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dirac

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Posts posted by dirac

  1. Reviews of the Royal Ballet in "Swan Lake."

    The Jewish Chronicle

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    Luca Acri almost stole the show as Siegfried’s friend Benno — he lights up the stage with his dancing — while time and again my eye was drawn to Valentino Zucchetti in the Act I waltz and the Act III Czardas. He is making a name for himself as a fine choreographer, but he is a lovely dancer too.

    Broadway World

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    The Act III ballroom scene is where things really “pop” after the slightly plodding country dances, safe for a lung bursting Neopolitan from Madison Bailey and Taisuke Nakao, we’re in gala territory with the sheer showboating of Nuñez’s Black Swan. Demeanour shifted from the pureness of Odette, her Odile is angular, spiky and smirking, she runs rings around Siegfried with it all culminating in the pas de deux for which the applause is frequent and spontaneous. Her fouettes fly without a hint of bother, and Muntagirov’s soundless landings, suspended jumps and neat unassuming landings are showcased in fine style too. It’s a cliche but the pace, fire and technical perfection of them is breathtaking. 

    The Arts Desk

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    Within the framework of every new production of Swan Lake (and few audience members will be aware how little of the original 1877 choreography survives) there is a certain amount of dramatic leeway for the two leading dancers. Marianela Nuñez and Vadim Muntagirov have long experience both as stage partners and with this ballet, which might make on think they could do it in their sleep. Not a bit of it. These two seem to review their interpretation afresh on each revival. Nunez’ Swan Queen, on opening night, was no timid, trembling thing. She was angry, and fierce with it. You will not shoot me with your crossbow, nor will you harm a feather of my companions!, her movements say on first meeting the Prince.

     

  2. Reviews of the Royal Ballet in "Swan Lake."

    The Times

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    There are going to be five productions of Swan Lake in London in 2024, but what better way to start the marathon than with the Royal Ballet’s vivid and heartfelt staging? Liam Scarlett’s outstanding 2018 production, here revived for a run of 30 performances, is beautifully judged, elegantly choreographed, stunningly designed and dramatically rich. Add superlative performances from a first-night cast and you have an evening that will live long in the memory.

    The Stage

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    Vadim Muntagirov wears the role of the prince like a well-fitting cloak now, and his partnership with Marianela Núñez is electric – he matches her flawless technique beat for beat, but he also knows how to partner her so that she shines. When they meet in Act II, she’s not the skittish, scared Odette we often see – this cursed princess is imperious and angry as she explains the outrage committed against her that has seen her turned into a swan.

    CultureWhisper

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    No ballet more clearly illustrates the health of a company than Swan Lake, and judging by the opening night of the current run, The Royal Ballet is in rude health, the corps dancing with verve and impressive coordination; soloists grabbing every opportunity to shine and a trio of Royal Ballet principals bringing rousing commitment and artistry to the lead roles: Vadim Muntagirov as the melancholy Prince Siegfried, Marianela Núñez in the dual role of Odette/Odile and Gary Avis as the sorcerer von Rothbart.

     

  3. Alberta Ballet presents "Hansel and Gretel."

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    The show was programmed by Ventriglia’s predecessor, Christopher Anderson, as part of the 2023-2024 season. But the Italian choreographer, who was announced as the ballet’s artistic director in December, feels a connection to Hansel & Gretel, particularly its creator/choreographer Loughlan Prior. Prior danced for the Royal New Zealand Ballet when Ventriglia was artistic director of that company. He left in 2017, two years before Prior was commissioned by the company to create a new version of the fairy tale. But Prior began his choreography career under Ventriglia’s watch.

     

  4. A preview of Carlos Acosta's new "Nutcracker in Havana."

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    The show, which is set to tour U.K. cities from November, will be performed by some 20 dancers from Acosta Danza, the Havana-based dance company Acosta founded in 2016 after retiring from classical ballet.

     

  5. Atlanta Ballet announces its 2024-25 season schedule.

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    Choreographer Stanton Welch’s Tu Tu is set to Maurice Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G Major. This highly stylized classical work with a playful twist features 22 dancers and marks the return of a popular piece not seen on the Atlanta Ballet stage in six years.

     

  6. The Joffrey Ballet announces its 2024-25 season.

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    Joffrey’s 69th season, and its fourth at the Lyric Opera House, will open Oct. 17-27 with the American premiere of Marston’s “Atonement,” based on Ian McEwan’s novel, shortlisted for the Booker Prize and turned into a 2007 movie.

     

    Related.

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    Other engagements in the year ahead include “Winning Works” (March 14-23, 2025) by the Joffrey Academy of Dance, the Joffrey with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (April 10-13, 2025) and Joffrey on Tour at Ravinia in Highland Park this coming September.

     

  7. A review of New York City Ballet by Leigh Witchel in dancelog.nyc.

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    Many times in the season folks ended with the energy level they should have started at. But the T(i)(y)lers, Peck and Angle, started dialed to 11 in their first duet, with stolen glances, shaded eyes and drama, drama, drama. The parts for Violette Verdy and Nicholas Magallanes begin more calmly and allusively than that, but the choreography caught up to where they were. Peck and Angle quickly hit their stride. Angle is a phenomenal partner, bracing her on his back so smoothly in a lift that there was no pause between the ground and the air.

     

  8. A review of the Finnish National Ballet in "Dracula" by Maggie Foyer for Bachtrack.

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    The resulting narrative ballet Dracula, restaged for the Finnish National Ballet, has graveyards and gloomy castles alternating with waltzing couples in Victorian drawing rooms. In this collision of fantasy and reality the dancers have a broad canvas on which to display their talents while sets and costumes created by Charles Cusick Smith and Phil R. Daniels show awesome attention to detail.

     

  9. An interview with Jean-Christophe Maillot by Victoria Looseleaf in San Francisco Classical Voice.

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    “For me,” said Maillot in a recent phone conversation, “the question that arises with traditional big ballets [is that] everybody knows the story; everybody’s relating to it. If we do a new one, what’s the point of view we can have that makes it interesting? Every [production of] Coppélia that I’ve seen, this lady [Coppélia] sitting on the balcony, was the most uninteresting character of the ballet.

     

  10. A review of the Joffrey Ballet by Leigh Witchel for dancelog.nyc.

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    Goncalves and Mendoza did very good work. But at the Sunday matinee Dylan Gutierrez and Victoria Jaiani were as close to heaven-sent casting as it was going to get. It helped that they each are about five years older than their counterparts. In her late thirties, Jaiani is the perfect age for the duet. Like Lorena Feijoo, who originated the part as well as Yuan Yuan Tan in San Francisco, experience helps when you’re asked to express emotional pain.

     

  11. The Bolshoi Ballet celebrates the memory of Ekaterina Maximova.

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    Vasiliev, a renowned former principal dancer of the Bolshoi and the company’s director from 1995 to 2000, has also been productive as a choreographer. Several samples of his ballets were shown at the gala. Much to the audience’s appreciation, for the first time, Vasiliev included film footage and archive photos of Maximova’s performances and private life, which testified to her dazzling talent and vibrant personality. The clips he chose depicted her in the very same roles that were subsequently performed live at the gala, allowing comparisons between her and today’s ballerinas. They left no doubt that Maximova’s performances should be considered a standard. Although forty years or so have passed, her style and technique still looked fresh and modern. Most striking, though, was her captivating charisma. How impressive must she have been alive and in person!

     

  12. A review of New York City Ballet by Jennifer Homans in The New Yorker.

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    No more. Her ballet, “Concerto for Two Pianos,” shows Peck to be a choreographer of considerable skill and range. Set to the double-piano concerto by Francis Poulenc, the dance she has devised is a perfect match: a mercurial and moody rush through styles and ideas for nineteen dancers which leaves us somehow lighter—and full of the great good energy of Poulenc and the dancers. In an era inclined to narrative and political art, Tiler Peck is not afraid to give us the pure pleasure of music and dance.

     

  13. A  list of "Best Ballet Movies" from Cosmopolitan.

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    There are also some great ballet television shows out there: Bunheads, Flesh and Bone, and Tiny Pretty Things to name a few. (Speaking of Bunheads, Amy Sherman-Palladino is working on a new ballet series called Étoile starring Charlotte Gainsbourg and Luke Kirby and I will be sat.) But for now, let's focus on the movies. There are a lot of great ones!

     

  14. San Francisco Ballet's encore run of "Swan Lake" will feature guest stars.

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    Natalia Osipova, Daniel Camargo and Jacopo Tissi are scheduled to appear with the San Francisco Ballet during its encore performances of “Swan Lake,” the company announced Monday, March 4. The high-profile guest appearances, set for April 30 through May 5, are part of a new programming strategy under Artistic Director Tamara Rojo, who assumed the top leadership post at the Ballet in 2022.

     

  15. San Diego Ballet presents "The Many Loves of Don Juan."

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    Two hours of running time with San Diego Ballet filled up the weekend with spectacular beauty, making the audience feel like they were in the middle of medieval Spain. Don Juan, second to none in Casanova’s league, wanders around the world to seduce every woman who catches his eye, starting his voyage from a Spanish lord’s house.

    The performance is more in tune with Lord Byron’s epic poem rather than the traditional Mozart opera, “Don Giovanni.” Compared to Mozart’s conjoining of characters from opera seria (noble and serious style) and opera buffa (comic style), “Many Loves of Don Juan” is more focused on comedic incidents and accidents.

     

  16. Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre's old house for students is for sale.

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    There is no need for the space since students are now leasing their own apartments. The ballet is recommending identified student housing in September 2024 in the Cultural District, close to the Benedum Center and Pittsburgh Regional Transit bus lines.

     

  17. An autobiographical article by Peter Martins, "A Life in Ballet," in the March issue of The New Criterion.

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    By my early teens I had become rowdy, quarrelsome, sometimes snotty, and completely undisciplined. Stanley Williams, who was a principal dancer with the company, became my teacher when I was twelve. He had been born in England, but his mother was Danish, and his family moved to Denmark when he was a child. When a dancer says, “So and so is my teacher,” he means this is the one who determined my style, who gave me the clue to the art and my way of performing. This is the teacher who set my goals, who set my standards of movement. It was Stanley who first made me feel the challenge, the potential achievement, and the importance of being a dancer.

     

  18. A review of the Birmingham Royal Ballet by Sarah Crompton in The Observer.

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    How times change. The company’s current artistic director, Carlos Acosta, has mounted a 40th-anniversary revival just as the bankrupt local authority has withdrawn support from all the arts organisations it once part-funded. Birmingham Royal Ballet will survive, but the cut is a sign of how far artistic ambition in national and local government has receded from the high-water mark that this handsome, expansive production represents.

     

  19. An interview with Lacey Hammond Harrington, the National Ballet of Canada's footwear co-ordinator and dye workroom manager.

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    Harrington not only co-ordinates and organizes every pair of shoes in each NBC production, but fits each dancer, and then paints, dyes and embellishes each shoe that hits the stage. After all, flamboyant characters such as the White Rabbit, the Queen of Hearts and the Mad Hatter demand such attention to detail. While most might be familiar with the rabbit ears, the top hat and the endless tea cups, a tremendous amount of work goes into the shoes they twirl in on.

     

  20. A review of the Ballet of the Buryat Academic Ballet and Opera Theatre by Ilona Landgraf for "Landgraf on Dance."

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    Last year, the Republic celebrated the centenary of the foundation of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic—currently known as Buryatia (which is still an autonomous republic within the Russian Federation). On this occasion, the Buryat National Ballet and Opera Theatre commissioned the Moscow-based contemporary choreographer, Nikita Dmitrievsky, to create a new ballet. His Land of Faith – Bargujin Tukum premiered last May and will return to the schedule later this year. During a tour to Moscow last December, it was shown at the Stanislavsky Theatre. I was able to watch a video of the premiere.

     

  21. Several dancers of the Lviv Opera Ballet fail to return to Ukraine.

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    They were next scheduled to appear on stage in their home city of Lviv on March 1, but did not return.

    The runaway artists have been suspended from further performances at the Lviv Opera and their names have been removed from its website. The theatre says the incident is being investigated.

    Related.

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    Since the declaration of general mobilization by Kiev in February 2022, following the escalation of conflict with Russia, there has been a notable increase in individuals, particularly men of conscription age, attempting to flee the country. This incident with the Lviv Opera Ballet members is not isolated but part of a larger trend that has seen even public figures like TV host Aleksey Pechiy seeking refuge in the European Union. These actions highlight the desperate measures some are willing to take to avoid conscription, amidst reports of the Ukrainian government considering a new mobilization law to bolster military ranks.

     

  22. A review of New York City Ballet by Leigh Witchel for dancelog.nyc.

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    The company gave its all to Times in a way they hadn’t in anything up to that point in the season, and its performances were emotional, moving events. But even if the ballet is now seven years old, it doesn’t yet feel like someone else’s clothing.

     

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