Joseph Gorak (breakthrough season for him), Joseph Phillips, Arron Scott, Thomas Forster and Eric Tamm (he hasn't done much this season). I would like to see more of Roman Zhurbin, Roddy Doble and Vitali Krauchenka in real dancing solo roles rather than mime heavies. They could take over some of Gennadi's old assignments. I also would like to see more of Luis Ribagorda (I liked his Neapolitan dance in "Swan Lake" Act III.)"

-----------------------------------------

I agree with much of the above.

Cory is developing, but is not nearly strong enough in technique or partnering to be considered a "war horse" principal.

I think Gennadi's departure will really be felt. He was terrific in character parts that also required a good amount of solid dancing. He wasn't always exciting (but sometimes really was) but he was extremely reliable and solid.

Sadly, I agree that Sascha/Stella have been going nowhere and perhaps it's time they move on before they get too old. Though the obvious difficulty in getting principal jobs together at the same company is perhaps why they've stayed at ABT so long. I can't help but wonder if Sascha's going to Dutch Nat'l Ballet as a principal was his last ditch effort to be taken seriously by ABT and get promoted. I love them both and will never understand why Stella wasn't promoted years ago.

Daniil, is a boy wonder but he should not be promoted any time soon. His partnering skills are scary and he needs to start performing with more maturity (and less mugging).

Gorak and Tamm should be promoted to Soloist level. I thought seasons ago that Hoven was also Soloist material, but I'm afraid his chance has been lost, as too much time has gone by.

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I just voted for promoting within the ranks. I have always respected the way NYCB, for example, grows its own talent and promotes from within. However, NYCB does not seem to have a 'star system' like ABT, and I recognize the importance of bringing in talent from the outside sometimes.

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Well, the dust has settled and we are left with the following as the male principals contingent for 2012-13:

Beloserkovsky

Bolle

Cornejo

Gomes

Hallberg

Simkin

Stearns

Vasiliev

The negative:

Beloserkovsky is a principal in name only. Cornejo is difficult to cast because of his height and is oft-injured. Hallberg is in Russia for part of the year and, like Cornejo, is laboring more and more with injuries. (Overwork?) Simkin has numerous deficiencies which limit his casting. Vasiliev is yet another short principal.

The positive:

Bolle is assuming more responsibility in the company (i.e. performing in the Fall). Gomes and Stearns remain constants in the repertory. Vasiliev, like Bolle, appears to be taking on more responsibility.

Prognosis:

Bolle, Gomes and Stearns will continue to be the workhorses. Whiteside and, perhaps, Hammoudi will have to pick up a lot of the slack and function as de facto principals. Kevin McKenzie should still pursue prying Muntagirov from Tamara Rojo's grasp.

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Well, the dust has settled and we are left with the following as the male principals contingent for 2012-13:

Beloserkovsky

Bolle

Cornejo

Gomes

Hallberg

Simkin

Stearns

Vasiliev

I agree with miliosr's prognosis.

I think this leaves the company in a very precarious position - heaven forbid Gomes becomes injured and is out for any length of time, who can step in? He has been carrying the load of male principal parts for some time, year-round. He is the best partner they have and in my opinion, the most versatile.

I really hope that the 2013 season is the last for Beloserkovsky. Sorry if that is harsh, but his salary would be better spent on someone who actually dances.

On a side note, I hope ABT nutures the younger guys who show a lot of potential right now. As this thread shows, the company needs to do a much better job of nuturing and developing talent and not letting dancers (male and female) stall in the corps or as soloists. Eric Tamm is opening Nutcracker (and performed the lead last year too) and has really shown that he is soloist material. Joseph Gorak also has the talent. I hope they don't languor in the corp.

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I would like to see Thomas Forster promoted to soloist asp

I second that! Forster and Joseph Gorak are both so very ready for a promotion. When either of them are onstage my eye is drawn to them so strongly that I have to force myself to look at anyone else.

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I would like to see Thomas Forster promoted to soloist asp

I second that! Forster and Joseph Gorak are both so very ready for a promotion. When either of them are onstage my eye is drawn to them so strongly that I have to force myself to look at anyone else.

Me too!

As the poll shows a 60/40 split perhaps we can look forward to some new promotions from within the company.

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Marcelo is once again increasing his workload to fill in for injured/absent dancers (Today's matinee of Corsaire, the Hee Seo SL). Ironic that Matvienko was supposed to fill the gap for Hallberg's cancellations, but now Matvienko is MIA.

Agree about Gorak. Would like to see more of him. Have not made up my mind about Forster.

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I remember the first time i saw Thomas Forster, when he first joined ABT: he did a saute (sorry, no accent on the e) in arabesque from the upstage left wing onto the stage in The Sleeping Beauty vision scene; and I have been following him ever since. He is a wonderful, well-trained dancer, excellent partner, always fully invested in what he is doing, is natural on stage, and is tall and has beautiful feet. I have been waiting for years to see him given the opportunities his talent and work merits.

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One person they seem to give some good roles to is Eric Tamm. When I first saw him as a last minute fill in a few years ago for David Hallberg (in Theme and Variations?) I was not impressed. However, he looked much better this season as a lead in Symphony in C in the first movement. I think the next male who will be in line for a promotion to principal is James Whiteside. He's carrying a large load of principal assignments this season. They are testing him to see how he does. He's done very well in the roles I've seen him in.

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Praise for Joseph Gorak:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323495604578537802589331648.html

First came a marvelous program that opened with a recent restaging of Mark Morris's "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes" (1988). A witty and rich excursion for 12 dancers to Virgil Thomson piano études, it looked splendid on the expansive Met stage where sterling corps de ballet dancer Joseph Gorak shone.
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I haven't posted in a long time but I did a little research after reading the most recent posts on the 'Met 2014 Season' thread. Per ABT's Web site, here is the distribution of male principal roles by dancer name. (Their rank is in parentheses after their name - P = Principal, S = Soloist, C = Corps and GP = Guest Principal/Exchange Artist.)

Gomes (P) = 14

Whiteside (P) = 13

Cornejo (P) = 8

Stearns (P) = 8

Hallberg (P) = 7

Simkin (P) = 6

Matthews (S) = 5

Bolle (P) = 4

Radetsky (S) = 3

Jackson (GP) = 2

Tamm © = 2

Shklyarov (GP) = 2

Vasiliev (P) = 2

Gorak © = 1

Hammoudi (S) = 1

Lendorf (GP) = 1

Muntagirov (GP) = 1

Nedak (GP) = 1

Veyette (GP) = 1

Several comments:

1) Gomes, Stearns (who was slated for more performances until his injury) and Whiteside continue to be the male workhorses at ABT. If one (or more) of them goes down to injury, ABT is in a world of hurt.

2) I continue to question the promotion of Simkin as I do not feel he is carrying a principal's load (largely for height reasons.)

3) There is no point in retaining Vasiliev as a principal if he's only going to contribute two performances. Write him off as a failed experiment.

4) Bringing in Lendorf, Jackson, Nedak and Veyette to staunch the schedule bleeding caused by the Stearns injury and the Matvienko withdrawal has got to sit ill with the male corps dancers and soloists. The Veyette casting in particular has to be a real morale crusher because management is basically making a vote of no confidence in its own male corps.

5) It's hard to look at this casting and not come away with the impression that ABT -- at least on the male side -- is a company in disarray.

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I agree wholeheartedly with every comment, miliosr, and I thank you for putting together such an eye-opening tally. It is depressing isn't it? Given how mgmt is handling this Met Season, I'm going to have my eye on the roster post-season to see if any corps members (and how many) leave. What reason would they have to be optimistic about their future there, when they see how many talented corps and soloist dancers languish for years without a promotion and aren't fully utilized when there are injuries and hence, opportunities? Giving Matthews, Tamm and Gorak more roles to fill in for the injured is terrific, but not good enough.

And, although it pains me to say this, I believe Hallberg should only be a guest artist at this point. It's clear that his loyalty is to the Bolshoi (and to doing guest appearances worldwide with other companies) and not to ABT. That's wonderful for him personally (I really mean that) but I can't help but think that his principal status is preventing someone else from getting promoted (like Matthews). Doing 7 performances in a year is a guest artist's schedule.

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