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Helene

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  1. The press release for the 2023-24 season: 60th Anniversary Season BALLET WEST ANNOUNCES 23/24 SEASON MILESTONE SEASON WITH AUDIENCE FAVORITES, WORKS BY FOUNDER WILLAM CHRISTENSEN, COMPANY PREMIERES, TOURS TO WASHINGTON D.C. AND CHICAGO, AND THE RETURN OF THE CHOREOGRAPHIC FESTIVAL FIVE-BALLET PACKAGES START AT JUST $147 Salt Lake City, UT— In a live event at the Janet Quinney Lawson Capitol Theatre, Ballet West Artistic Director Adam Sklute announced the internationally-acclaimed Company’s 60th Anniversary Season, highlighted by three full-length story ballets, three world premieres, a KSL-TV broadcast, and unique historic masterpieces. The season begins in October at the Janet Quinney Lawson Capitol Theatre, and is generously sponsored by the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation, Intermountain Health, Salt Lake Zoo, Arts & Park, and Intermountain Health. “For this season, I wanted to honor the legacy of our founder, Willam Christensen, a visionary committed to the history of ballet, but also to its future,” said Sklute. “In addition, I want to pay homage to all of my predecessors in unique and subtle ways by presenting a mix of audience favorites and new creations.” The 60th Season is following two years of record attendance and audience growth. The Company is also pleased to welcome back accompaniment by the Ballet West Orchestra, led by Ballet West Music Director Jared Oaks. The season opens with the return of Ben Stevenson’s Dracula, back by popular demand and just in time for Halloween! The production was hailed by the New York Times as “a Dracula beyond Stoker’s darkest dreams.” This blockbuster show is set to the music of Franz Liszt, as arranged by John Lanchberry. It features exciting pyrotechnics, flying vampires, and a ghostly carriage that careens on-and-off stage. Dracula runs Oct. 20 – 28 at the Janet Quinney Lawson Capitol Theatre. Directly following is Firebird, a triple-bill of three works that honor the scope and vison of founder Willam Christensen, running Nov. 3 – 11. Opening the program is the revival of Christensen’s magical story of The Firebird to the iconic score by Igor Stravinsky. The ballet tells the tale of a prince who captures and then frees a magical bird, who in turn thanks the prince by saving him from attacking monsters and helps him find a beautiful princess. Next is the world premiere of Ballet West Demi-Soloist Joshua Whitehead’s Fever Dream. Whitehead has choreographed and composed the music for this sophisticated and mesmerizing work, originally shown as a workshop production for the students of Ballet West Academy. The program closes with George Balanchine’s joyous and unabashed celebration of Americana - Stars & Stripes. A huge cast of dancers present challenging classical dancing and intricate patterns to the upbeat and recognizable music of John Philip Souza (as arranged by Hershey Kay). The Nutcracker returns Dec. 8 – 27. Nearly 80 years after Christensen first choreographed it, America’s first full Nutcracker is still delighting audiences of all ages. The timeless music of Tchaikovsky will be performed live by the Ballet West Orchestra. In 2022, more than 42,000 experienced this beloved production and most performances were sold out. Prior to the traditional Salt Lake City run of performances, Ballet West will take The Nutcracker back to the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. for seven performances, Nov. 22 – 25, and then to Ogden, Utah before hitting the Capitol Theatre stage in Salt Lake City from Dec. 8 – 27. A must-see for any theater-goer, Swan Lake returns Feb. 9 – 17. The production is conceived and produced by Adam Sklute, after original choreography by Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov, with additional choreography by Ballet West Principal Rehearsal Director, Pamela Robinson-Harris and the late Mark Goldweber. The story follows a forlorn prince, an evil wizard, and an enchanted maiden who can only become human by the light of the moon. April 12 - 20, the company presents Love and War, a powerful triple-bill of groundbreaking and astonishing works. The program opens with the Utah Premiere of Blake Works I by renowned choreographer William Forsythe, who is recognized as one of the greatest living chorographers in the world. This sensual work, created on the Paris Opera Ballet in 2016, is set to the tuneful and moody songs of James Blake. Next is the long-awaited Ballet West revival of Red Angels, choreographed by Ulysses Dove with music by Richard Einhorn. Four dancers and an electric violin, played by the original interpreter, Mary Rowell, one of only two people in the world to play this score, present a nonstop outpouring of energy and passion. Finally, one of the world’s greatest ballet masterpieces, Kurt Jooss’s 1932 work The Green Table, returns to the Ballet West stage with a spellbinding score for two pianos by Frederick Cohen. In eight profoundly moving scenes, Jooss and Cohen depict the futility of war, its tragedy, and the redemptive power of humanity. In addition to the mainstage season, the popular Family Classics Series returns with Beauty and the Beast, conceived and produced by Adam Sklute and choreographed by Ballet West Principal Rehearsal Director Pamela Robinson-Harris with Peggy Dolkas. Performed by Ballet West II and members of the Ballet West Academy, this production is designed for families and children looking for an introduction to ballet with a shortened run-time and narration. Performances run March 29 – 30 with a Spanish-only narration March 30 in the evening. The Choreographic Festival returns June 5 – 8 at the Rose Wagner Theatre. This season’s festival celebrates Asian choreographers, artists, musicians, and companies. Along with presentations by two soon-to- be announced international guest companies, Adam Sklute has commissioned world premieres for Ballet West by Caili Quan, a dynamic new voice in contemporary ballet and dance, and emerging choreographer Zhongjing Fang, currently a soloist with American Ballet Theater. The strength of this program has also garnered national interest that takes the company back on tour to The Kennedy Center June 18 – 22, 2024. “From the revivals of some of Ballet West’s most beloved presentations, to the creation of new, cutting-edge work, our 2023-2024 season is definitely the biggest and most ambitious season in Ballet West history!” adds Adam Sklute, “It is our gift to Utah, the world, and our grand art-form of ballet!” Subscribers to the 2023-2024 Season will enjoy exclusive benefits, including free ticket exchanges, up to 40% off single ticket prices, priority seating, and first access to purchase additional tickets to The Nutcracker. Five-performance pages start at just $147. Groups of 15 or more will have access to purchase tickets before single tickets go on sale Tuesday, September 5. Heritage Club Members will have access to exclusive insider events including pre-performance Director’s Pointe talks, Intermission Receptions, In-Studio Rehearsals, and more. Single tickets do not go on sale until September 5, so ballet fans are encouraged to subscribe now or renew their seasons subscriptions early to get the best available seats. Contact Ballet West at 801-869-6920 or visit BalletWest.org. DRACULA Oct. 20 - 28 Choreography: Ben Stevenson Music: Franz Liszt (as arranged by John Lanchbury) Lighting Design: Tony Tucci, adapted from original designs by Tim Hunter Lighting Recreation: Jim French Costume Design: Judanna Lynn Scenic Design: Thomas Boyd World Premiere: March 1997, Houston Ballet, The Brown Theater at The Wortham Center, Houston, Texas Utah Premiere: 2011 Recommended for ages 10 and up. FIREBIRD Nov. 3 - 11 The Firebird Choreography: Willam Christensen Music: Igor Stravinsky Scenic and Costume Design: Ronald Crosby Costume Design: David Heuvel Lighting: James Larsen Masks: Logan Long World Premiere: October 25, 1967, Ballet West, Kingsbury Hall, Salt Lake City Fever Dream Choreography and Musical Composition: Joshua Whitehead Utah Premiere: November 2023 Stars and Stripes Choreography: George Balanchine Music: John Philip Souza (as arranged by Hershey Kay) Costumes: Karinska Original Lighting: Ronald Bates Lighting: James Larsen World Premier: January 17, 1958, New York City Ballet, City Center of Music and Drama, New York Utah Premier: April 9, 2010 Recommended for ages 10 and up. THE NUTCRACKER Dec. 8 - 26 Choreography: Willam Christensen Music: Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky Scenic Design: John Wayne Cook Additional Scenic Design: Dick and Belinda Bird Costume Design: David Heuvel World Premiere: 1944, War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco, California Utah Premiere: December 27, 1955, Kingsbury Hall Recommended for ages 5 and up. SWAN LAKE Feb. 9 – 17 Choreography: Conceived and Produced by Adam Sklute, after original choreography by Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov Music: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Additional Choreography: Mark Goldweber and Pamela Robinson Harris Sets and Costumes: Peter Cazalet Lighting: Jim French World Premier: March 4, 1877, Russian Imperial Ballet at the Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow Utah Premier: Feb. 2, 1982 LOVE AND WAR April 12 - 20 Blake Works I Choreography: William Forsythe Music: James Blake Costumes: William Forsythe and Dorothee Merg Lighting Recreated by: Brandon Baker World Premier: July 4, 2016 at the Palais Garnier in Paris, France Utah Premier: April 2024 Red Angels Choreography: Ulysses Dove Music: Richard Einhorn Lighting: Mark Stanley Lighting Recreation: Brandon Baker World Premiere: May 19, 1994, New York City Ballet, New York State Theater Utah Premiere: April 11, 2009, George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Center for the Performing Arts, Park City, Utah The Green Table Choreography: Kurt Jooss Music: Frederick Cohen Costume Design: Hein Heckroth Masks and Lighting Design: Hermann Markard Lighting: Kevin Dreyer World Premiere: July 3, 1932, Choreographic Festival in Paris, France Utah Premiere: March 2017 Recommended for ages 10 and up. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST March 29 - 30 FAMILY CLASSICS SERIES: Performed by Ballet West II & Frederick Quinney Lawson Ballet West Academy Students. Spanish-only narration on March 30 at 7 p.m. Production: Adam Sklute Choreography: Pamela Robinson-Harris and Peggy Dolkas Music: Alexander Glazunov and Nikolai Tcherepnin Scenic Design: John Wayne Cook Costume Design: David Heuvel Lighting Design: James K. Larsen Utah Premiere: 2016 Choreographic Festival VI: ASIAN VOICES Choreographers: Caili Quan and Zhongjing Fang International Guest Companies: Soon to be announced
  2. The press release is also on PNB's blog, with photos: https://www.pnb.org/blog/pacific-northwest-ballet-principal-dancer-lesley-rausch-announces-retirement/?vgo_ee=nuIXrdLfF6yPU%2B45o%2FHUNHwFoqDlMHNmyq65fGLdufk%3D Season Encore (in-person) tickets can be purchased from here: https://order.pnb.org/23-encore?&promoApplied=true&vgo_ee=nuIXrdLfF6yPU%2B45o%2FHUNHwFoqDlMHNmyq65fGLdufk%3D From her first roles in the corps, Rausch's beautiful feet and gorgeous port de bras put her on the map. If anyone deserves to retire and have a wonderful life with her husband, it is she :flowers:, but 😭 for us.
  3. Pacific Northwest Ballet Principal Dancer Lesley Rausch Announces Retirement. 22-year career with PNB will be celebrated at Season Encore Performance, June 11, 2023. Marion Oliver McCaw Hall 321 Mercer Street at Seattle Center Seattle, WA 98109 SEATTLE, WA — Pacific Northwest Ballet principal dancer Lesley Rausch has announced that she will be retiring at the end of the 2022-23 season. Lesley joined PNB as a member of the corps de ballet in 2001. She was promoted to soloist in 2007 and principal in 2011. Lesley’s incredible 22-year career will be celebrated at the Season Encore Performance, Sunday, June 11 at McCaw Hall. Tickets to the Season Encore Performance, starting at $37, are available through the PNB Box Office, 206.441.2424, online at PNB.org, or in person at 301 Mercer Street. “I never imagined 25 years ago, when I attended my first summer course at PNB School, that I would go on to have such a rewarding career with this great company,” said Lesley in her announcement. “I knew that I truly loved PNB and feel immensely fortunate that Kent and Francia took a chance on a very flexible, and somewhat uncoordinated, young dancer. I am beyond grateful for all of the love and commitment they put into nurturing the dancer I would become. I am also extraordinarily appreciative to Peter for the countless and diverse opportunities he has gifted me. You have all helped me to fulfill my dreams in ways I never realized were possible. “I am blessed to have parents who encouraged me to pursue my dream of becoming a professional dancer and helped me move to Seattle at the age of 17 to train at PNB School. Thank you to my mom, dad, and sister who have always been there to cheer me on and help pick me up when things were tough. “I have spent my entire adult life at PNB, which has become in some ways my home and family. I have made lifelong friends and most importantly met and married my soulmate. It has been such a gift to share this beautiful career dancing with Bold [former PNB principal Batkhurel Bold], my biggest cheerleader. I look forward to all the years ahead dancing through life together. “To my colleagues past and present, I have the utmost respect and admiration for you and feel blessed by the incredible partnerships I have shared over the years. To my most consistent partner, [PNB physical therapist] Boyd Bender, thank you. I would never have had the longevity or success in my career without your brilliant dedication to your craft and your unwavering care and support. “There are far too many people to thank for all of the contributions they have made to allow me the success that I have had at PNB. To the audience, subscribers, donors, rehearsal directors, school faculty, administration, PR, marketing, costume, wardrobe, production, stage crew and managers, musicians, and everyone else that makes PNB the incredible place that it is, thank you. It has been the pleasure of my life to share my passion with you all.” "Lesley Rausch has elevated countless ballets with her singular presence, extraordinary talent, and unmatched artistry over an impressive 22-year career with Pacific Northwest Ballet,” said PNB Artistic Director Peter Boal. “As she elects to step away from the stage at the close of our 50th Anniversary season, we know, like everything she does, it will be with the utmost grace. In iconic roles in Swan Lake and Diamonds, Lesley is able to sustain legato phrasing with her endless line, uncanny extension, and exquisite port de bras. Quite simply, Lesley is the ballerina version of a Stradivarius. Equally aligned with the nimble electric violin in Red Angels, Lesley's range as a dancer is extraordinary. The epitome of elegance on stage, she is also a devoted mentor, coach, and champion to her peers in the studio. I can't quite imagine PNB without her, but we will hold our treasured memories dearly, while offering our profound gratitude to this great artist." “When Lesley came to her first PNB School Summer Course in 1997, we immediately picked her out of the crowd,” said PNB Founding Artistic Directors Francia Russell and Kent Stowell. “Visually, her physique looked designed for a career in classical ballet but we soon learned that, in order to tame it, she had many challenges ahead of her. What we did not know was that Lesley had almost unreal will and determination. She also had a temper. When I cast her in a difficult variation for a School Performance she insisted she could not, and would not, do it. I insisted she was going to do it. In the end, that solo brought her to a higher level of technique, as I knew it would, and she was soon in the Company and on her way. “Through all the years we have worked with her, Kent and I have been impressed not only by Lesley’s devotion and seriousness about her work but her lack of seriousness about herself. No high falutin’ prima ballerina airs about this young woman. She is aware of everyone working with her and has been both a great colleague and, as she proceeded to her peak as an artist, mentor, and inspiration for the Company. “Lesley has gone from strength to strength as a dedicated and beloved performer in both the contemporary and classical repertoires. As a dynamic technician she has never lost the loveliness of her vulnerability in many roles. Swan Lake was perhaps the most perfect example: her Odette was heartbreakingly, humanly beautiful and her Odile a creature of fire and ice, and all performed with a clarity of technique that pretended to be easy. Last spring revisiting the ballet one last time with Lesley, was a productive and fulfilling experience we can never forget. Also impossible to forget are her radiant and gently humorous Titania in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, her breathtaking ‘Court of Love’ in Carmina Burana, and her power in In the middle, somewhat elevated. And so many, many more! “Of course Lesley’s most important partner is her husband, Bold. So different in character and background, they have forged a powerful, loving relationship that is a joy to know. Lesley will be missed terribly by everyone at PNB and she will miss dancing for sure. But we have no doubt at all that her life, with Bold, will be as full in the future as the brilliant career she has had with PNB. She leaves a legacy of dedication and perfection to which future dancers will aspire.” In addition to the Season Encore Performance, audiences will have several opportunities to catch Lesley’s performances during the second half of PNB’s 50th Anniversary season: BOUNDLESS (March 17 – 26); A Midsummer Night’s Dream (April 14 – 23); and WORLDS TO COME (June 2 – 11). For ticket and casting information, visit PNB.org. Lesley Rausch is from Columbus, Ohio. She studied with Shir Lee Wu at Columbus Youth Ballet and also at Pacific Northwest Ballet School. She took summer courses at the School of American Ballet, International Dance School at Jackson, Mississippi, and PNB School. Lesley joined Pacific Northwest Ballet as a member of the corps de ballet in 2001. She was promoted to soloist in 2007 and principal in 2011. Lesley has danced leading roles in George Balanchine’s Agon, Apollo, Concerto Barocco, Coppélia, Diamonds, Emeralds, The Four Temperaments, George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker®, La Valse, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Prodigal Son, Rubies, Serenade, Slaughter on Tenth Avenue, Stravinsky Violin Concerto, and Symphony in C; Peter Boal’s Giselle; Val Caniparoli’s The Bridge and Lambarena; David Dawson’s Empire Noir and A Million Kisses to My Skin; Ulysses Dove’s Dancing on the Front Porch of Heaven, Red Angels, Serious Pleasures, and Vespers; Nacho Duato’s Jardí Tancat; William Forsythe’s Artifact II, In the Middle, Somewhat Elevated, New Suite, and One Flat Thing, reproduced; Kiyon Gaines’ ə{SCHWA}; Paul Gibson’s The Piano Dance and Rush; Ronald Hynd’s The Sleeping Beauty; Jiri Kylian’s Forgotten Land and Petite Mort; Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Cendrillon and Roméo et Juliette; Mark Morris’ Pacific; Crystal Pite’s Emergence and Plot Point; Alexei Ratmansky’s Concerto DSCH, Don Quixote, and Pictures at an Exhibition; Jerome Robbins’ Afternoon of a Faun, The Concert, Fancy Free, Glass Pieces, and Other Dances; Kent Stowell’s Carmina Burana, Cinderella, Nutcracker, and Swan Lake; Twyla Tharp’s Brief Fling, In the Upper Room, Nine Sinatra Songs, Opus 111, and Waterbaby Bagatelles; and Christopher Wheeldon’s Polyphonia. She originated leading roles in Caniparoli’s The Seasons, Kyle Davis’ Las Estrellas, Gaines’ Sum Stravinsky, Edwaard Liang’s The Veil Between Worlds, Benjamin Millepied’s 3 Movements, Susan Stroman’s TAKE FIVE…More or Less, and Price Suddarth’s Signature. Lesley was a finalist in the 1998 Concours International de Danse de Paris. She has performed as a guest artist with Chicago Dancing Festival, Lafayette Ballet Theatre, Nantucket Atheneum Dance Festival, Nevada Ballet Theatre, and Ballet Hawaii. In addition to her performing career, Lesley has been a guest teacher at Ballet Hawaii, Evergreen City Ballet, New American Youth Ballet, and Punahou Dance School. She also is on the faculty of Pacific Northwest Ballet School. Lesley is a Stott Certified Pilates Instructor and a certified instructor in Tai Ji Quan Moving for Better Balance and Madeline Black’s Series One and Two.
  4. Helene

    Introducing Myself

    Welcome to Ballet Alert! We're glad you found us.
  5. I got my renewal notice in the mail, for next season and the rep revealed so far is: 1. Wartime Elegy (Ratmansky) and The Seasons' Canon (Pite) will be back next season! 2. One Thousand Pieces (first full PNB performance, Cerrudo) 3. Swan Lake (Stowell) 4. (Edited to add] a World Premiere by Danielle Rowe. The Digital Season add-on for subscribers is $30, and partial season and Digital Only packages are being finalized, with the target availability date of mid-March.
  6. A reminder that all info about dancers needs a source. "I think" isn't a source. Either the dancer, company, or another ballet professional has posted or written or spoken about it publicly, or they haven't. If they have, source it, which, for things in the past, can be "They posted to instagram" or "Another dancer posted to Instagram" or "The NYT said" that they were injured, pregnant, guesting, etc. and for current news, link to it or refer to an Instagram story, a Q&A, etc.
  7. That was fantastic! (I could never walk in them, but Florence Clerc had the best shoes.)
  8. Thread for critic reviews of the Peck ballet in The New Yorker can be found in the Writings on Ballet forum here:
  9. Wendy Whelan was my favorite Aurora, too, through the last NYCB performance of SB I saw in 2004.
  10. Hilarion wouldn't be a poor peasant: he's a gameskeeper, and his employer would have been wealthy, which may be one of the reasons he can suss out Albert so easily, as opposed to just being jealous of the shiny new guy. In most other productions I've seen, he brings dead birds, ie, dinner, to Berthe, partly to show that he will be able to feed her daughter. He's not in the fields and subject to an agrarian living. He meets a group of gameskeepers in Act II; I've seen productions where he appears to be bumping into a group of guys he doesn't know. Maybe his coat is shorthand for that, because only the hunting party brings back game. Giselle doesn't have to swallowed up, because by then, she's already passed him onto Bathilde. It makes me think of La Traviata, where Violetta tells Alfredo that when he finds a wife to give his wife Violetta's locket and to tell her that an angel is watching out for them both. In Traviata, there's no one specific, whereas in Giselle, it is Bathilde. I love that his punishment is depicted physically: he's between Giselle and Bathilde, and he has to live out his life in the middle of the great forgiveness sandwich. There have been a number of changes for each revivial, particularly in the mime, between 2011 -> 2014 -> 2023. (I'm not sure if there were intermediate/other changes slated for 2020, when the revival was cancelled when theaters closed.)
  11. On the Boards is sponsoring Kidd Pivot in Crystal Pite's Revizor for one performance at the Paramount Theatre in Seattle on 1 March at 7:30pm: https://www.ontheboards.org/performances/kidd-pivot-revisor I saw this in Vancouver pre-pandemic, and I was blown away. I don't know how much Pite has changed it since then, but I can't imagine it being any less amazing.
  12. Here's a link to the Curry (and Hamill and Bezic and Cranston) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwY93Z7dpzE
  13. It's a shame that the upper level students aren't performing in the corps. PNB isn't the only company where, by the time they've spent their last two years at the highest level that they've been in multiple ballets, supplementing the apprentices and corps members in the big corps ballets. Here it's Nutcracker Snow and Flowers, Sleeping Beauty and/or Swan Lake, Giselle when it's played, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Cinderella, Coppelia, Pite's two big works among them. There may have been some other ballets with large corps that haven't been performed in a while that used students in the corps, and I'm sure I'm forgetting a bunch. That stage experience ia invaluable, and that's not even counting the Spring story ballet matinees (ex: Snow White) and the school shows, which include Next Step, in which company members choreograph on them. I think the Garland Dance counts, and from what I've been reading here over the years, Peter Martins thought enough of his full-lengths, particularly Swan Lake, which made it to PBS as a representation of the company to the rest of the country, and Romeo + Juliet to be programmed enough, even going head-to-head with ABT.
  14. PNB works the same way for the children's roles in almost all of the same ballets, although I don't think PNB ever did Harlequinade. Most of the children in those ballets, all of whom are local, do not go on to the most advanced levels, although some do and a few of those do make the leap to the Professional Division (last two years). There have been more local children who've started early in the school and made it into the company (or other companies) through Dance Chance and the Francia Russell Center on the Eastside, but for a long time, it was similar to NYCB, where Peter Boal, Judith Fugate, Michael Byars, and a few others did start at SAB as young(er) children, whereas most of the local dancers, like Calegari, didn't join SAB until they were teenagers. Merrill Ashley wrote in her book that she performed the first kid Candy Cane in at 13 or 14, when her parents allowed her to attend SAB, but she wasn't yet tall, and she fit into the costume. I realize that isn't a pointe role, and I was thinking specifically of the Tea sidekicks. I thought the Nutcracker corps was supplemented by students in the advanced classes, but I was corrected earlier in the thread. And, of course, Martins wouldn't cast based on an 11- or 12-year-old unless they were extremely talented, but there were 14- and15- and 16- and 17- and 18-year olds that were in the advanced classes at SAB in December 2017 that are dancing at NYCB now as 19-23-year olds. They would surely be up for parts in The Sleeping Beauty, and he'd be aware of them, especially as he attended at least two performances recently. Peter Boal hadn't taught 1/3 of PNB that recently either when he became AD, but he did remember them.
  15. I could be mis-remembering, and I don't have the full programs anymore, but I thought the two women in Tea, who dance en pointe, were students, at least when I saw the company regularly, yegads, nearly 30 years ago at this point! In any case, Martins attended at least two performances this year: Ramasar's and Hyltin's farewells, and I'm sure he had his eyes open for those former students. It's only been four years.
  16. Balanchine only appeared in SAB classes a few times a year -- dancers have written about how they would wear their best clothes, do their make-up carefully, choose the right earrings, wear perfume, etc. when they heard he was coming -- and, he too, made quick decisions. If Martins disagreed with Kay Mazzo about her suggestions, he'd observed enough to form that opinion, for better or worse. My apologies for not knowing the SAB terminology for the way levels are described at SAB. So that means SAB students are no longer in The Nutcracker, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Coppelia, The Sleeping Beauty, and Harliquenade? (I don't know the new works, and those are the ones I remember with young dancers.) Where do they get the children/teens from if not from the school?
  17. Martins knew the corps members who were Professional Division students at SAB, both from classes and when they dance corps roles in the main company for productions like Nutcracker. Peter Boal had taught 1/3 of the dancers at Pacific Northwest Ballet when he became AD, because he had taught them at SAB. He knew their dancing very well.
  18. An announcement: https://www.broadwayworld.com/westend/article/Laura-Morera-Retires-as-a-Principal-Dancer-After-27-Years-20230209
  19. It would depend on what the contract says. Martins could always defer to staff for any casting he controls contractually, but he doesn't have to. Francia Russell once said in a Q&A in Seattle, when discussing performing Symphony in C, for which John Taras had lifetime rights from the original beneficiary (Betty Cage?). John Taras was insisting on an older version that NYCB hadn't been performing. According to Russell, Martins threatened to mothball Symphony in C unless they could perform the version they were used to. (Different companies performing different versions were well documented as being blessed by Balanchine by Maria Tallchief and Russell, among others, the most obvious being that companies still perform Apollo with the original opening and staircase ending, instead of the AT&T logo.) Taras relented for NYCB, and Russell said he died before PNB performed it, so the company could do a different version. Unless there is a contractual obligation to perform Martins' Sleeping Beauty within a specific timeframe, there's no reason why NYCB couldn't mothball it. Symphony in C is more valuable to NYCB than Sleeping Beauty, and he was willing to sacrifice rather than letting someone else control things.
  20. The stream with the Opening Night cast will be available this Thursday, February 16 through Mondy, February 21 (11:59 PST). Tickets are available here: https://order.pnb.org/23-digital/giselle They are $35+tax.
  21. From Coco Lavine's Instagram, a short rehearsal clip from "Like Water for Chocolate": https://www.instagram.com/p/Con9P2vD_j3/
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