Jump to content
This Site Uses Cookies. If You Want to Disable Cookies, Please See Your Browser Documentation. ×

carbro

Rest in Peace
  • Posts

    7,774
  • Joined

Posts posted by carbro

  1. Even in Balanchine's oh-so-innocent evocation of childhood, we can see how Marie feels something new and special for Drosselmeyer's nephew in Act I. In Act II, as she dreams, he has taken her to the Land of the Sweets, filled with exotic (if childlike) pleasures. It's all very indirect, no heavy Freudian hand at work here. Still, the subtext of the girl contemplating her future womanhood can be drawn.

  2. Are we limited to the dear departed? Or can we clone the alive but retired and/or alive and dancing? I'd nominate Carolyn Adams, who left such a huge void when she retired. Farrell, Vilella, Makarova, van Hamel. A clone of Gelsey Kirkland would probably require a second (back-up) clone, maybe a third, just to be sure. One of Jose Carreno for the coming generation, and one for the next and the next, etc. And Angel, although he appears likely to dance magnificently well into the future.

    Are there any administrators whose cloning we should lobby to prohibit?

  3. NYCB: Ringer's debut in Act II pas in Midsummer was THE single great highlight of 2002 for me. Evans' Puck consistently hits the funny/poignant intersection with incredible accuracy.

    ABT: La Wiles. Always Carreno. The bursting into flower of Murphy (especially during City Center season, where each performance seemed to gain in authority over the previous one). Dvorovenko & Beltoserkovsky in 2nd Mvt. Bizet. Kent's wonderfully ditzy Titania. Steifel's incredibly rich and detailed 2nd Sailor (Fancy Free). Also his solo in Harrison tribute. Promise of Hallberg. Finally seeing Misty Copeland on stage.

    Kirov: Ayupova in Emeralds. (Had to use green here, right?)

    Runner-up: Cojocaru's Giselle.

  4. Originally posted by balletmama

    . . . the audience response was so overwhelming that they did an encore!  Have others seen encores in dance before?

    Yes, as a matter of fact. Very shortly after his arrival in the US, Baryshnikov danced the Don Q pas with Kirkland at a benefit for Pennsylvania Ballet at Brooklyn Academy of Music. Audience response was so loud and sustained, they were compelled to repeat the coda.

    Also saw Ailey -- on the 10th -- and had the same experience with Revelations as you did. Company looked fantastic throughout: Winter in Lisbon, The River (with guests in honor of Chaya's 30 years w/ Ailey), and Revelations.

  5. As an idea these costumes are intriguing. They certainly evoke snowballs. I can't help but wonder (before watching the trailer) about losing the line of those lovely torsos, though. I imagine that the legs look cut off from everything else.

    I like the backdrop. It reminds me of the one for the posthumous staging of Balanchine's Swan. So, with that in mind, black snowflakes would make perfect sense!;)

    Sometimes I think that the distinction between "different" and "good" is lost.:(

  6. Originally posted by Alexandra

    I'd guess that often what forms our opinions about this is, again, familiarity.  When OUR company dances a work from a different tradition, they improve it (see dozens of reviews about NYCB's "Bournonville Divertissements" in 1977).  When THEIR dancers dance one of OUR ballets, however, it's another story.

    "I don't have an accent, but you talk funny." ;) Right? We absorb a style to such an extent that we don't perceive it, and anything different deviates from the "norm."

  7. Robbins made a timid suggestion in Goldberg, Part I, didn't he, with two men?

    Clearly, with two women, partnering would be a definite problem. But wouldn't the possibilities expand in one for two men? So much more can be described by mutual and/or alternating partnerings.

    I think the Lubovitch is beautiful and so moving.

  8. Originally posted by BalletNut

    The very end of Giselle's mad scene when she dies in Albrecht's arms and he lets her go and she flops lifelessly on the stage.

    Kirkland would take that run to Albrecht, take that last step before flying into his arms and visibly "die" before he caught her. How the hell did she do that????

  9. Dvorak's "American" Quartet, which is so pretty, suggests endless expanses and, like so much of Dvorak, is sublimely danceable. (I'll admit the Scherzo is problematical for me. I may just lop it off). I've seen it choregraphed a few times, but haven't seen on stage what I'd heard in the score.

    My "American Quartet" is intimate in scale, with simple costumes (women are skirted). The dominant motif of my second movement is renverse. It's a modest little piece -- happy and sweet.

  10. I know I'm being greedy. Glebb asked for ONE moment, and I've already posted 3 or 4, depending how you count the Tchaikovsky pas.

    Here Goes: Sleeping Beauty, Vision pas de deux (adage), when Aurora does the reverse fouettes (from arabesque to fourth front). I don't know why it's so affecting, but I love it.

  11. A lost favorite moment:

    The original finale of Chaconne, with the dancers advancing in such a way as to make us in the audience feel as though they were about to swallow us up. I get giddy recalling the feeling.

    I can understand Balanchine changing it for the camera, but then why didn't he change it back?

  12. Tchaikovsky Pas, Woman's variation:

    The three ecarte developes (with the third reeeeeaaaalllllly slow), into the tiny gargouillade.

    Also, in the adage, the arm business in the supported, slow turns into the fish.

    What? No Peter Martins fans out there? Anyone? Hello? (Not me.)

  13. I do so love glebb's moment. Well, the Reel is wonderful, even without the magical flight of Sylph.

    My favorite is toward the end of 2nd movement of Concerto Barocco. It is the only time all 11 dancers are on stage, and there is a confluence of opposing energies. The corps is doing the soutenu-tombe combination, the second soloist is doing her grand jetes, releve, releve in the opposite direction -- up against the corps' down, down against the corps' up --and the man is helping the ballerina do her slides into those fabulous fouettes into arabesque. My idea of heaven.

    In recent years, NYCB's rendering of Barocco has robbed that moment of its inherent dramatic impact :eek:, so I now boycott their perfomances of it. Too heartbreaking -- in the bad sense.

  14. I attended the evening, on the premise that a Ringer-Boal-Ansanelli cast was untoppable. It was a disappointing night. My report to friend (edited for public consumption) follows:

    Act I: Generally fine. Unwelcome "improvements" in Mouse fight (unless memory's playing tricks), but the kids were good. I liked Fritz (Amon Ito), but I always like Fritz.

    Act II: In her variation, Jenny seemed not to have gotten back to performance shape yet, and the pas was marred by mishaps. Peter nearly dropped her on her tiara after the first swoon. The first pirouette into backbend was botched; it seemed Kaplow and the dancers were each waiting for the other to signal the climax. The second one was not a whole lot better. For these fine dancers, it was definitely not their finest moment.

    The Angels were a little under rehearsed. Polichinelles: seriously under rehearsed. Hot Chocolate: watered down. Coffee: burnt. Tea: way over-caffeinated. Candy Canes: soggy. Marzipan: stale and hardened. Flowers: wilted. It's all thanks to management's campaign to drum the musicality out of everything.

    Dewdrop was . . .

    Alexandra saved the night for me. Flashes of Gelsey's daring. She was just sensational. It's so gratifying to see her dance allegros big and full-out and with nuance -- a rarity at NYCB these days.

×
×
  • Create New...