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volcanohunter

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Posts posted by volcanohunter

  1. There are major changes coming to the roster as well. Veteran principals Marian Walter and Dinu Tamazlacaru are leaving the company (perhaps more like retiring), and Daniil Simkin, Iana Balova, Evelina Godunova, Aya Okumura and Yevgeniy Khissamutdinov are also leaving. There may be other leavers who aren't dancing principal roles in Onegin.

    https://www.staatsballett-berlin.de/en/blog/onegin-abschiedsvorstellungen/181

  2. Alessandra Ferri celebrates her 60th birthday today. This video of Christopher Wheeldon's This Bitter Earth was shot four years ago, but two months ago Ferri was dancing at Covent Garden in Wayne McGregor's Woolf Works.

     

     

  3. 1 hour ago, Phrenchphry11 said:

    I don't doubt many dancers are looking to make big moves in this "post-covid" world.

    Froustey will be 38 years of age in June, which is a rather late stage in a dancer's career to move to a new company. To that extent she's fortunate to have found a new artistic home. But the company in Bordeaux is about half the size of SFB and doesn't present nearly as many programs or performances. 

  4. Most native-born Canadians never swear an oath of loyalty to the monarch. Those acquiring Canadian citizenship have a choice between swearing or affirming loyalty to the monarch and his/her descendants. Occasionally young attorneys will object to having swear such an oath, arguing that they signed up to uphold Canadian laws, not the monarchy. 

    A poll released last week suggests that 60% of Canadians are opposed to recognizing Charles as King of Canada (they like Camilla even less), most don't want to see him on their coins and $20 bills, and 52% think that Canada shouldn't continue as a constitutional monarchy, which is interesting given that republican sentiment has never been especially strong in Canada.

  5. It occurred to me that I ought to have posted those links.

    ROH Stream: https://www.roh.org.uk/stream/

    Paris Opera Play: https://play.operadeparis.fr/en

    La Scala TV: https://lascala.tv/en/

    Although I am not a frequent Met Live in HD viewer, the screenings I attended within the last year had tiny audiences compared to what they were a decade ago. Now they're like the ballet-in-cinema audiences of yore. :( 

  6. On 4/29/2023 at 11:38 AM, sandik said:

    At a recent Q&A, Peter Boal at Pacific Northwest Ballet said that while they originally offered streaming in order to keep contact with their local audiences, they realized later how much broader that digital audience would become -- right now, they have digital subscribers in all 50 states, and in multiple other countries.  I think that's a really good thing for the company, and in the long run, a really good thing for the art form.

    I hope Pacific Northwest Ballet sticks with streamed seasons, because as far as I can tell, it and Australian Ballet are among the few companies still offering PPV streams. La Scala periodically offers PPV streams, but ballets are few and far between. The Paris Opera offers live PPVs, but its archive is available only by subscription.

    The Paris Opera and the Royal Opera House have created their own streaming sites, but the libraries aren't deep enough to warrant a monthly subscription. ROH Stream includes "over 45" opera and ballet streams, Paris Opera Play has a catalogue of 24 ballets, 28 operas and 27 concerts (but the concert repertoire in particular is readily available in HD on YouTube by other orchestras). The POP subscription includes the livestreams. If they were to post their entire archive, I'd be there in a second.

    I fault myself for not always being aware of the digital seasons that were being offered a couple of years ago, because it was a question of using it or losing it.

  7. 48 minutes ago, mille-feuille said:

    I was annoyed to hear the audience's loud "aww :(" when they announced that Nadon would replace Fairchild.

    That's a pity. In some countries when a last-minute casting change is announced, the audience applauds, regardless of whether it's happy about the change or not.

  8. How did it feel when you first saw videos of “The Pharaoh’s Daughter,” which you and your wife, Tatiana, had worked on for two years?

    It was really painful. It was a longtime dream of mine to do it. It was a lot of preparatory work.

    But it’s nothing compared to the war. No one dies. It’s just a ballet. They take a ballet, OK, they take a ballet. They don’t write my name on the production, well, that’s bad. It’s wrong on so many levels. But it’s nothing compared to the real tragedy that is going on every single day.

    How can you be sure that the Mariinsky used your choreography?

    The work that I did was very specific. It was a reconstruction from the notations. Its steps, combinations of steps, arm movements, gestures and how the steps are connected to the music. There are parts that are now very different. But they just built it on top of the work that I had done.

    In the video, I saw moments that couldn’t have been found anywhere else. The dancers worked on these steps for months. It’s in their bodies.

    [...]

    Have you had any communication with the Bolshoi or the Mariinsky since you left Russia?

    Not long ago, the Mariinsky sent a letter from one of the clerks in a production office. They said that they spent money on us, on me and my wife living there, and that we would need to pay back that money — the hotel, the overseas flights. Of course, they perform ballets of mine without my name, and they don’t pay any royalties. So that was an interesting letter.

    Did you respond?

    I didn’t. I don’t know what to say.

    Everything used to be according to contract, but it was so easy for them to break a contract, to deprive an artist of intellectual property.

  9.  

    Do you envision a day when you’ll work again in Russia?

    I’ve heard that when Nabokov was invited to Germany after World War II, he said, “I won’t go because I don’t want to accidentally shake hands with a murderer.” That resonated.

    What is your sense of the Russian cultural scene now?

    It’s getting worse and worse in Russia day by day. In cultural life, they try to pretend that everything is fine, but the repertory shrinks, the best creators leave. Some have chosen to stay. But if you work for a state-supported, important Russian cultural institution, it means that you support Putin and his war, and you’re a tool of propaganda.

    Some Russian artists say they have no choice but to work for institutions like the Mariinsky and the Bolshoi. Even if they oppose the war, they say, they need the jobs.

    If you live in Russia, I understand that. But if you come from the West, that’s unacceptable — as unacceptable as for the West to receive people who support Putin. And there are many great amazing artists who still find a way to tour and perform.

  10. Interesting that there is a revival of The Dante Project rather than a run of McGregor's MADDADDAM, which premiered in Toronto in last November as a co-production. I don't think it's McGregor's best work, but without it the ballet season is short on premieres. There is a festival of new works, including another co-production with the National Ballet of Canada, choreographed by Robert Binet, but as yet the details are sparse.

    Interesting also that the "short Ashton works" will be performed by Sarasota Ballet rather than the home team.

  11. On 2/6/2023 at 1:33 PM, Helene said:

    There are companies that do archive their casts and/or programs online, and they can be printed out/saved, even with a screenshot, but all three I know about are opera companies

    Out of curiosity, I looked at a program from about a year ago from the National Ballet of Canada. The printed version had a general list of which dancers were cast in which roles, but specific casting for each performance was accessible by a QR code. That link is now dead. :(

  12. So Bernstein and Sondheim fit into this on the grounds that...West Side Story is based on a Shakespeare play? Because no British composer ever set a Shakespeare text to music? And, say, Vaughan Williams would be elitist? :dry:

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