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Marc Haegeman

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Posts posted by Marc Haegeman

  1. Great to hear the company made a favourable impression, although I would have preferred it was with something more balletic. The progress they made in the Forsythe rep is indeed considerable, remembering how awkward most of them still looked when they first staged in the Middle under previous AD Robert Denvers. Some years later they now look more at ease in it than in anything else, simply because they have been really focusing on it and take it with them season after season. A Balanchine ballet like Theme and Variations or Divertimento #15 is done 5 or 6 times and never again.

  2. I'm actually going quite :off topic: here, perhaps I should make a new thread for this question..?

    My mother (who was going with me) has to go to a funeral on the day of the performance. I didn't really know that person, so I still want to go, but I would like to get rid of the ticket. I don't really have any friends I can ask to come to the ballet with me (well, actually I could try that.. But I think I'd have to 'prepare' them for it. Maybe next time.), so I would want to sell it. Now, selling it that day at the theatre would not be appreciated by the theatre people, I think.. Is it possible to return the ticket to the theatre (and getting my money back), so they can sell it last-minute or something like that? :dunno:

    As you can see, I'm not at all experienced in theatre-going..

    Each theatre has different rules. Just give a call to the box-office and they will tell you what's possible and not.

  3. I think I found out. Dmitry Belogolovtsev, who was cast for the performances on the 25th and 27th is badly injured, so Vasiliev-Kaptsova get to do these two performances, and Anna Antonicheva who was supposed to dance with Belogolovtsev twice, now does one performance with Yegor Khromushin.

    Oh, and the Dutch newspaper I got this information from says that it is Vasiliev's debut in the role.

    Well, I just hope Belogovtsev will quickly recover..

    It is his debut in the full-length ballet. So far he only danced the 1st Act in Moscow, in a special performance.

  4. Thank you for the information, Marc! I hadn't heard of him either.

    I emailed the Bolshoi about it, I always like to know the cast before I go to a performance..

    And in any case, there's still Maria Alexandrova to make me happy; I'm sure it will be fine with both casts. :D

    Actually I have a picture up of Khromushin with Alexandrova in de Pas des éventails from the new "Corsaire": (click here, 3rd photo top row). Also a bit of surprise to see him in the role of the cavalier of the principal ballerina. His performance there was by all accounts average.

    Not to worry, Lidewij, if this is your first "Spartak", you will find plenty to enjoy! :)

  5. Khromushin is a young corps de ballet dancer (graduated in 2003), seen quite often in small solo roles over the last year or two. He was among others chosen by Alexei Ratmansky (who obviously sees something in him) as one of the guys in his ballet "Card Game". Spartacus seems like a very strange choice for him. He also seems to have already danced Ferkhad, the leading male role in "Legend Of Love" last year.

    Here's his bio on the Bolshoi site (in Russian).

  6. In a nutshell, the main virtue of Alexei Ratmansky's production of "Flames of Paris" is that he allows us to see another of these old, mostly forgotten ballets, which form an essential part of the Russian and Soviet legacy, with 21st-century eyes. Ratmansky himself calls it a dialogue with Vainonen's original production, and that's basically what he brings us : it shows a definite admiration for the original work, its surviving choreography, mise-en-scène, and music, but also a questioning and reinterpreting by somebody living today. In this respect Ratmansky's work from the last four or five years at the Bolshoi (thinking of "Bright Stream", "Bolt", "Le Corsaire" etc) is comparable to Valery Gergiev's at the Mariinsky ten or fifteen years ago when he brought new life to all these forgotten Russian opera's by Rimsky-Korsakov, Prokofiev, etc.

  7. The schedule, at least for Antwerp, is on the Vlaamse Opera page - http://www.vlaamseopera.be/programme_ballet.orb

    I'm ambivalent about Forsythe but I happen to really admire Artifact Suite - and I don't know the differences between it and the full-length Artifact. The Suite is quite long in itself. Of the companies I've seen do Artifact Suite so far, I think San Francisco Ballet has made the best case for it. (Paris does Vertiginous better)

    While the Suite is pure-dance and gesturing, the full-length Artifact also incorporates these shouting matches which can be relished in Impressing as well.

  8. Inspired by this thread about Maria Alexandrova I got out my DVD collection and found what I was looking for.

    In 1995 in Lausanne Switzerland she took part in the EBU ballet competition. Very rare indeed for Russians to compete there.

    She did a variation from Coppelia in a horribly sugury pink costume, but she was good, and remember she was only 16 then.

    Her second variation was from La Bayadere, equally good.

    I have a very faint recollection of at that time I was yelling "Here is the winner". Not so... And the Swedish commentator made rather sneering remarks about her - in my view totally unfounded. 1st prize that year went to Ruth Miro and Jesus Pastor from Spain, Nadja Sellerup from Sweden got 2nd prize and Jeroen Hofmans from Belgium 3rd. Masha was totally ignored to my great consternation, I really thought she was good and well deserving.

    Now that she has hit the big times, it is wonderful to have this DVD of her as a youngster. Just hope to see her live one day!

    Exactly, I made that very same rediscovery a few years ago when I was transferring my VHS tapes to DVD. She was ignored allright, but then again, these competitions.... :wink: Alexandrova would strike back two years later with a gold medal at the Moscow Competition.

    Here's her personal website, different from the one mentioned above, which was only a fan site.

  9. Leigh, we're treated the full-length Artifact. Can't wait.

    No calendar up yet on their website.

    The premiere of Swan Lake is in Antwerp in January 2009 (April in Gent); Artifact follows in May 2009, in Antwerp only.

    As Leigh says, principals Aki Saito and Wim Vanlessen are the dancers to see (you should have them in In the Middle Somewhat Elevated); Alain Honorez is excellent as well in works like this.

  10. Knowing that Helene and Leigh became since their last visit great fans of this company :) , here's what they have to offer for next season. A new (new) "Swan Lake" in a choreography by Marcia Haydée. I note that the Ivanov bits (at least for what we usually know as the 2nd Act) will be safe, but the remainder seems to be fair game: the emphasis will be on Rothbart and his role will be considerably developed ("To me, Rothbart is like Dracula", finds Haydée). In any case, come what may, and Haydée has strong competition from the previous "Swan Lake" effort for Flanders by Jan Fabre, something to look forward to.

    Also new for the company next season will be William Forsythe's "Artifact." Revivals will include Haydée's staging of "The Sleeping Beauty", as well as Forsythe's "Impressing the Czar", both successful additions to the repertory since Kathryn Bennetts took over.

  11. I don't think Ratmansky/Burlaka are condensing their Flames of Paris purely for economical reasons. Their main concern is to present a ballet which is dramatically digestible for a 2008 audience and can be covered by the company they have. That's why their Flames of Paris is not an "authentic reconstruction" but a revival of an old ballet including those elements that they think will make sense to a public of today. In this respect last year's Corsaire (which wasn't a reconstruction either, but nonetheless ran in its premiere version over 3 hours 45) has been a lesson: all one could hear was that the ballet was "too long".

  12. "First time on DVD?" Really...? This celebrated programme was re-issued by VAI (Video Artists International) last year.

    It will be interesting to see if Unitel/Deutsche Grammophon was able to upgrade the video quality of this old film (I can live without the promised 5.1 DTS Surround - the original was recorded in mono anyway), or maybe they even found the complete version of Giselle instead of the abridged one usually seen. Otherwise this new release will be a waste of money and time. It's always good to have a model when you prepare your press release.

  13. As said, these are two different productions and quite different in spirit. The DVD with Kirov/Kolpakova is the Konstantin Sergeyev production; both the Bolshoi DVDs are the Yuri Grigorovich staging, grander in scale, differences in storyline, and with the character of Abderakhman considerably developed (as said by Helene a starry role for Taranda). I always had a soft spot for the old Kolpakova film, firstly because of her, but also because of having a performance of the great Kirov of olden times - something quite different from what we can see now. In this way it ranks with the old Bayadère performance with Komleva and Terekhova, or the Sleeping Beauty with Kolpakova.

  14. Garybruce, there is only one DVD version of the POB Paquita - those listed on Amazon are different releases of the same recording with Letestu and Martinez. If you want a complete version of the ballet, that's the only one there is. Except for the Grand Pas and the pas de trois the choreography is new (in the style of) by Pierre Lacotte, so you know more or less what you're going to get. Even if Letestu and Martinez wouldn't be my choice for the leads in Paquita either (but there is always a favourite cast that you don't have on DVD :smilie_mondieu: ), they are definitely not bad, while the plot is good fun, the production beautiful and well rendered by the DVD.

  15. Personally I think this interview is far too biased to be taken serious as a source for the current state of affairs at the Mariinsky. The only reason I linked it was because it was one of the first articles which stated Vaziev's departure as official. But I would be rather careful about the way Maestro Gergiev puts things.

    It's interesting for example how he puts up such a negative image of the man he kept in charge for 13 years. Rashomon, you say? I was thinking more in the direction of a biblical Roman character, if comparisons are to be made, while Gogol is not very far either :) Maestro is also frightfully short of memory when he reminds us that he needs everybody and implies he respects his artists - no doubt Gorchakova, Prokina and some others will disagree about that one.

    FauxPas, Terekhova has been back as ballet master for several years now and I don't think anybody of the old guard would make much difference in this hornet's nest.

    But to be continued....

  16. Natalia Osipova was just awarded the Golden Mask (the highest theatrical award in Russia) for Best Female Dancer (for her role in "In the Upper Room"). Not bad for a 21-year old.

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