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kfw

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Everything posted by kfw

  1. kfw

    Veronika Part

    The interviewer, Graham Watts, describes her as (understandably) sad, but nowhere does she make herself out to be a victim, and quite the contrary when she says she realized she needed to lighten her demeanor and "pull myself together, be stronger and work in their style." A woman who leaves her home country for one whose language she doesn't know, persists for six years in a system that doesn't suit her, gives many beautiful performances nonetheless, and now dares to leave what she has for what she might not find . . . I admire her courage, and I hope she won't be a stranger to D.C.
  2. I enjoyed your review, dancesmith, although to my mind the principals in Symphony in C were anything but flat. Sarah Mearns in particular in the 2nd movement was everything I'd hoped for, luminous and grand and self-contained, and I loved the way she really looked at Askegard. I agree that Garcia was terrific, and it was a special pleasure to see Fairchild charming and dazzling after making little impression in the inferior Zakouski the previous afternoon. Any program with the moving Serenade and the exhilarating Symphony in C is a favorite program of mine, no matter what's in between, and both have such hummable scores and lovely costumes that Moves isn't a bad choice. When the Merce Cunningham Company performs, the dancers must be counting like crazy, but except during partnered movements, if their timing falters, how often would we notice? These dancers accomplished an even more impressive feat, and there are hints of emotional drama in this work as well. Serenade is so lyrical and finally elegiac that I always forget how much fleet footwork it contains. Phillip Neal was his unfailingly elegant self, and I won't stretch my paltry powers of dance description further on the other lovely protagonists except to quote with admiration for them Balanchine's rebuttal to those who called his ballets abstract: "how much story you want?"
  3. Mike, I did see the program this afternoon, and I thought Carousel and The Concert were very well danced. Damien Woetzel, as we know, has the technique of a man half his age; Tiler Peck, at 19, probably is half his age, but they were both fine actors and looked good together. I've seen just enough Wheeldon that this looked like Wheeldon to me, and I was caught up in it immediately and wanted to see it again, and absorb more of the choreography, as soon as it was over. Not so with "Zakouski." The word means "appetizers," of course; didn't someone say it's about three too many? The folk touches were nice, but overall I found this pretty dull, and far too long. The audience did give it a good hand. I don't get to see NYCB in the black and white ballets nearly often enough, but when I do nowadays they never look as taut and energetic as they do in my imagination. The dancing lacks snap, crackle and pop. There were individual exceptions in "Agon" this afternoon: Reichlin in the Bransle Gay and Bransle Double, and Evans and Whelan for the most part. Certainly these three and others gave committed performances, but too often dancers couldn't quite fill out the shapes, and one young woman looked scared to death. Would that Villella would coach this up north; I'll bet it gets a great performance in Florida. I don't know if this one was under-rehearsed, or if the company was just tired from their long season, or both. I haven't seen "The Concert" in 20 years, so I don't know what a great performance of it looks like, but I did love this one. Sterling Hyltin told an interviewer not long ago that she hoped to dance this ballet, I thought she'd be a natural in it, and in this her only 2nd chance, I thought she was. But as with "Carousel," everyone onstage seemed engaged. How could anyone not have a good time in a ballet this fun? So, it was very good to see this company again, but for once at the Kennedy Center it would be nice to think we're seeing them dancing Balanchine at their best.
  4. I remember Michael Byars being showered with flowers after his final performance in 1995 (?), as Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream. I don't think the company came out onstage behind him, but it was a sweet tribute nonetheless. Are soloists often honored this way?
  5. kfw

    Natalia Osipova

    Paul, you might want to open Windows Media Player and uncheck the option to make it your default media player. Or if you can't find that option, another way to do it is to open Real Player, or whatever ever else you might have, and make it the default option. Real Player is my default and it allows me to watch embedded videos right there on the page. Good luck!
  6. In Suzanne Farrell's notes on some of the ballets NYCB is bringing to the Kennedy Center this week, she writes that .Thanks for all the great, detailed reports, folks.
  7. Wasn't that wonderful? Especially so since in demeanor she is so humble, so unselfconsciously unconcerned with presenting herself as a star.
  8. Wow, thanks, Ray! I'll ask for "Trying It It in America" via inter-library loan tomorrow.
  9. Please don't apologize, Alexandra, I was just having a little fun. It gets here when it gets here, and whenever it gets here, I'm happy.
  10. The postman has finally finished reading my new copy of the quarterly magazine DanceView, and with alternating sighs of regret and satisfaction has consented to let me have it. I'm pleased to list the contents of the Winter 2008 issue of this fine publication, for Ballet Alerters who don't already subscribe. "Maurice Bejart -- 1927-2007" and "The Last Word on Julie Kavanaugh's Nureyev Biography" by John Percival "A Conversation with NYCB's Megan Fairchild" by Michael Popkin' "Working Hard: Morphoses Makes Its City Center Debut" by Mary Cargill "American Ballet Theatre at City Center" and "New York Report" by Gay Morris "London Report" by Jane Simpson "San Francisco Report" by Rita Felciano DanceView is the quarterly print companion to danceviewtimes. Subscriptions are available here.
  11. I imagine you're right. Raven Wilkinson for AD '08!
  12. Well the AD has to choose, that's his or her job, and we all tend to love most and choose most often what we know best. Sometimes "prejudice" is just limited experience. In the interest of consciousness raising and equal opportunity in ballet, it might be best to avoid alienating people we don't know by condemning their taste as racist.
  13. Raven Wilkinson's strength of character and pride in her own identity is striking throughout the Ballet Review interview Bart mentions. I was especially moved by the moment of consciousness raising she relates in regards to auditioning for Eugene Loring for a ballet he was doing for Joffrey Ballet. Loring expected her to be familar with "modern movement," but, no, she told him, Then after waiting several weeks to hear if she'd been selected, she inquired of Joffrey himself, telling him she needed to know because she had an upcoming chance to dance in Europe. I'm both moved by Wilkinson's ordeal and touched by the well-meaning Joffrey's moment of revelation.
  14. Ilyin was listed as a corps member, and in a couple of performances was one of the Fairy Knights.
  15. For what it's worth, there is another Lynes studio shot, published in a NYCB program, where d'Amboise wears the translucent costume without a unitard.
  16. I assume that's the same 1954 performance available on the Vai DVD. The film there is so grainy that's it's a little hard to tell, but it looks like his uniform is too thick to be translucent. I certainly can't see nipples.
  17. My vote goes for a very dull 1993 ballet that was already revived in 1999, Peter Martins' collaboration with Wynton Marsalis, "Jazz (Six Syncopated Movements)." I wouldn't rush to see his "Reliquary" again either.
  18. I'd just like to add that as Disneyfied as ABT's production is, for me, the dancers transcended it Saturday afternoon. I was moved.
  19. Thanks for writing, tikititatata. That's not a wower of a ballet, of course, but it is one that many people find breathtakingly beautiful. You might be interested in what Tom Phillips has to say in Three to Treasure about the ballet and the performance you saw.
  20. They were wonderful Saturday afternoon, and I didn't know girls ever did pointe work so young.
  21. Yes, and she was a lovely, girlish Aurora, happy and a little shy at her party. To my mind the slight nervousness she displayed before her balances worked for her in that it seemed perfectly in character, and then made her joy once she'd gotten through them -- and done so very well -- quite moving. After that she was all beauty and confidence wrapped around thrilling technique, and her wedding celebration dives into the Prince's arms were swift and fearless. And of course she and Hallberg look so good together. The other special treat of an altogether wonderful afternoon was Part, who I thought looked lovelier than ever. She struggled in her Act III solo and finished off the music and there was a bobble or two elsewhere, but it almost didn't matter because otherwise she was perfectly warm and gracious and authoritative, and not, or so it looked to me, cautious. Just to see her stand with one foot back and wand held high and her back so beautifully arched . . . she would have saved the ballet for me if Wiles hadn't come through.
  22. hbl, thanks for the recommendation. You can find a thread devoted to Barbara Milberg Fisher's "In Balanchine's Company" here.
  23. I don't think Macauley sounds jaded in the least. What he sounds like is someone who passionately loves the art form and the company -- "I have loved and been awestruck by this company in the past and await its return with hope that is too strongly mixed with frustration" -- and wants to see it at its best. This is why expresses not boredom but disappointment with specific aspects of the production.
  24. Good point. From the flap jacket: "Sex, as much as dancing, was a driving force for Nureyev . . . we [] see Nureyev's notorious homosexual history unfold . . . "
  25. Bart, what kind of audience does Miami City Ballet get down there? I'm guessing you have a lot of retirees from out of state who've seen the classics done well and could tell the difference, but do you also have a lot of younger Floridians who maybe haven't seen those productions, and like the dancers have been trained on, so to speak, and have had their taste formed by, neo-classicism? But then the other thing that strikes me is that when dancers are asked about how they came to ballet, they often mention having seen the classics when they were young. I would think that a dancer who'd been entranced by Sleeping Beauty as a child would bring a lot of imagination to dancing it as an adult. Just speculatiing . . .
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