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CharlieH

Inactive Member
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Posts posted by CharlieH

  1. 3 hours ago, Gnossie said:

     

    Allow me to doubt it (your last paragraph)

    Moscow will have to wait until next year to have a proper celebration of Petipa, when the Ekaterinburg ballet brings Yuri Burlaka's wonderful recon of Harlequinade for next year's Golden Mask.  (Recon made for Samara Ballet 4 years ago, because you know, there are people who don't go around "reconstructing" ballets that have already been reconstructed...) 

    ABT’s Harlequinade recon will be just that. No Balanchines or contemporary choreographies on the same program, as in all of the Petipa “tributes” at the Bolshoi, Stanislavsky, Mariinsky. 

  2. 15 hours ago, volcanohunter said:

    It would be ironic if the Royal Ballet's new production of Swan Lake were to ditch most of the Petipa.

    The Bolshoi's gala on May 31 and June 1 was originally advertised as "Marius Petipa: In Commemoration of the Bicentenary. World Ballet Stars Gala Concert." Says so in the 242nd season booklet. I guess they're hoping audiences will have forgotten about that, or won't care as long as Zakharova appears, not dancing Petipa.

    The more I read about the so-called Petipa Galas/Tributes in Russia, the more I think that the grandest tribute of all is happening right here in the USA with Ratmansky’s reconstruction of Harlequinade at ABT. No bull - 100% Petipa.

  3. 11 hours ago, Royal Blue said:

    A ray of light in a world filled with darkness—that is what NYCB is. And on every occasion the company presents Jerome Robbins' sublime, majestic The Goldberg Variations that light shines a little brighter. Especially if the work is as lovingly performed as it was on Saturday evening by Ashley Bouder, Sterling Hyltin, and Sara Mearns (from all three of whom I have been accustomed to expecting efforts of the highest caliber); Lauren Lovette, Emilie Gerrity, Anthony Huxley, Taylor Stanley, Daniel Applebaum, Joseph Gordon and twelve members of the corps in the Part I Variations; Jared Angle, Andrew Veyette, Tyler Angle, nineteen more corps members (as well as two apprentices) in the Part II Variations; Susan Walters at the piano; and, finally, Miriam Miller and Aaron Sanz as the gorgeous couple in the opening Theme and haunting closing of the ballet. Except for Hyltin and the Angle brothers those named had also appeared a few hours earlier—most in substantive roles—at the matinee "Tribute to Robbins" program!

    Even more than those frustrated by what I regard as the "heavenly length" of this ballet, I welcome the intermission that arrives at its conclusion when placed first on the program ... for a manifestly different reason: it provides the indispensable interval to recompose myself from the inner thrill I have experienced while viewing it! No matter how vast the universe is, all its entities—living and inanimate; material and spiritual; visible and invisible; gargantuan and infinitesimal; fathomable and incomprehensible—are interconnected. The Goldberg Variations is one of those rare, monumental works of art that makes me feel acutely conscious of—and at the same time guardedly optimistic about—this immense interconnectedness. From my perspective, its performance on Saturday amounted to a deeper and more genuine tribute to Robbins.

    Thank you, Royal Blue. You perfectly captured my feelings about Goldberg, in general, and last Saturday night’s performance in particular! Now imagine the thrill of following THAT with Robbins’ magnificent  Les Noces - more powerful, colorful, forceful & dramatic than the Nijinska original (a masterpiece in its own subtle way). Full chorus, vocal soloists, four grand pianos and full percussion ensemble AND dancers on the stage...with special kudos to Indiana Woodward and apprentice Andres Zuniga as the bride & groom. Goldberg + Noces = A Double-Whammy of a Sensorial Delight!

    Also delicious, in a much lighter vein and on another program: Fanfare...a far more effective music-education experience than “Show the Music” lecture that preceded The Cage on Friday night. 

    I’m looking forward to seeing the fifth and sixth programs on Saturday, especially the one that includes Dances at a Gathering. A mostly wonderful festival thus far. 

  4. 4 hours ago, cubanmiamiboy said:

    So he went the same way as Petipa, right...? I know there are many choreographed  "ballet for opera" numbers in the Stepanov. And just like Mr. B's...we might never see them revived...

    As luck would have it, Petipa’s choreography for La Gioconda’s Dance of the Hours was revived for Kremlin Ballet around the time of the Petipa 175th birthday celebrations. It has been further revived a number of times since then, such as at NBA Japan, circa 2000. Apparently, one of the big Russian academies is doing it this year (forget which academy but it’s all part of the Petipa celebration).

  5. STDA was an anomaly, as I thoroughly enjoyed most of the rest of the four Robbins-100 programs seen during the past two weekends. I initially did not report on the Carlyle to not dampen the rest of the celebration, until I read all of the above negatives. Glad that some folks liked it.

  6. ITA on the horrible mess that is Something to Dance About. The Charleston was the one saving grace but we didn’t see enough. 

    NYCB already does West Side Story Suite, with dancers in the roles. Mearns and her red bling dress in the Carlyle Crap are ALL WRONG as Puerto Rican Anita!!!!

    The Fiddler “bottle dance” without the bottles...imagine the Manu Dance from Bayadere without a water jug on Manu’s head!

    The #s from Funny Girl (from which Robbins was fired (?) before opening) and Gypsy are totally boring and useless. To add insult to injury, one of Robbins’ most celebrated B’way numbers - the Mack Sennett ballet from High Button Shoes, with the line of beach hut doors & everyone running in and out - is omitted. The one rarity that I expected to see went AWOL! Bummer.

  7. Last night’s double bill of Goldberg Variations and Les Noces was a once-in-a-lifetime event that left most everyone in the venue in awe. A double tour de force. At the end of the evening I thought: “How privileged I am to be here, witnessing something so extraordinary and meaningful, so magnificently performed...that is not beholden to pop culture and would never ever be marketed in cinemas.” Best of all, I was surrounded by audience members that cheered and understood what they were watching. What a night at NYCB: a program of substance and intelligence! Hands down the grandest of the four Robbins programs seen on my most recent trips to the Big Apple. (Dybbuk was also wonderful but it was sandwiched between two Broadwayish works, both weakly performed, with the exception of Pazcoguin in WSSS.)

    I’ll leave it up to others to point out details. I’m just offering a big “Wow!” to hopefully begin a conversation about the fantastic Goldberg/Noces double bill.

  8. 12 minutes ago, ABT Fan said:

    Their joint birthdays?! Wow. Maybe instead of sipping wine in Act I, they can have cake!

    Yes. Hallberg revealed that factoid at the public book discussion & signing in DC, the week of the last Kennedy Center engagement (with Michael Kaiser as emcee). Hallberg told us that he & “Natasha” had selected the date & that this performance means a lot to both of them...same birth date but different years.

    In other words, Hallberg seemed to indicate that both would move mountains to make this happen (assuming both are healthy & free from injury).

  9. 8 minutes ago, ABT Fan said:

    Abrera is no longer scheduled for Myrta; Teuscher replaces her on the 15th. The change is not on ABT's site yet, but it's on Met Opera's site and on Teuscher's Instagram. Abrera is still scheduled to do Giselle two days later on the 17th, so if she's injured, hopefully she'll be well enough for Giselle.

    https://www.metopera.org/Season/2018-abt/Giselle/

    They’re still showing Osipova & Hallberg dancing on the 18th - their joint birthdays. Fingers crossed!

  10. 16 minutes ago, ABT Fan said:

    I missed that! I find it particularly sad that Arpino's work is virtually never seen anymore, it seems.

    We used to count on American Repertory Ballet in Princeton to occasionally stage Arpino ballets but that was 3-4 years ago (Viva Vivaldi and Confetti).

  11. On 5/5/2018 at 10:00 PM, cinnamonswirl said:

    It was the music from the Scottish jig, but Pereira wasn't doing the actual steps. She was just bouncing, goofing off. My guess is Pereira is debuting as Swanilda and Bouder was making a joke, "look at this new Swanilda being silly during rehearsal."

    Looks & sounds like the A2 Scottish Dance to me. I am happy to read this news, being a fan of the New Pereira, so beautiful in her Divert 15 sólo recently. A more complete artist than before. She even looked taller and sleeker than before, not the soubrette of before. Promotion to Principal soon?

  12. I’m so saddened but am sure that he is a new angel in Ballet Heaven. Mel and another ballet angel, Gleb, were my indispensable BalletAlert experts on All-Things-Joffrey...and beyond. Rest In Peace. 👼 

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