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

miliosr

Senior Member
  • Posts

    2,810
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by miliosr

  1. Josua Hoffalt posted this on his Instagram feed two days ago (translated from the original French):

    "Hello to all,
    I have had the chance to dance great classical repertoire roles and to work with great contemporary choreographers. Today I feel like passing on what I have been taught. I now propose private lessons in Paris and in the Parisian region for all levels, as well as the possibility of preparing for contests and auditions. For more information, please contact me via email.
    See you soon"

  2. From an interview with etoile Ghislaine Thesmar that appeared in the August 1979 issue of Dance Magazine:

    "As far as Violette [Verdy] is concerned, I can only say that she is a close friend and to talk about her situation is a very delicate matter. Suffice it to say that when she came to us, she did so with an open heart. She came with so much generosity and enthusiasm and she wanted the very best. But she was also vulnerable, because she came from America where things are far more direct and far clearer. Well, she came to a theater which, for better or for worse, is filled with an incredible amount of red tape. I mean, you must get absolutely everyone's approval and opinion before you can make a single decision. It's like a royal court - I would say a decadent royal court. So, Violette came into this and lost an enormous amount of time and energy just to get the smallest things done. She came into an atmosphere that can eat you up and destroy you,"

    "Violette wanted to please everyone and that, of course, is impossible - and she suffered. You see, she didn't play the game, and if you don't play the game, you're finished. It is very likely that Rosella Hightower will take over - I hope she will have the strength. The point is that at the Paris Opera we need somebody very, very strong. I think Peter Martins would make a very good director. [Note: My emphasis] In a sense it's not a question of knowledge or experience, but one of psychological character. You have to be a rock for a company like ours."

    "But to be honest about it, no matter who comes in, it really won't change a thing. Ours is a menage that goes on and on, and change is not one of things we are famous for. It's a matter of tradition."

  3. 12 minutes ago, nanushka said:

    This could be the start of an exciting (if at times bumpy) period for the company and its fans.

    I agree with the 'excitement' part. By the nature of its repertory, there isn't always room at the top for younger dancers. We saw that from, roughly, 1995-2010 when ABT's fabulous roster of male principals remained remarkably intact. Since ABT appears to be promoting solely from within these days (after all the flak they took for the 2010-15 guest star era), some the guys in the corps will be able to prove themselves and advance to soloist rank. We're about to find out how badly some of them want it, which will be exciting.

  4. 5 hours ago, FauxPas said:

    All of the principal promotions (and one soloist promotion) are richly deserved.

    ABT really needed to replenish its roster of male principals. With the departures (for various reasons) of Marcelo Gomes, Roberto Bolle and Alban Lendorf and the greatly reduced presences of David Hallberg and Danill Simkin, the company has been relying on Herman Cornejo, Cory Stearns and James Whiteside to carry the male side of the company, which was unsustainable. Unfortunately, the four promotions from the men's soloist ranks and the retirements of two other male soloists leave the soloist ranks in a highly depleted state. The upside is that this presents a lot of opportunity for some of the guys in the corps. Jonathan Klein was a lead in Ratmansky's Whipped Cream so he might be a prime candidate for advancement.

  5. 16 hours ago, silvermash said:

    POB announced 3 new programmes for this fall at The Palais Garnier

    Etoiles de l'Opéra
    from 05 to 29 October 2020
    Alastair Marriott, John Neumeier, Hans van Manen, William Forsythe, Martha Graham, Mikhail Fokine, Jerome Robbins
    with Mathieu Ganio, Laura Hecquet, Stéphane Bullion, Ludmila Pagliero, Hugo Marchand, Hannah O'Neill, Vincent Chaillet, Emilie Cozette, Sae Eun Park

    Rudolf Nureyev
    from 06 to 30 October 2020
    Nutcracker, Cindarella, Romeo and Juliet, Don Quixote, Swan Lake, Manfred, Sleeping Beauty
    with Dorothée Gilbert, Paul Marque, Alice Renavand, Florian Magnenet, Myriam Ould-Braham, Mathias Heymann, Valentine Colasante, Arthus Raveau, Francesco Mura, Amandine Albisson, Audric Bezard, Léonore Baulac,Germain Louvet

    Hugo Marchand has announced on his Instagram feed that he will me performing Hans van Manen's Trois Gnossiennes with Ludmila Pagliero as well as Jerome Robbins' A Suite of Dances.

    Germain Louvet has announced on his Instagram feed that he will be performing the Sleeping Beauty pas de deux with Leonore Baulac.

  6. I bought another stash of Dance Magazine back issues from e-Bay; this time from 1979. Here is another news item involving Violette Verdy from March 1979:

    "As announced by Rolf Liebermann and Violette Verdy, Jacqueline Rayet, who as danseuse etoile created many important roles, has been appointed to the new post of maitre de ballet at the Paris Opera, effective Jan. 1, 1979, through July 31, 1980. In this position she will be charged with taking a group of dancers selected from the corps to foster choreographic creation and to develop interest in the company in the suburbs of Paris and the French country."

    Curious that Liebermann and Verdy would pursue this initiative when they each had one foot out the door. I wonder how long the choreographic initiative lasted? (Benjamin Millepied tried this during his tenure and it lasted for one season.)

  7. I picked up a copy of Arthur Elgort's recently published photo book, Ballet. 

    There are some very beautiful photos contained within its pages but the view it gives of the ballet world is very particular. The book is heavy on portrait and rehearsal photos from the New York City Ballet's 1979-80 season as well as of Vaganova Academy students in more recent times. Some of the most memorable photos for me were of Mikhail Baryshnikov and James Cagney backstage together in 1979, an impossibly handsome Patrick Dupond of the Paris Opera Ballet, and New York City Ballet dancers at a public swimming pool in Saratoga in 1980.

    Warning: Some of the captions are not right. There are photos of Robert La Fosse from the early 80s which have him at the New York City Ballet and there's a photo of Julie Kent which also places her at City Ballet.

  8. 23 hours ago, pherank said:

    In Froustey's case, being held back for 8(?) years didn't make any real logical sense. But I wouldn't claim that it is the same experience for every dancer. I would just say that the POB promotion and role assignment process has real issues that should have been addressed years ago

    Froustey is a prime example of the promotional system not working to perfection. Not being a good "test taker" worked against her at the moment of truth. Brigitte Lefevre had the power in her hands to override the juries and promote Froustey to premier status. But Lefevre must have thought that such a move would have been a bridge too far relative to the similar move she had made with Mathieu Ganio.

    Ultimately, matters worked out for Froustey because she found the company that was ideal for her.

    20 hours ago, volcanohunter said:

    what Lefèvre did with Mathieu Ganio (who probably would have won promotion to premier danseur on his first attempt at the end of that year).

    This move did not go without comment either. Not long after Ganio was promoted in rapid succession to premier danseur and then etoile, Jean-Guillaume Bart gave an interview in which, without citing Ganio by name, he said that he thought the position of etoile was rather "too easily won" these days.

  9. On 8/22/2020 at 10:24 PM, pherank said:

    It does seem like there's a big difference between how the POB defines "Artistic Director", and how North American companies, for example, define the position. But that's not so surprising given the age and traditions of the POB.

    I would go even further and say that there's a fundamental mismatch between the cultures of the New York City Ballet and the Paris Opera Ballet as borne out by the unsuccessful directorships of those who have had a strong connection to the former:

    John Taras - (1969 - March 1970)

    Violette Verdy (1977 - January 1980)

    Benjamin Millepied (2014-2016)

    City Ballet-related directors arriving at the Paris Opera Ballet with grand plans to abolish the annual competitive exams, ignore the hierarchy and take control of the school invariably have their heads handed to them on a platter by the house.

     

     

  10. 11 hours ago, pherank said:

    As Mathilde Froustey made clear in a number of interviews, review by peers was often remarkably unfair. Each dancer's peers are their direct competitors - that seems to limit any encouraging and supportive behavior in the dancers at POB. Froustey mentioned friends and a boyfriend voting against her promotion. And then A.D. Lefèvre would go back to casting Froustey in soloist roles - Lefèvre was supportive, but had only a single vote in the committee.

     

    11 hours ago, volcanohunter said:

    And yet a certain number of slots are available each year, and except on rare occasions, they are filled. People do get promoted. 

    Froustey consistently fared badly in the competitions and she was right to leave, because she couldn't see herself advancing. But most choose to stay.

    And of course POB dancers can see what goes on at other companies. They don't exist in a hermetically sealed bubble. 

    volcanohunter is correct. Froustey herself has admitted that she had a tendency to flounder on the day of the competition. There was nothing sinister about the results. If anything, friends and a boyfriend voting against her promotion speaks to the validity of the process: people were able to put personal feelings aside and vote on the merits. (Admittedly, this probably didn't do wonders for Froustey's relationship with her boyfriend.)

    In addition, there are only ever a limited number of promotional slots available each year. Complicating this during Froustey's time at the company was the fact that 'Generation Nureyev' remained in place at the top for a very long time, which resulted in a 'Lost Generation' for whom there were limited promotional opportunities.

    Finally, the competition jury is split in two -- half from the dancers' side and half from the management side. Presumably, Brigitte Lefevre had other potential votes for Froustey but not enough to overcome Froustey's own onstage struggles at the competition.

  11. 2 hours ago, Jack Reed said:

    If I remember correctly, Verdy's tenure at POB was pretty brief, too, just three years, though it may not have been POB politics that lead her to leave.

    You've set up the chaser to this trip down memory lane . . . :)

    In the following month's issue of Dance Magazine (December 1978), this news item appeared:

    VIOLETTE VERDY WILL LEAVE PARIS OPERA IN JANUARY, 1980

    Although it had not been officially announced at presstime, Violette Verdy's contract as the director of the Paris Opera Ballet reportedly will not be renewed when it expires in January, 1980. Her rumored successor is Rosella Hightower, who currently heads her own school in Cannes, to be assisted by Victor Rona. A press conference making the official announcement of the change was expected for November in Paris.

    The staff of the Paris Opera is in a period of transition now, as director Rolf Leibermann will be replaced by Bernard LeFort in January 1980 when Leibermann's contract expires. This appointment was made approximately six months ago. LeFort, who is the director of the Aix-en-Provence festival, is already working at the Opera, scheduling performances for 1980.

    So, Verdy's time at the helm amounted to about 2 1/2 years and even that is being generous as the last year+ of her tenure was as a lame duck.

     

  12. And the last excerpted parts

    D.M.: Are you planning to eliminate the yearly exams for the corps de ballet?

    V.V.: Eventually, maybe, when we have made more changes in the house. Without them, at the moment, we wouldn't have the same competitive spirit and we wouldn't have any way to check on some of those dancers. Also, we will do what all big companies do, which is cut down on the number of categories. We would have corps de ballet, demi-soloist, soloist and principal dancers with everyone being rather interchangeable. [Note: And we all know how both of those objectives fared. Benjamin Millepied pushed for the same things -- eliminating the annual promotional exam, fostering more interchangeability -- 35 years later and failed.]

    D.M.: What are the projects for this year [1978-79 season]?

    V.V.: [Note: This was a long answer so I will only reproduce the final part.] Because of the reopening of the Opera Comique, which is a very good thing, I'm going to able to start a choreographer's workshop which will give me a chance to use my younger dancers who want to try some choreography in a place a little safer than the Opera.

     

  13. Even more Violette Verdy:

    D.M.: What were your goals when you came to Paris?

    V.V.: I have tried to put young dancers in many roles before their time and it has been more or less successful. I have unearthed some of the older dancers that lately had been rather stigmatized and condemned and have forced them to appear in certain parts, in which some have really shone. I have had to fight a great deal of negativity from some of the principal dancers who have a mythical idea of themselves and are not very flexible about serving the art. I have not forced them to dance anything they don't want to and some have gone into hibernation rather than dance. For instance, they feel the Balanchine repertory does not make them shine enough as stars; but more as dancers! They feel naked as dancers rather than stars.

     

  14. More Violette Verdy:

    D.M.: Is there a difference in the mentality:

    V.V.: Yes. The Opera dancers are very knowledgeable and very demanding and, in a sense, more sophisticated in knowing about the theater and about quality, but they do not have enough occasion to lose themselves, to abandon themselves in creations so that they become selfless. They develop much more in terms of heroes and princesses. They develop a mythical idea of themselves as stars in the traditional star system which makes them more selfish in their approach to their work. They see art as helping them to be stars.

    D.M.: What changes have you seen in one year?

    V.V.: Some of them figured that I was weak and too nice and that it would be easy to overcome me and make me do things or obtain favors. I had to overcome that too. it still is going on because they are not sure how firmly I can step in and make a decision and show authority. They have been testing me and even setting traps for me so they could denounce me as weak or unknowledgeable. They are a very tough company - almost like a gang. [Note: My emphasis]

  15. I recently bought a collection of Dance Magazine issues from 1978. The November 1978 issue contains an interview with Violette Verdy reflecting on her first season (1977-78) as Director of Dance at the Paris Opera.

    Verdy's comments are interesting because some of the issues she faced are the same ones Benjamin Millepied faced 35 years late:.

    D.M.: When you accepted this position, did you know the problems that were involved?

    V.V.: Yes, but there is nothing like the reality of a situation to make you see how much of a problem it is, and they did not give me the means to make changes. Without making a real change in the situation, for instance, in the union and the union rules, without throwing out the dancers who are not very good any longer or who have a bad attitude, I had to deal with what was there without being able to really accomplish a change. So, I had to find a means of making the change.

    D.M.: In what ways do you find that American companies differ from the Paris Opera Ballet?

    V.V.:  We have a very stratified company at the Paris Opera, which makes it difficult to use dancers from one category in another. Also there are too many dancers. It is very hard to preserve a unity of spirit because of that, so I have not been able to act as freely as if I had gone into an American company. They are not unified because they do not have one permanent choreographer. They are dependent on different styles and choreographers which, in a way, makes them versatile but does not predispose them mentally to a foreign director.

    I will post more highlights in successive days!

  16. I've been rereading Pauline Koner's autobiography, Solitary Song, this summer. The chapter on Doris Humphrey is unintentionally revealing regarding the disappearance of the Humphrey repertory. As I read along, I kept a tally of the dances Humphrey created from 1946-1958 and Koner mentions:

    Lament for Ignacio Sanchez Meijas (1946)

    Day on Earth (1947)

    Corybantic (1948)

    Invention (1949)

    Night Spell (1951)

    Fantasy and Fugue (1952)

    Ritmo Jondo (1953)

    Ruins and Visions (1953)

    Felipe el Loco (1954)

    Airs and Graces (1955)

    Theatre Piece No. 2 (1956)

    Dance Overture (1957)

    Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 (1958)

    The last time the Limon company performed any of these dances was in 2006, when Day on Earth and Lament for Ignacio Sanchez Meijas were revived. The latter was supposed to be revived in excerpt perform this summer but, other than that, the Humphrey repertory is non-existent at Limon.

  17. 19 hours ago, eduardo said:

    in the case of NYCB I think every year there are some new apprentices, and also every year some of them get contracts to join the company, right? Is there a similar number of corps de ballet members who leave the company every year? Do those dancers leave by their own will or in some cases the company just don’t renew their contracts and that’s it?

     

    5 hours ago, Helene said:

    When Peter Martins didn't renew a large number of contracts one season, reducing the size of the company, there was a NYT article about it.

    The circumstances involving the New Rock City Ballet and the "non-renewed" corps members in 2008 involved two unique circumstances: (1) a roster that had grown much too large and wasn't experiencing the yearly churn it needed to make room for new dancers fresh out of the school, and (2) the Great Recession of that year. While I don't think it was literally untrue that the company was experiencing financial difficulties in 2008. I believed then (as I do now) that the Great Recession gave Peter Martins cover to do something he wanted to do anyway: get rid of a number of corps members who weren't fitting into his plans or weren't working out generally.

×
×
  • Create New...