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Marc Haegeman

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Posts posted by Marc Haegeman

  1. Nora, "Great Dancers of our time" is a German production featuring three dancers working in Germany.

    Russian star and Berlin State Ballet intendant Vladimir Malakhov can be seen in a pas de deux from MacMillan’s Manon (with Mariinsky star Diana Vishneva), in Voyage from Zanella and in Fokine’s Le Spectre de la Rose (with Nadja Saidakova). Spanish Lucia Lacarra, now with Bavarian State Ballet in Munich, dances the White Swan adagio and the variation from Swan Lake, as well as a duet from Lady of the Camelias by Caniparoli (both with Cyril Pierre). Japanese Kiyoko Kimura, first soloist with Leipzig Ballet, features in choreographies by Uwe Scholz (with Christoph Böhm).

    The presentation is rather bleak, with little or no sets, and not taken from actual performance.

    If you like any of these dancers (the dance fragments are interspersed with short interviews), you will certainly enjoy this. Others will ponder about the relative meaning of "greatness". :yucky:

  2. Oh--I'd love to see the Dance of the Tiny Cupids. :blink:  I'll bet it's adorable.  To clarify, I didn't seriously expect them to bring along the Bolshoi Academy students, but the corps did seem rather small (only 16 or 24 dancers).

    They could have used some local students, though, as the Mariinsky sometimes does on tour.

  3. Funnily enough, the Kirov showed the Soviet-era Bayadere in London recently, but used to sets from the new/old production. So we were back in that rocky sci-fi landscape for the Shades Act, although the lighting used was much colder than it was in the new/old version. A curious mix which didn't really work. The costumes were the ones always used in the Soviet version.

  4. No real mystery, then.  Sometimes costume parts aren't all ready or there at dress rehearsal.

    Of course, Jane, you're right. Unless one considers the blue leg-warmers also mysterious for "Ballet Imperial" :blush: . No jewelry, no makeup. These shots were done at the "dress rehearsal".

  5. Since everyone was so helpful with dufay choosing which performance of The Bright Stream that would be best to see I was hoping that all of you would do the same for me about the which performance I should see of DonQ and Spartacus. I was going to get tickets for DonQ with Zakharova - afterall she's the only dancer I know, but after reading some reviews of Maria Alexandrova performance as Kiti I'm confuse. Usually I just buy tickets for both. But as everyone rightly mention, the ticket prices are outrageous. As for Spartacus I have no idea which performance I should see and it these prices I definitely want to get my money's worth!! You help would be greatly appreciated! Thanks :dunno:

    If I were able to choose from the casts on offer, I'd take Alexandrova in Don Q, and Klevtsov, Lunkina, Volchkov, Allash (a fair quartet) in Spartacus.

  6. The whole "point" of the Sylph being on pointe is that she was otherworldly.
    I see your point, but can we really go back to the time when the audience was "pointe-innocent"? We have seen so much pointe work that we now consider it a quite normal part of ballet language.

    We don't really need to go back to anything, do we? The Bournonville version doesn't have the girls on pointe and it's considered "normal" there.

    It's great to have this DVD-release of the POB, but it's a shame it wasn't filmed a few years earlier when we could have had Elisabeth Platel or Monique Loudières in the title role and Manuel Legris as James. I remember when this film was shot, last summer, the company wasn't in its best form.

  7. It gets better.

    I wonder if Somova, Bolshakova & Vostrotina will be joining Lopatkina as leads in the July 2005 London tour's 'Swan Lakes'?

    We're bound to get a full-scale kindergarten treatment again in London - with lots and lots of debuts and second-timers. At £ 85 per night, it can't get any better. :dry:

    Gumerova and Sologub won't be there. Pavlenko is unsure. So yes, Natalia, you might be right about Swan Lake.

  8. Bart, I realize our Belgian situation is for any foreigner hard, if not impossible to understand, but it is still a fact that Belgium has been cut in two because of several problems of which the language is only the most obvious one. Cultural matters in Belgium are now ruled by the respective governments and parliaments of this country, basically Flemish and Walloon.

    The Royal Ballet of Flanders is the only surviving ballet company in our country. We used to have a company in the French-speaking part of the country, but that disappeared because of lack of funds and interest, and Viviane is right to point out that a similar danger continually lurks for Flanders. Contemporary dance with its marvellous, mind-blowing ambassadors of the calibre of De Keersmaker, Fabre, or Ultima Vez is trendy and cool (although those who think so, often leave in mid-performance); classical ballet still defended by the RB of Flanders is considered past and gone food for oldtimers.

    Bennetts is surely right to talk about a gap, but I'm curious how she will make ends meet.

  9. The Royal Ballet of Flanders announced its schedule for the 2005/2006 season, the first under new director Kathryn Bennets.

    - Perfect Gems, October 6: "In The Night" (Robbins), "The Grey Area" (Dawson), "Theme and Variations" (Balanchine).

    - "Impressing the Czar", December 1 (Forsythe).

    - Dynamic Dances, February 16: a creation by Douglas Lee, "Revelry" (Hill), "Ancient Airs and Dances" (Tanner).

    - Uncontainable, April 20: project for young up-and-coming choreographers.

    - The Sleeping Beauty (Haydée, after Petipa).

    Dutch company Introdans will guest in October with ballets by Hans van Manen and Nils Christe.

    Some notes: where it is required a "real" orchestra will provide musical support - a relief, something we haven't seen happening for quite some time in this company.

    Re performing venues: A much better use of differing theatres has been made and not everything is relegated to the tiny home-theatre of the company.

    "The Sleeping Beauty" staged by Robert Denvers after Nureyev's version some five years ago seems to have been dumped in favor of Haydée's. We might regret being harsh on the old Denvers production, after all... :mellow:

  10. I have tkts. for both ballets at OCPAC.......have any of you seen The Bright Stream?

    I am very curious about this ballet.  I did read a bit of information on Marc's Ballet Lovers web site.  How has it been received so far?

    I enjoyed it a lot. It made the company look good - they obviously enjoyed it as well. The ballet has been received very well, for a large part also because not many thought the Bolshoi capable of pulling off a comedy. Even in Paris it made a triumph.

    I wonder how American eyes will see it :wink:

  11. Does anyone know the complete Bolshoi North America tour schedule? What I find below are announcements for NYC & Orange county CA, but I would expect 4-5 more locations.

    Thanks...

    US TOUR, July-August 2005: Metropolitan Opera New York, Wolf Trap, Orange County.

    Metropolitan Opera House, New York, July 18-30, 2005: 14 performances, featuring the North American premieres of The Bright Stream and The Pharaoh’s Daughter, as well as performances of Don Quixote and Spartacus.

    Wolf Trap, Vienna, VA, August 5-6, 2005: 2 performances of Don Quixote.

    Orange County Perf Arts Center, Segerstrom Hall, Costa Mesa, CA, August 9-14, 2005: 3 performances of The Bright Stream and 4 of Spartacus.

    More on For Ballet Lovers Only

  12. Sad news from Moscow with the death of Raisa Struchkova (79) on May 2, one of the leading ballerinas of the Bolshoi Ballet in the 1950-60's and a teacher and coach of great repute (Maximova, Ananiashvili, Goriacheva, were among her pupils). Being part of the generation of artists who came with the first visits of the Bolshoi to the West in the fifties, she helped define in many ways the image of that company. She is best remembered for her virtuoso pas de deux like the Moszkowsky Waltz, but was also one of the finest interpreters in the Soviet dram-ballets.

    Cinderella, one of her signature roles, has been preserved on video.

    Some photos on For Ballet Lovers Only.

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