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

Drew

Senior Member
  • Posts

    4,056
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Drew

  1. Ooh I'm embarassed, but also pleased to learn about this...
  2. Olivia Hussey was Juliet in the Zeffirelli movie--but yes, definitely young. (Julie Kent is a beautiful woman. I didn't notice-or give a thought to- how old/young she looked compared to Hallberg at the Ken Cen honors. I can't say I never notice that sort of thing...but in this case, no.)
  3. I don't think the issue is whether or not Slaughter on 10th Avenue is Balanchine worth taking seriously--let's say it definitely has a place in the repertory even if not everybody would agree on what that place should be--but whether it would have been a better choice for the Kennedy Center honoring Makarova than what we saw on television. For myself, I was delighted to get the four classical excerpts we got since each one honored an important aspect of Makarova's career. Bits from two nineteenth-century classics didn't seem too much given the honoree: she was the Odette/Odile for me and many others growing up and, of course, was considered by many to be the Giselle of her generation too. These roles are a huge part of her legacy. Add to that: excerpts from a twentieth-century dramatic ballet --with the added frisson of including an American Romeo who now dances with a Russian compay--and the one quality ballet created on her in the west and I think we did get a miniature portrait of the most important parts of her career. (The straight, male, sports-loving, Letterman loving, occasional ballet goer with whom l watched the telecast greatly preferred the Giselle excerpt to the others. As it happens, he didn't care a straw for Slaughter on 10th Avenue when we saw it in the theater. However, he may not be representative. Probably isn't.) I admit, though, that the quick bit of Black Swan ended up being pretty ineffectual: I don't now how much was danced at the live performance--certainly more needed to have been for the excerpt to have much impact--but in principle ballet bravura is accessible to everyone and "black swan" now has pop cultural currency of a sort. It was not necessarily to have been predicted that Gomez/Part would turn out seeming a little lame (maybe potential problems with Part's fouettes could have been predicted). It also seems appropriate to have invited a Kirov/Mariinsky ballerina now at ABT and one who has been on Letterman no less...(I found myself wondering if Makarova had any say or influence.) In any case, despite her success in the work, for me an excerpt from "On Your Toes" would not have had the same resonance as a way to honor Makarova. So, on the whole, I give the organizers of the tribute good marks. I will add that just as the evening began I found myself thinking that the best way to honor Makarova would be with the opening of the Shades scene from Bayadere (though I did not come up with Helene's lovely idea of mixing students with professionals): I actually think this could have worked in the theater even for an audience of non-ballet fans, IF the producers didn't lose their nerve and included a full corps-de-ballet--but...uh...I don't think it would have worked on television at all. So...
  4. I think I enjoyed the classical dancing on this broadcast more than many others. It was real classical ballet with major artists. Perhaps my expectations are too low, but that was my reaction. Also, I couldn't help but wonder if cutting away from Part during the fouettes was an act of politeness. (After all it's a celebratory evening and some reaction shots were required anyway). Certainly when the camera returned to her it looked as if she had done some traveling. But I liked all the excerpts including Cojocaru whose purity of approach quite appeals to me. More film of Makarova would have been nice, but the evening does not seem to be designed that way for any of the honorees. At least the broadcast isn't. My one caveat was rather some aspects of the text already alluded to by Dirac. For whatever reasons, choreographers did not exactly line up to create a slew of works for Makarova. (Later in her career, she even publically complained about not having a full length ballet created for her.) So emphasizing that seemed a little...well, wishful. On the other hand, I thought that for younger members of the (21st century) audience perhaps one or two more sentences could have been said about just what bravery it took to defect and the kind of sacrifice it involved. But basically I found this a nice tribute. Uh...I even enjoyed the joke about the "the ballerina" from Jimmy Kimmel.
  5. From mid-May through mid-July there is a festival of opera and ballet in St. Petersburg (The "White Nights" festival) - and the Mariinsky performs as part of that festival. I believe guest artists also sometimes are invited to appear. I don't know the exact dates of any performances. Apparently the program may not get announced until as late as March. (I don't know about Moscow performances, but this website has some performances posted for June already--the information may or may not be reliable this far out: http://www.operaandballet.com/index.html?sid=9Pw6h47v0Lp95J5Yf3N1〈=eng) .
  6. Any performance can raise an outcry, especially when fans already despise the Director doing the casting and thus have no trust he knows what he's doing when casting a young untested dancer (in this case, too, an "outsider") in a major role. Anyway, here is one bit of Kampa's performance (a debut) posted on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1iYYDFkcwUU
  7. Best (of my rather limited ballet going): 1)Ashton's Dream at ABT--all three casts, but special mention to Herman Cornejo's Puck,Gillian Murphy's Titania, and (a Titania at a different performance) Julie Kent's magical balance in the final pas de deux -- out of nowhere, not really a balance at all: she just stopped time. 2)Ratmansky's Firebird at ABT--All three casts (minus Copeland due to injury): but special mention to Herman Cornejo's Ivan 3)The Balanchine-Stravinsky Festival program at NYCB w. Stravinsky Violin Concerto, Monumentum/Movements, Duo Concertante, and Symphony in Three Movements--both casts I saw, but special mention to Sterling Hyltin in Symphony in Three Movements and Robert Fairchild in Stravinsky Violin concerto 4)Osipova-Gomez sailing across the stage in perfectly attuned tour jetes in the classical divertissement of Bayadere Act I. 5)Osipova-Hallberg Giselles (Chicago and New York) 6)Cojocaru's Nikiya 7)Twyla Tharp's The Princess and the Goblin with the Atlanta Ballet Overall, a very fortunate ballet-going year for me and I am leaving several excellent performances off the list because I consider it cheating if one includes everything one liked! Worst: 1)Missing the Paris Opera Ballet's visit to the U.S.-- though, more precisely, that would be my biggest regret 2)I have seen several movements of Symphony in C and Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet at NYCB in better shape and remember a time when, at ABT, the Golden Idol in Bayadere was something of a highlight and the corps, whatever their weaknesses, did not make silly mistakes in the Shades scene.
  8. I remain a little puzzled by the claim that Western audiences loved Somova on those early tours as I never saw much evidence of that..
  9. Even at ABT Kirkland danced the revised version done for her when Balanchine reset Theme and Variations as the final movement of Tchaikovsky Suite No. 3. Gargouillades were added to that version--a case of the ballet being made (from a certain perspective) more difficult. I assume that Alonso stages the ballet as it was staged for her and I believe that at ABT the dancers also dance the Alonso/ABT version though Kirkland did not do so. Whether that version has been simplified or not at ABT over the years I couldn't say; I always found Theme and Variations one of their better efforts--certainly my favorite ABT Balanchine and presumably not a coincidence the ballet was created for ABT, since the company had people who knew how to keep it alive. However, I haven't seen it done there since Gillian Murphy made her debut as the ballerina which I'm guessing must be well over 10 years ago. And I also don't know what version the Balanchine trust 'authorizes' or what version San Francisco dances.
  10. Thank you Natalia and Helene for posting these clips...
  11. It may be that I went overboard with questions about ballet travel to St. Petersburg during White Nights. In the meanwhile I have resolved my hotel dilemma by making reservations more or less in between the Mariinsky and the main tourist areas and hoping the walk and/or transportation won't be too onerous either way! But seriously if anyone has experiences or advice to share of any kind regarding ballet attendance especially, whether responding to my earlier questions or not, that would be great....Of course I'm checking/reading guidebooks, but I trust ballet fans more when it comes to ballet-related questions and experience. (Timing of our trip is dictated by Mr. Drew's work taking him to Finland, so we are talking about the first week of June.)
  12. The Mariinsky management is accused of playing even with Maternity Leave funds? Gee, I wonder ....consider the possibilities.....awwww, I'll just shush-up & let the facts come to light. Seriously, these are horrendous allegations. ITA with Cygnet re. Gergiev's petty comment on Pavlenko. I would have expected tha from Fateev, not Gergiev, who doesn't seem to know or care much about the ballet troupe. Perhaps Gergiev was given "talking points" to simply read before the cameras? ITA also. I am not a Pavlenko fan, but as the spokesperson for the dancers she had the right to be treated with respect, and Gergiev's comments about her were not just petty, but deliberately humiliating. However, whether or not he cares - and plainly he doesn't - by showing such disrespect of a dancer and dismissing the concerns of the company , he is only showing himself in his true, unpleasant colours. His remarks are a disgrace; the way in which he has allowed Mariinsky Ballet to be mismanaged even more so. I can only hope that the ball has now started rolling and all the allegations and rightful grievances voiced by the dancers will finally be addressed. This situation has been going on for far too long. I was really disgusted by the Pavlenko comment -- and I have no opinion about her as a dancer at all and did very much enjoy the one time I heard Gergiev conduct and believe him to be a great musician. It is more dignified to ignore it, but I'm not that dignified. In a way, the comment convinced me (more than a 100 videos of Somova or Skorik with twisted torsos ever could) that there are fundamental problems with the way things are being run at the Mariinsky. Do I exaggerate? Perhaps...perhaps not. When the top guy talks that way, something is wrong.
  13. This made me laugh on principle, but I'm afraid I actually haven't seen any of the Anna Karenina movies....but MakaravaFan--I DO remember Nicola Padgett as Anna in the television series and how much I loved her in the role. Oddly (or not so oddly on this message board) my favorite embodiment of Anna Karenina is now Ekaterina Kondaurova in the admitedly not altogether successful Ratmansky ballet.
  14. I suppose you are right, but it was by far my favorite Wagner when I was a child, along with the "Ride of the Valkyrie". Come to think of it, my favorite Tchaikovsky in those days was "Francesca di Rimini," which has a certain crassness of its own.. Fokine choreographed something to Francesca di Rimini but I don't know if it survives. Has any ballet composer ever choreographed to Rienzi? I just tumbled over this thread this evening and I suppose you may have long since gotten the answer, but Roland Petit used the Rienzi overture for his Proust ballet. As I remember, he used it for the closing scene, but it's a dim memory...and he may have wanted a bit of bombast. I recently attended a concert with Tchaikovsky's fourth symphony on the program and I'm afraid bombast is very much how it seemed to me...though often as if on the verge of becoming something greater and more moving...but it never quite happened. That it happens in many of his other works, I certainly find...and it may be I simply failed to 'get' the symphony on this hearing. Regarding lists or announcements of the "10 best" or even one's "favorite", I sometimes think that if one is going to start down that road (and probably one ought not) it's best not to hedge with humility or subtlety: "my opinion..." or "from the perspective of a ballet lover...." Just go for it and be wrong rather than mealy-mouthed! It makes it more of an intellectual challenge for everyone and second it's...uh...more fun--possibly just because it is "aesthetically incorrect" to be ranking things that can't always be ranked. I love to shock people when they ask my favorite novel by giving them an immediate unequivocal answer (it's almost always Middlemarch) because it's obvious they expect a much more refined answer about the "impossibility" of having a favorite, or about how different traditions have different strengths etc. Of course, on the internet one always tries one's very best to be polite!
  15. I have some additional queries and hope people won't mind my floating them here: When are White Nights performances announced usually? I did a search on this sight for "White Nights" I found a thread from last year posted in late March that had some announcements...I'm hoping that is not really the earliest we can know anything. I gather the Mariinsky is in a slightly different part of town than the main tourist places to visit. Do people find they prefer to stay near the Mariinsky and/or nearer to mainstream sights? I realize the answer is likely to be very personal but am still interested in responses/experiences. Normally, when "ballet traveling" I myself prefer to stay near the theater, but I also wilt easily and am a little worried that by the time I get to, say, the Hermitage from a different part of town I will already be half wilted... Are taxis available at the theater after performances? (People may be thinking "of course" but for example I have waited for half an hour after a performance at Covent Garden and found myself on an empty street w. no-one around so I don't take anything for granted.) Seats: I have been to Tripadvisor and found a few reflections on seats and sight-lines at the Mikhailovsky and the Mariinsky, but would not at all mind hearing more about both theaters. (I'm short; I am also willing to consider all prices including the more expensive.) Obviously no-one has any experience with the new Mariinsky that is supposed to open this season, but any information/rumors would also be welcome. I believe Natalia and others recommend buying directly from the theater websites and not dealing with middlemen, but if anyone has any experiences with the "BalletandOpera.com" website or other middlemen I would be curious. Reliability? quality of seats etc.? Is there a quality company or a particularly ravishing theater I'm missing out on by focusing exclusively on the Mariinsky and Mikhailovsky? These are a lot of questions and I fear must sound very naive to many...so, thanks for reading/responding.
  16. Like you, I simply don't know very much about the internal situation of the Bolshoi. I can say that I think Ratmansky had a creative way of looking back at earlier moments in Bolshoi ballet history (the new Bright Stream and Flames of Paris) and w. Burlaka honored the classical past in productions like the reconstructed Corsaire and, more of an absolute success in my eyes, the post-Ratmansky Coppelia. As I understand Tsiskaridze has had some reservations about these regimes; I'm not sure all fans would agree. In any case, I have no sentimentality whatsoever about the OLD "old" Bolshoi being revived in 2012--if that were to mean Grigorovich productions ruling over all. I am not opposed to honoring Soviet ballet by any means (I always liked Sergeyev's Sleeping Beauty) and I was pleased that the Bolshoi could still make Spartacus 'work' in London a couple of seasons back. But it seems from the outside as if the company has had a lot of success in recent seasons, even following up the losses of Osipova and Vasiliev with the hiring of Obratzova. (All credit to Filin for hiring and developing Smirnova as well.) So whatever changes happen there are a lot of recent developments at the Bolshoi one would hate to lose. (I believe Tsiskaridze also objected to Hallberg being featured in the HD Sleeping Beauty broadcast: I would not like to see the Bolshoi lose its "Bolshoiness" but I don't think there is much risk of that--and could wish Tsiskaridze had felt differently about that one broadcast performance as well.)
  17. I think one reason there is such a lively discussion is that most of us feel there is a difference between saying you prefer Verdi to Madonna and saying you prefer Verdi to Stravinsky...just as there is a difference between saying you prefer Raphael to Rockwell and saying you prefer Raphael to Picasso. (Apologies to Rockwell and Madonna fans: they are doing something completely different--not writing bad operas or messing up the Vatican walls.) There is also perhaps an in between range too--where one might indeed rank Raphael higher than Picasso or--to choose a less historically crucial figure--say, Rothko--but still feel one's soul needs some Rothko or (to name a more contemporary figure) Robert Ryan. And indeed that one's soul is at least curious to see other newer artists even if not necessarily to return to see their work again. For myself I take for granted that to cite Cubanmiamiboy, only a "handful" of brand new dance works that I see in any given decade are going to be works of substance. Actually, that would be a very good decade. With limitations of circumstance (time, money, energy) of course one focuses on what one loves best. For me, with performing arts there is another dimension too. Given the choice between a third-rate or even second rate performance of Swan Lake and a first-rate performance of Balanchine or Ashton...I would almost always choose the latter AND given the choice between a first rate performance of Swan Lake and a second or third rate performance of Balanchine or Ashton, i would almost always choose the former. When it comes to third or fourth tier ballets/choreographers vs. classics (including Balanchine and Ashton), the choice would be more complex (e.g. is it a choreographer/company I have seen before, what other works have I seen most recently, what is the music etc.). Of course, mostly our choices don't come in such neat packages and one balances things off based on circumstance, budget, time etc. Even first-rate, second-rate is complicated by the fact that one often sees great dancers in crummy productions, great corps-de-ballet with mediocre principals etc. But certainly Miami City Ballet has a great--internationally recognized--strength. Losing that would in my opinion be a mistake. And it can be lost. (Atlanta ballet was once a respected Balanchine satellite--not nearly as acclaimed as MCB but solid enough to earn a season in New York that was respectfully received: they deliberately threw that part of their tradition away. I have already alluded to what I think of this season.) Historically, I think there have always been ballet fans whose hearts are first and foremost with nineteenth-century works. And they are great works. But Ballet as an art form is much bigger than that (and...uh...not because those of us who like to see newer or even new works have small souls). That said, is there a lot of mediocrity out there? Oh yes. Lightweight fare that even the greatest dancers can barely make interesting and plain old "meh" -- no-one wishes that on MCB or any company. I completely understand losing one's tolerance for a lot. I could not talk myself into Eugene Onegin last year with Vishneva (and Osipova as Olga!) on pretty much those grounds. But one has at the same time to distinguish between losing one's tolerance for mediocrity and assuming that all works one happens not to tolerate are as a matter of course mediocre. (As possibly some Cranko fan is now thinking with some irritation as they read my post!)
  18. Off topic but I cannot let this pass without responding: At NYCB Sarah Mearns, Ashley Bouder, Tiler Peck, Sterling Hyltin, Robert Fairchild--in my opinion even a less heralded principal such as Teresa Reichlin or more limited talent such as Megan Fairchild--are decidedly making upward spirals. In a few of those cases way, way, way upwards right into the pantheon of world's great dancers. And it's not due to dancing Peter Martins' version of Swan Lake...(which I don't even hate as much as many others do). Mearns' solo in Ratmansky's Namouna--I would put that performance right next to any in the pantheon of performances in 19th- or 20th-century classics; Hyltin in Symphony in Three Movements--all due respect to earlier generations, I thought she was better than anyone I have ever seen in the role. Etc. And these are (in my judgment) ballets that matter. Maybe it's a little soon to pronounce on Namouna--but Symphony in Three Movements? Whether or not it's to everyone's personal taste--no great art is--it matters. I do indeed love the nineteenth-century classics; I believe strongly that the "major" companies that give them attention and quality performances and productions are keeping the art of ballet alive. (Swan Lake in particular has suffered from productions that tinker with it excessively, even -- if not especially -- at the major companies.) And less than major companies play an important role in introducing people to these great works of the tradition. I myself saw my first La Sylphide, my first Giselle, and my first Coppelia with the National Ballet of Washington (not, though my first Swan Lake which they did not dance). If MCB wants to take on Swan Lake, then best of luck...Certainly they have better resources than many companies. But I also remember that when dancers such as Nureyev, Baryshnikov, and Makarova defected from the Soviet Union they made it clear that they did not want to be restricted to dancing nineteenth-century classics plus what they evidently judged to be the very limiting and limited Soviet repertory. They weren't leaving the classics behind, but they did want to try other choreography whether Ashton, Balanchine, Graham, Macmillan, Tharp or...well, you name it. And they did so, with varying degrees of success. As an audience member, I too want the twentieth-century classics next to the nineteenth-century ones--and not by any means always danced by the same companies (sometimes yes, sometimes no: depends on the company)--and I have to say that after a middle-aged lifetime of attending the ballet, ballet today feels a lot more thrilling than it has in decades because some substantial new choreographers are on the scene. Particularly Ratmansky. ABT with Ratmansky premiers and revivals of great 20th-century works (by which I mean Ashton and Tudor) is a great deal more exciting than ABT without. I write this as a someone who is genuinely passionate about getting the chance to see fantastic ballerinas in Giselle and Swan Lake etc. I will add, too, that I would KILL to have a local company with the fabulous repertory of MCB. (Okay, that's an exaggeration, but not by much.) This season the Atlanta ballet is treating us to Dracula, Nutcracker, a children's Cinderella and an evening of modern dance. There is a program with David Bintley's Carmena Burana that I may try to see. Otherwise, I'll save my ballet budget for travel. As soon as I find a date that works with my life, MCB is on the list--and I won't be traveling to see them dance nineteenth-century ballets but to see them dance Balanchine, Ratmansky, and Scarlett. Of course, the local audience matters much more than I do -- absolutely -- just trying to say how it looks to one outsider.
  19. It does make one wince when one reads about the same ballerina for all three Swan Lakes in Taipei. Unless those performances are spaced in an unusual way...Sort of seems like a recipe for injury...
  20. At the Koch theater, especially with a little girl and on a more limited budget I recommend the second ring seats. For cheaper still, front of the third ring. Anything in the rings that is pretty much facing the stage should be fine. Up and down the side of the theater in the rings can be problematic. If you do sit downstairs the banking is much better after the first 8-9 rows. At the Met, as others have said in other threads, every seat is a compromise. Also, nothing is even vaguely reasonably priced unless you are very, very, very far away indeed. For a treat I would sit downstairs, ask for a cushion for your daughter, and (depending on how tall you are) hope no-one too tall sits in front of you. The seats are banked starting at about row K, but in my experience it's unwise to sit closer than L. (I'm short.) Between L and T is pretty much my favorite range in the orchestra. I actually like sitting in the middle of the side sections as much as or more than sitting in the center section as I usually find it's a little easier to find an angle to see in between people's heads. The truth is that even with banking I sometimes have trouble seeing. The dress circle is usually as expensive as downstairs but the seats are very well banked. If you can sit towards the front, then it's not too bad. For myself, I enjoy it more with binoculars from up there. I once saw someone with small children who had gotten front row seats at the Met--but for any child or any shortish adult the bottom part of the dancers' legs are cut off in those seats. Sitting on the side down front gives you a very peculiar angle. For me, Osipova is not to be missed at ABT and, for very different reasons, Cojocaru. But everyone on this board will name a different favorite ballerina. Personally I think those are the two ballerinas of the season that people will be talking about the most decades AFTER the season is over, the ballerinas your daughter will say "When I was a little girl, my mother took me to see..." But the ballet I most strongly recommend--and that you might not have thought of as compared with Swan Lake or Romeo and Juliet--is Sylvia; incredible melodious music, fantastic ballerina role, lots of charming bit parts (dancing goats, the goddess Terpsichore) and ABT in the past has danced the ballet very well across multiple casts. And it's joyous! (Gillian Murphy is also fantastic in the lead role if you are keen on supporting home team ballerinas.) But you know, of course, it's an excellent company and though we often criticize it on this board, I don't think you can go wrong with any performance--though...uh...some may be righter than others...
  21. Very nice to read about Kent's performance--I can easily believe she was lovely--and I loved her performance as Desdemona in Lar Lubovitch's Othello--but I did want to add something about the "technical" question. The Moor's Pavane is not a classical piece, but that does not mean it doesn't require a very specific modern dance technique which, in my experience, ballet dancers often are not qualified for even if they appear to all intents and purposes to be doing the steps with ease. I remember the first time I saw a modern dancer in Moor's Pavane, I experienced it as something of a revelation--the sense of weight in particular was entirely different from that of the ballet dancers on stage. I enjoy the reports I am reading of ABT's performances and it sounds as if the ABT dancers had a success in this work, but if they took Limon's technique seriously, then I suspect it was something they also had to study to master effectively. (And more balletic performances of Moor's Pavane have been known to be effective theatrically in any case: it's just that over the years I have learned to respect the difference real command of a very different modern dance techniques can make in modern dance works.)
  22. Drew

    Skorik

    It is likely that almost everyone on this thread with experience seeing the Mariinsky over the years has had experiences similar to mine--experiences that, for me, give these discussions a quality of unreality. Though, indeed, I have only been able to see the company very sporadically over the years... Certainly, when I first saw the Kirov in the early 80's one thing that struck me was that although they had a lot of principal dancers I did not quite 'get' (including dancers much admired in the Soviet Union such as Mezentzeva), I never doubted I was seeing serious, skilled artists in complete command of what they were doing. I never had to make allowances or create a back story to explain what I was seeing, praise someone for having 'improved' or focus on potential--EVEN when I scrunched up my brow in puzzlement and thought -- "so, that's what a non-defecting Kirov ballerina looks like...not what I imagined exactly." Everyone on stage, as a friend of mine said, "knew what it was supposed to look like" and, as it went without saying, had the skills to make it look that way. (This was in Petipa and Fokine I should underline.) And, in Pacquita, say, up and down the line, one soloist was better than the last: a display of as high quality classical dancing as I had ever seen. I had some favorites but never worried twice about the "cast"--certainly not when it came to the company's women: whoever was dancing and whatever the role, she was sure to know what she was doing and be doing it at the highest level. Then, at the end of 80's I saw a performance on tour where that was not entirely true. I remember the exact moment in Pacquita when someone seemed to lose their poise and dance with less than perfect security and I was--at the time, without irony--SHOCKED! shocked that such a thing was possible at the Kirov...Some on this board may remember too towards the very end of the Vinogradov era, some fans were puzzled by the Makhalina phenomenon which was attributed to favoritism and an inexplicable taste for hyper-extended limbs: little did we imagine what was coming. The season with the reconstructed Sleeping Beauty at the Met was the first, ironically enough, to break the spell for me. I would take Sergeyev danced the way they used to dance almost any time over the reconstruction the way they were dancing it at the Met. I saw not one but two less than ideal Auroras in the company of Sizova, Kolpakova, in more recent memory, Lezhnina. (Of course I wouldn't mind seeing the reconstruction danced ... the way they used to dance.) I actually have seen Somova (everyone's exhibit A for the prosecution) give what I judged a lovely and, indeed, very appealing performance in Ratmansky and a quite nice one in Balanchine (allowing that the Mariinsky's Balanchine is not my favorite) ... but it's really unspeakably depressing that a company that once had such incomparably high standards in the pre-Balanchine era classics is so out of touch with its legacy that fans find themselves debating just how much allowance should be made for ballerina x or whether ballerina y even deserves principal roles. Moreover these are fans who don't necessarily see eye to eye on everything: it's not simply one clique that happens to hate one dancer. However, I will say that as my narrative above suggests I think the problem is about more than a couple of controversial dancers--dancers about whom there is still some range of opinion--and precedes the current regime and, perhaps, includes something strange in the company's own relation to its "post-Soviet" moment: including how it decides what parts of the Soviet legacy are to be kept, what revised or chucked altogether, and generally what modern ballet at the Mariinsky should look like (other than Balanchine as a rather obvious choice of choreographer) -- perhaps, too, in its relation to how the company should be financed -- etc.
  23. Thank you for reporting on the performance you saw Mashinka and the atmosphere around it.
  24. With Osipova dancing Swan Lake at the Royal, I have been hoping she would also dance it at ABT--so I would be very happy if tba cast for Swan Lake included an Osipova Odette-Odile (esp w. Hallberg). Would also be delighted to have Hallberg join the Osipova/tba/Vasiliev cast in Sylvia. Love ABT in the latter ballet and will do my best to get to NY to see it. Very pleased Cornejo has been cast as Siegfried w. Cojocaru. Hoping I can see that too... (Osipova's Don Q is scheduled on days when I can't get to New York. I admire Osipova so much that it seems rather a little joke the universe is playing that I am never able to catch her in her most famous role. The repertory I am most interested in -- the new Ratmansky- Shostakovitch ballet -- is similarly ill-starred for me, though I expect I will get to see it another season. Hope so.)
  25. I would be interested in hearing reactions to Osipova's performances of Swan Lake at the Royal this season...I have seen a few (very positive) tweets concerning tonight's performance--her Royal Ballet debut--but that's all. I know Odette-Odile is a relatively new role for her and not one that obviously suits her style, but I have always imagined that, at some point, she was bound to find an artistically persuasive way to dance it. Any reports?
×
×
  • Create New...