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Amy Reusch

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Posts posted by Amy Reusch

  1. I think I must clarify "brand new choreography" not to mean 'flashy trendy brand new' but rather choreography created on them -- not new choreography acquired by their company but created on other dancers. Dancing in someone else's footsteps isn't quite the same creative process as originating a role oneself.

    I hope I'm now sufficently reprimanded for saying "brand new" instead of "original".

  2. Given that the dancers mentioned come from a classical and neo-classical background, it would seem that they wish to develop other aspects of dance which their current casting does not enable them to explore as widely as they would wish. Why else would they take leave from their safe haven? Are we moving into an era of dancer power as opposed to company power?

    It's very exciting for any dancer to have a talented choreographer create choreography on them. That doesn't necessarily mean the stars are wishing for different movement vocabulary, like say something from the modern dance world. Is that what you meant?

    I wonder how often a year the typical principal gets brand new choreography to perform.

  3. I've never had it act up with Ballet Talk's board software before, so I have a pretty strong feeling it's a bug with the new Internet Explorer version. As you saw, I can get it to work by circling around, but it no longer works as it was intended to. I'll have to wait until someone else with the IE software tries it and has a problem, I guess. However, if it really is the IE software, invisionzone is going to need to do something about it, considering how widely Microsoft's browser is used (by default more than choice, I imagine).

  4. Okay... this is a test. I tried to put a link to another website in another post, and the buttons didn't behave normally. Right, so, what to link to? Hmmm...

    The entry on Ballet at Wikipedia

    I typed the above text, highlighted it and hit the link button expecting a little window to pop up in which I would fill the URL (as I always have done it here in the past). BUT instead, I get a little dialog box (? is that what it's called even if it's a monolog?) with a warning exclamation point in a yellow triangle saying "You Must

    Enter an URL" along with a little "ok" button. Well... okay... that was what I was trying to do.

    I wonder if it has something to do with my recently upgrading to Internet Explorer version - oh heck, I have no idea where - oh there it is now - Internet Explorer version 7. I think I may just hate upgrades.

    Anyone else having any difficulties?

    I find that if I just put the URL in the text like so: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballet it will show up as a link when I submit the post.... and then when I go in to re-edit it, I can fool around with the title (or so I think, here goes a try).

    For instance here: The entry on Ballet at Wikipedia

    But that's really more hassle than most of us would bother with.

  5. Well to me, it's more of interest because of the situation of the institution rather than because of any person involved. I believe there are some other dance institutions facing the same transition problem... At NYCB, there's a serious repertory legacy for both Balanchine and Robbins. Even with Mr. Martin's successes, he hasn't been in the same position as Balanchine or Robbins. (No one was worrying whether Balanchine was maintaining his predecessor's legacy.) The company was never intended to become a museum, but no one wants to lose or dull the jewels in it's repertory. The question is, how can NYCB acquire and support a new choreographic genius to Balanchine's caliber and not worry about how well it's curating the older repertoire. It would be very rare to find one person with both skills highly developed. Mendelssohn was one of those rare types, reviving the music of Bach & Schubert as well as being a genius in his own right. (I can't think of others, but there must be at least one). I rather like the idea of having separate people for the two streams rather than trying to find one person who can look both backward and forward... I just have trouble with the model in terms of the assistant directors... a triumvirate instead? Wouldn't it just be in a state of constant rivalry, weak compared to the board?

    [my apologies for the redundancy with the above posts... I was interrupted in the middle of composition and when I returned to hit the "post" button, I discovered others had already addressed the same issue]

  6. Among the dancers tentatively scheduled to participate in his first season are Wendy Whelan, Sébastien Marcovici, Maria Kowroski, Sofiane Sylve and Edwaard Liang from City Ballet, and Darcey Bussell, Alina Cojocaru and Johan Kobborg from the Royal Ballet, where Mr. Wheeldon has danced and choreographed.

    “None of these dancers reflect the dancers that are necessarily going to be in the company when it’s formed in a more concrete way,” he said.

    So he's premiering at Vail with a company of superstars whose commitments must preclude them becoming fulltime company members for him... which is why assumedly they don't reflect the dancers he'll be forming the company out of... But with dancers of that calliber lining up to tempt him, will he find a muse among his own dancers? And if not, if guest superstars are frequently to be featured, seems he might as well have stayed a resident choreographer? I'm still trying to figure out the dynamics of this one.

  7. It seems an excellent idea... and isn't an organization as big as NYCB capable of it?

    But what then would be the General Artistic Director's responsibility? Programming the season? Choosing & promoting the dancers? Would there be jostling between the assistant directors?

    But it does seem like good management.... rather than choosing someone well qualified in one of those fields and thereby perforce neglecting the others

    Would this General Artistic Director function rather like Roy Kaiser at the Pennsylvania Ballet? I don't believe he is choreographing or dedicated to upholding a particular choreographer's repertory.

    But what about the acquisition of new works? I can understand wanting that director on equal footing with the other two, but it seems like this would be usurping the general artistic director.

  8. Moses Supposes Morphoses is Wrong?

    It's great he's getting his own company together. It must help the choreographer's muse to have his own company. (I imagine he'll still be available for commissions from the larger institutional companies). I wish him all luck in keeping his time mostly free from the business side of the venture... hopefully Lourdes Lopez will manage to make that work for him. I have often heard good things about her. Just possibly Christopher Wheeldon has lucked out.

  9. Thanks Mel, his name had escaped me.

    Very nice line on Semyonov in the photo.

    I find it interesting that Nijinsky danced a Satyr before Apres Midi d'un Faun.

    I was wondering too if, feminism or no, the imagery of the hounds & Acteon might not be just a little too threatening to some power figure out there. (I have no idea of who the politcal players of the time were, or if any of them were involved with female dancers).

    The part of Silenus sounds like a plum for a variety of casting possibilities, Mel.

  10. It does seem that a dancer playing Endymion who was perhaps most famous for his sleeping, would dance decorously....

    Thanks rg.

    I do enjoy the pas de deux nonsensical though it may be.

    Rats... now I'm picturing Endymion sleeping somewhere onstage, hopefully not being trampled by barrel turning satyr...

  11. I believe this pas de deux has been discussed here before but I'm struggling with the search engine. Lots of interesting photos from rg but I can't find a discussion of the ballet.

    I'm very confused. Didn't Diana turn Acteon into a stag and set his own hounds on him when he discovered her bathing with her nymphs? I can't follow how this relationship ended up as a spectacular pas de deux... perhaps I can see Acteon's gravity defying leaps evoking a stag, but not his partnering of Diana...

    I realize a grand pas de deux is not expected to tell a story, but I'm still having trouble understanding them cast "as a couple".

    Could someone explain? My apologies if the question is childish.

  12. Got to love the internet... FromRandy Kennedy's "Tales from the Underground"

    But several months ago, a friend of mine swore that he heard his subway train singing an actual song-or at least the first three notes from one. Specifically, he said, he was almost sure that the notes were from "Somewhere," a song in the famous musical West Side Story.

    The first lines of the song are:

    There's a place for us,

    Somewhere a place for us.

    Peace and quiet and open air

    Wait for us

    Somewhere.

    If my friend, Roy, hadn't been a clinical psychologist, I might have questioned his sanity. He was questioning it a bit himself, wondering if he was imagining things the way psychotic people do. "Am I getting the secret message?" he asked himself.

    But then I heard from other people who also had heard the notes being played by a generation of brand-new trains that had just begun to run in the subway. As the trains pulled out of the stations, they made an ethereal sound, sort of like the sound made by rubbing your finger on the rim of a crystal glass. First there was a low note, followed by a very high note and then a slightly lower note.

    One day, finally, I heard these notes myself, and I agreed. They were definitely the first three notes from "Somewhere":

    There's a place . . .

    Figuring out why subway trains were playing the beginning of a Leonard Bernstein tune wasn't easy. My friend Roy liked to think that maybe a mischievous and inventive train builder somewhere had programmed in the musical notes as a joke. But, alas, in the end the explanation turned out to be less funny and a lot more technical. Officials from the Canadian company that built the trains, Bombardier, put an end to the mystery once and for all.

    The new trains are equipped with devices called "power choppers" that release, at three short intervals, the 750 volts needed to make the trains move forward. It is these devices, in other words, that give the new trains their musical qualities.

  13. Okay... I was in NYC over the holiday weekend... and down in the subway I kept hearing the first three notes of "Somewhere there's a place for us" from West Side Story... I would hear it and just as I was beginning to wonder if it where some sort of arts installation in the subways, the cars would careen at a different speed and the melody would be broken... Have I lost it? Or has anyone else heard this? And has it been there since the beginning and Bernstein heard it as well?

    Curious & perhaps demented back in Connecticut,

    Amy

  14. I think Balanchine, and later the Balanchine Trust, was very generous about allowing companies to perform his work... and it pays off... look how many companies perform it and how healthy his legacy is as a result. Tharp was at one time very very expensive (perhaps she still is?) and outside of ABT & Hubbard Street, few did her work...but now suddenly it seems everyone is doing it... Did I read somewhere that her son is working to seed her work in more companies? Baryshnikov merited high respect when his project for NIPAD (National Iniative to Preserve American Dance) was to perform the Judson work around the country in the theory that if one really wants to preserve an oeuvre, the best way is to perform it and keep it live in the dance world's consciousness.

    I do wish Petit would foster more performances of his work or that the French government would underwrite some of the costs for international companies to acquire it.

    I don't hold a few bombs against him... as long as he's made some gems as well.

  15. I'm just wondering... There is so little (is there any?) Roland Petit in American ballet companies' repetoire. Anyone know why not? A decade or so ago, Pennsylvania Ballet was interested in obtaining some of his work, but apparently their interest came to naught. Do many companies outside of his own perform his work? I recently saw a video of Baryshnikov in Petit's Carmen and would like to see more... Am I allowed to ask this question, or is it too much a matter for conjecture?

    Roland Petit entry in Wikipedia

    Estelle Souche's page on Roland Petit mentions that he has left (retired?) direction of Ballet National de Marseille.... and notes several of his ballets in the Paris Opera repetoire.

    ABT has notes on Roland Petit in their website, but do they currently have any rights to perform his work?

    It seems he should be enjoying his golden years of celebrity right now... with lots of companies doing his work. What's up?

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