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liebs

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Posts posted by liebs

  1. I also think I've seen Les Biches. Did the Joffrey do it in the early 70s? Or perhaps, it was earlier in my life that I saw it. My. memories of it are blurry - I mostly remember the costumes and an overall atmosphere of chic with over tones of lesbianism.

    I know Eliot Feld Ballet restaged Nijinska's Les Noces also in the 70s. Cora Cahan danced one of the parents. But I didn't see it.

  2. I'd like to see more of de Valois and some early Cranko. I saw both "Lady and the Fool" and "Pineapple Poll" in London in about 1964. It would also be great to see more Joffrey and I have a very soft spot in my heart for de Mille, as her writing meant so much to me when I was young.

    It would be great to see The Duel, however badly it seems dated.

  3. I saw the Fort Lauderdale performances, my first of the company, and was impressed. I don't have my program available so can not say much about casting.

    Serenade was the weakest for me. The slow tempo deprived the corps of the sweep we get at NYCB. I did not care for either of the Hidlago sisters as two of the soloists but Kronenberg was impressive as the girl who falls. There were a number of partnering glitches in the Dark Angel and in general I was not as impressed by the men as by the women in the company.

    Funny Paper was cute but I am not a fan of the ballet companies in Talyor's work. His dancers push down into the ground and ballet goes up, so I feel that most of the time Taylor's choreography is not shown to its best advantage. Obviously, it suffered by comparison to Balanchine's masterpieces.

    Symphony in C looked great. My favorite was Katia Carrozza in the first movement. Crisp, clean pointe work and lovely arms. I did not like the interpretation of the second movement, it is not Swan Lake, and the ballerina went from pose to pose rather than giving us a long singing phrase as we see from Whelan and some other NYCB ballerinas. The corps women looked good in this, better than in Serenade.

    The audience was very enthusiastic and clearly loves their company, as they should.

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