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Jane Simpson

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Posts posted by Jane Simpson

  1. The performance on Feb 2 was a 'closed' one of some sort so probably not much comment will appear - but I expect there will be a LOT of discussion after the 9th, which is also Francesca Hayward's public debut as Giselle.

  2. The Ashton Foundation has been running a series of events, presented by Alastair Macaulay, in which some of Ashton's solos and pas de deux are taught to today's Royal Ballet dancers by the artists who originally created the roles , or their distinguished successors.

    So far you can see:

    The Prince's solo from Sleeping Beauty, and the Dance of the Blessed Spirits - Anthony Dowell coaches Reece Clark and Vadim Muntagirov

    The Walk to the Paradise Garden - Merle Park coaches Meaghan Grace Hinkis and Ryoichi Hirano

    Raymonda pas de deux and variations - Donald Macleary and Darcey Bussell coach Anna Rose O'Sullivan and David Donnelly in the variations, Marianela Nunez and Federico Bonnelli in the pas de deux.

    All also include (selectable separately) introductory sessions and a discussion/Q&A session at the end

    All are linked to from here

     

     

     

  3. 4 hours ago, Ashton Fan said:

    I always think that we need to remember that the myth of MacMillan the great story teller is largely the result of the audience's response to Manon in its first season. The critics loathed it but as the audience wanted to see it ticket sales were good and so it survived. There is little  sign of the audiences tiring of it. Every three years its revival is announced, everyone groans and then inexplicably they find themselves compelled to buy tickets because of the advertised casts being dangled before their eyes.

    As far as other MacMillan works are concerned the tide may be changing.The company recently revived "The Invitation"., Most people I know expressed dissatisfaction with the revival which they felt had failed to come to theatrical  life . I can't help wondering whether the failure was attributable to the casting and coaching, which seems unlikely as the cast were strong,  or whether it was the subject matter of the work which was the problem. Could it be that sexually predatory adults and rape don't actually seem that suitable for balletic treatment any more? Could it be that  the revelations of the levels of child sexual abuse which have taken place in the church, children's homes and elsewhere have made the subject matter of the ballet unpalatable?  Perhaps The Invitation has become a period piece. I wonder whether it is the subject matter which has made current audiences unable or unwilling to feel any sympathy for the adults in the ballet and whether it was that which stopped the ballet working as a piece of theatre? Because it seemed to me that the work was stopped in its theatrical tracks and just refused to go. The husband's "remorse" rings hollow today when it probably did not to its original audience. Perhaps we have grown a little wiser.

     

    I didn't see the recent revival of The Invitation but I did see it when it was new . I can assure that 'sexually predatory adults and rape' were far from 'suitable' subjects for ballet in those days, and the subject matter was far from 'palatable'.  I don't remember feeling any sympathy at all for the adults in the ballet - the impression I got was that this was something that had happened before, more than once probably - that the husband's remorse was possibly genuine for the moment but wouldn't prevent him from doing the same thing again, and that his wife had covered up for him before.  The format of the ballet was never satisfactory, though.

    Also, I think Manon took quite a long time to catch on at the box office, unless a big star was dancing - the last time I saw it at Covent Garden, sometime in the mid-1990s, I had a £10 stand-by ticket in the the centre stalls and reckoned there were at least another 100 empty seats around me.

     

  4. This one?

    http://balletalert.invisionzone.com/topic/19832-bournonville-films-in-london/?tab=comments#comment-164582

    I think it must be held in the National Film Theatre in London - if so it might be possible to visit and see it - I've forgotten what the rules there are, but I'll find out if you like. Wish I could see it again myself!

  5. I think most of the promotions were widely expected - the surprise perhaps is that Kevin O'Hare was reported to have said he would no longer promote to the Principal Character Artist rank - I'm pleased that he's changed his mind (or was misquoted), especially for the sake of Bennett Gartside who for me has been performing at that level for the last several years.

  6. The RB published its promotions and leavers list this morning, including:

     

    Yasmin Naghdi promoted to Principal

     

    Matthew Golding leaves the company

     

    Bennet Gartside, Christina Arestis, Kristen McNally and Thomas Whitehead promoted to Principal Character Artist

     

    Matthew Ball and Marcelino Sambe promoted to First Soloist

     

    Reece Clark, Benjamin Ella and Anna Rose O'Sullivan promoted to Soloist

     

    Hannah Grennell, Calvin Richardson, Gina Storm-Jensen, and David Yudes promoted to First Artist

     

    Full listing

     

     

  7. 23 minutes ago, Natalia said:

    8. Innocent Ivan/Two Brothers pas de trois  - Beaumont describes the dance in minute detail but does not cite the music to which it is danced. (!!! - Nutcracker Trepak? SB Desire solo? SB Aurora/Desire coda?)

     

    ...then comes the full Aurora/Desire pdd...barely mentioned by Beaumont...just one tiny sentence: "(after the Ivans)...The Prince comes forward leading the Princess and together the dance a charming measure." (p. 581)

     

     

     

    In his book The Diaghilev Ballet in London, C.W.Beaumont describes the changes Diaghilev made to the original, including:

     

    "...Diaghilev refused to permit Prince Charming and Princess Aurora to dance to a certain boisterous melody which occurs after the grand pas de deux. this melody was certainly not suited to a classical pas de deux, and Nijinska used it for a character number, "Innocent Ivan and his Brothers," based on Russian folk dance measures..."

     

    Also the RB's 75th anniversary book, by Alexander Bland, talks of the changes made to the 1921 version for the RB's 1939 production, including "The coda to the grand pas de deux was rescued from the Three Ivans, to whom it had rather incongruously been allotted".

     

    So that sounds to me as if there was no coda in the 1921 version.

  8. 1 hour ago, Fosca said:

     

     

     it was only in 1969 when Stuttgart toured to New York that Clive Barnes made it an overnight sensation with his words of the "ballet miracle".

     

    ... though Arlene Croce loathed it, and said so, as Alexandra described in an earlier thread !

     

    (just noticed that earlier thread was 18 years ago!)

  9. Eva Kistrup fills in some more details in her blog

     

    I'm pleased to notice that they are spreading  their productions out over longer periods, so that it will be easier to see 2 or even 3 different shows in one trip - an excellent thing for us visitors.

  10. Next season in Copehagen includes;
     

    Raymonda, produced by Nikolaj Hubbe

     

    A full-evening Queen of Spades by Liam Scarlett

     

    A new version of the Kylian evening Silk and Knife

     

    Reruns of Swan Lake, Giselle, Kim Brandstrup's Shaken Mirror, Balanchine's Nutcracker, Akram Khan's Vertical Road

     

    A new piece for the RDB School by Gregory Dean

     

    A portrain of Sorella Englund

     

    AND

     

    A week's Festival in the first week of June, including Napoli but not limited to the Bournonville repertoire

     

    Full details here

  11. All the casting is now up, though in a way that would be meaningless to people who don't know the ballets.

     

    If I'm interpreting it correctly, the first night cast is:

     

    Emeralds - Amy Watson and Jonathan Chmelensky, Susanne Grinder and Marcin Kupinski ('walking' pas de deux)

     

    Rubies - J'aime Crandall and Jon Axel Fransson, Astrid Elbo

     

    Diamonds - Holly Dorger and Gregory Dean

     

    It looks as if other casts show Caroline Baldwin and Ulrik Birkkjaer in Diamonds, Ida Praetorius, Chmelensky and Emma Håkensson in Rubies, and Kizzy Matiakis/Andreas Kaas and Wilma Giglio/Sebastian Haynes in Emeralds.

     

    But I could have got this completely wrong...

     

     

     

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