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

volcanohunter

Senior Member
  • Posts

    5,691
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by volcanohunter

  1. It's affordable to see the ballet, just not from the very best seats

    I also agree. Generally, when I tell friends how much it costs to see the ballet, opera or symphony, they're astonished at how little the cheap seats cost. These people often make less than average, but are nevertheless willing to pay through the nose to get great seats to rock concerts because they love the bands, simple as that. It probably wouldn't be a bad idea to let people know that tickets to the ballet can be bought cheap, but I'm afraid that the bigger obstacle would be persuading those same people that it's worth going to see in the first place. (I once nearly persuaded a friend to come to the ballet with me, except that she'd already spent a small fortune to go see Leonard Cohen that night.)

  2. I haven't seen the film, but I suspect that Fracci is on to something. I was struck by this sentence from the Variety review: "Brief glimpses of Beth on her way out remind how quickly young replacements are cast aside in the cruel world of ballet..."

    That's rich, coming from Hollywood, where the shelf life of many "It Girls" seems to be a year, perhaps two. What exactly leads the reviewer and, presumably, the screenwriter to think that the ballet world, particularly its New York incarnation, regards dancers as disposable? The careers of Irina Dvorovenko (professional dancer for 20 years), Paloma Herrera (19 years), Julie Kent (25 years), Diana Vishneva (15 years), Maria Kowroski (16 years), Jennie Somogyi (17 years), Wendy Whelan (26 years), perhaps Darci Kistler, who just retired after 30 years with NYCB?

  3. According to Ukrainian newspapers, Putrov will be dancing at the opera house is Kiev on September 7 in Vakhtang Vronsky's The Forest Song. In an interview, Putrov states that it has been his dream to dance the lead in the ballet, in part because he made his stage debut in the work 20 years ago.

  4. Could those familiar with it tell me more about this TV special, which is available on Amazon?

    Christmas means Santa in his sleigh...Scrooge visited by ghosts...and Clara's enchanted journey to the Nutcracker's kingdom. Tchaikovsky's beloved holiday ballet comes home with sumptuous sets and costumes and the dazzling dance artistry of the New York City Ballet's Melissa Hayden, Edward Villella and Patricia McBride. Eddie Albert narrates the story of young Clara, who receives a Nutcracker doll as a Christmas gift, then dreams a magical dream: the Nutcracker comes alive and whisks her through a realm of wonders to the palace of the Sugar Plum Fairy. Originally seen by U.S. TV audiences in 1965, this version of The Nutcracker is now ready to become a holiday tradition for you and your family.

    This product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.

    This disc is expected to play back in DVD Video "play only" devices, and may not play in other DVD devices, including recorders and PC drives.

    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0221445/

  5. The big companies also have choreologists on staff who notate choreography as it's created, usually in Benesh notation. It's not limited to ballet companies either. Large opera companies also have choreologists to record and recreate stagings. The Metropolitan Opera once had a web feature on its choreologist, but unfortunately, I can't find it.

    I remember seeing a couple of documentaries in which it's clear how important a choreologist can be. In one episode of Peter Schaufuss' Dancer series, there's footage of him working on the creation of Kenneth MacMillan's Orpheus with Jennifer Penney. The dancers are trying to negotiate MacMillan's very tricky lifts and having a great deal of difficulty in the process. MacMillan mutters something along the lines of, "I can see this is going to take hours," after which the camera switches to the choreologist sitting next to him, rubbing out all the unsuccessful lifts from her score with a very large eraser.

    The documentary about the creation of Robert Desrosiers' Blue Snake for the National Ballet of Canada captures an injury to one of the soloists during the dress rehearsal (a moment alluded to in Robert Altman's The Company). What follows is a last-minute rehearsal in which Desrosiers teaches the relevant solo to another dancer, with a lot of help from the choreologist.

    Unfortunately, fluency in Benesh notation is very limited. Any orchestral player can read a score, but there are few dancers who can read Benesh notation with the same competence.

  6. Hopefully some of the little folks, the small donors and even the ticket buyers and lovers of the arts who don't even get to sit in the house that is named for Koch (and the others) will demonstrate their dis - favor in this funding model and force these boards to be more sensitive to where the donation comes from and how the money was made and the agenda of the donor in out society.

    This is extremely naive. Over the past few weeks on this site there have been several news stories linked about the perilous state of dance in the United States. Dance companies are barely hanging on. Now is hardly the time to force these organizations to become picky about where their money comes from. You're free to try to convince them to alter their funding model, but I fear there will be no ballet companies left by the time you succeed.

    http://www.observer....is-modern-dance

    http://www.firstthin...0/07/last-rites

    Ballet needs all the friends it can get, and that includes friends of all political stripes. Administrations change frequently in Washington. You need your defenders in every camp.

    Besides how exactly is Koch's personal politics going to affect City Ballet's repertoire of plotless works? He's on ABT's Board of Trustees. Did he use his clout to veto the recent Alicia Alonso gala becase he objects to her politics? Evidently not. Did he stop ABT from bringing The Bright Stream to the Kennedy Center? No. Personally, I don't see too many reasons to be worried that these companies are about to be turned into propaganda machines for his or anyone else's agenda.

  7. Sorry, I got sidtracked by my little rant there. Apropos sandik's question, the Goh and Alberta Ballet Nutcrackers have co-existed in Vancouver in the past. For many years Nissinen's Nutcracker was presented as a "joint production" of Alberta Ballet and Ballet BC, though usually Ballet BC's participation was limited to 4-5 dancers, never in the leading roles, as I recall.

  8. Off topic, I know, but I hate Alberta Ballet's new Nutcracker. As soon as I saw it I wanted Mikko Nissinen's creaky old production back. I was expecting a lot since I'd always enjoyed Edmund Stripe's choreography, and he produced a charming Alice in Wonderland for the company, but his transposition to Imperial Russia doesn't work. He gets too many details about how the Orthodox celebrate Christmas all wrong (unless we're to understand that it's a German family living in St. Petersburg, in which case there's no point to changing the location), the story of how the nephew was turned into a nutcracker is told three times in pantomime, and killing the Rat King does not transform the Nutcracker back to his natural self, which sort of makes the battle anti-climactic in retrospect. [The transformation is the Snow Queen's job. Nothing to do with the Nutcracker's heroism or Klara's affection.] Zack Brown's set is mostly, well, brown in the first act and surprisingly spare in the second. [On second thought, it's more like Barbie Garden.] I never thought I'd see the day, but this production has actually cured me of my annual Nutcracker habit.

  9. For those without Sirius subscriptions, these are the operas the Met will stream free of charge on its web site via Real Player. The operas begin at 8:00 p.m. ET, unless noted otherwise, and casting is subject to lots of changes, of course.

    Monday, September 27, 6:45 p.m.

    Das Rheingold

    Levine; Harmer, Blythe, Bardon, R. Croft, Siegel, Terfel, Owens, Selig, König

    Tuesday, October 5

    Rigoletto

    Arrivabeni; Gagnidze, Schäfer, Meli, Silvestrelli, Surguladze

    Monday, October 11, 7:00 p.m.

    Boris Godunov

    Gergiev; Pape, Semenchuk, Antonenko, Balashov, Nikitin, Petrenko, Ognovenko

    Wednesday, October 20

    La Bohème

    Rizzi Brignoli; Kovalevska, Grigolo, Opolais, Capitanucci, Shenyang, Parks

    Friday, October 29

    Don Pasquale

    Levine; Del Carlo, Netrebko, Polenzani, Kwiecień

    Thursday, November 4

    Carmen

    Gardner; Garanča, Cabell, Jovanovich, J. Relyea

    Tuesday, November 9

    Così fan tutte

    Christie; Persson, Leonard, de Niese, Breslik, Gunn, Holzmair

    Friday, November 19

    Il trovatore

    M. Armiliato; M. Álvarez, Racette, Cornetti, Lučić, Tsymbalyuk

    Monday, November 22, 7:00 p.m.

    Don Carlo

    Nézet-Séguin; Alagna, Poplavskaya, Smirnova, Keenlyside, F. Furlanetto, Halfvarson

    Tuesday, November 30

    Carmen

    Gardner; Garanča, Cabell, Jovanovich, J. Relyea

    Monday, December 6

    La fanciulla del West

    Luisotti; Voigt, Giordano, Gallo

    Friday, December 17

    Pelléas et Mélisande

    Rattle; Kožená, Degout, Finley, W. White, Palmer

    Tuesday, December 21, 11:00 a.m.

    The Magic Flute

    E. Nielsen; Phillips, Miklósa, Thomas, Gunn, Robinson

    Friday, December 31, 7:00 p.m.

    La traviata

    Noseda; Poplavskaya, Polenzani, Dobber

    Monday, January 3

    La fanciulla del West

    Luisotti; Voigt, Giordani, Gallo

    Monday, January 10

    Tosca

    M. Armiliato; Radvanovsky, M. Álvarez, Struckmann

    Thursday, January 20

    Simon Boccanegra

    Levine; Hvorostovsky, Frittoli, Vargas, F. Furlanetto

    Wednesday, January 26

    La traviata

    Noseda; Poplavskaya, Meli, Dobber

    Wednesday, February 2

    Nixon in China

    Adams; Maddalena, Kim, Kelly, Brubaker, R. Braun, R.P. Fink

    Monday, February 7

    La Bohème

    Rizzi Brignoli, Kovalevska, Beczała, Phillips, Mattei, Shenyang, Scheunemann

    Wednesday, February 16

    Iphigénie en Tauride

    Summers; Graham, Domingo, Groves, Hawkins

    Thursday, February 24

    Lucia di Lammermoor

    Summers; Dessay, Calleja, Tézier, Youn

    Tuesday, March 1

    Armida

    Frizza; Fleming, Brownlee, Osborn, Siragusa, Banks, van Rensburg

    Friday, March 11

    Pique Dame

    Nelsons; Mattila, Zajick, Mumford, Galouzine, Markov, Mattei

    Wednesday, March 16

    Lucia di Lammermoor

    Summers; Dessay, Calleja, Tézier, Youn

    Thursday, March 24

    Le Comte Ory

    Benini; Florez, Damrau, DiDonato, Resmark, Degout, Pertusi

    Monday, March 28

    Capriccio

    Davis; Fleming, Connolly, Kaiser, R. Braun, Larsen, P. Rose

    Wednesday, April 6

    Wozzeck

    Levine; Goerne, Meier, Skelton, Siegel, W. Fink

    Thursday, April 14, 8:30 p.m.

    Le Comte Ory

    Benini; Florez, Damrau, DiDonato, Resmark, Degout, Pertusi

    Friday, April 22, 6:30 p.m.

    Die Walküre

    Levine; Voigt, Westbroek, Blythe, Kaufmann, Terfel, König

    Wednesday, April 27

    Il trovatore

    Levine; M. Álvarez, Radvanovsky, Zajick, Hvorostovsky, Kocán

    Wednesday, May 4

    Orfeo ed Euridice

    Walker; Royal, Daniels, Oropesa

    Tuesday, May 10

    Ariadne auf Naxos

    Luisi; Urmana, Kim, DiDonato, R.D. Smith, Allen

  10. Avery Fisher Hall was renamed after Fisher donated 10.5 million to the New York Philharmonic in 1973. According to the Deparment of Labor inflation calculator, that would be worth 51.56 million today. Going by that standard, renaming the Koch Theater for a 100 million donation does not seem unreasonable.

  11. The Penguin edition of Hoffmann's story starts like this:

    For the entire twenty-fourth of December, the children of Medical Officer Stahlbaum were not permitted to step inside the intermediary room, much less the magnificent showcase next door. Fritz and Marie sat huddled together in a corner of the back room. The deep evening dusk had set in, and the children felt quite eerie because, as was usual on this day, no light had been brought in. Fritz quite secretly whispered to his younger sister (she had just turned seven) that he had heard a rustling and murmuring and soft throbbing in the locked rooms since early that morning. Also, not long ago (Fritz went on), a short, dark man with a large casket under his arm had stolen across the vestibule. However, said Fritz, he knew quite well that it was none other than Godfather Drosselmeier.

    Once Dumas finishes his prologue, his text goes:

    Once, in the town of Nuremburg, there lived a highly esteemed presiding judge known as Presiding Judge Silberhaus, which means Silver House.

    The judge had a boy and a girl.

    The boy, nine years old, was called Fritz.

    The girl, seven and a half years old, was called Marie.

    They were two lovely children, but so different in face and character that no one would ever have believed them to be brother and sister.

    While in Hoffmann's story Stahlbaum is a doctor and Drosselmeier is a judge, who also happens to be an amateur clock maker, in Dumas' version Silberhaus is a judge and Drosselmayer is a doctor, who also makes mechanical toys.

  12. The piece will include "Bumble Bee" ( :blink: )

    James Kudelka's production for the National Ballet of Canada includes a female Bee soloist in the Waltz of the Flowers. I'm wary of Ratmansky borrowing ideas from Kudelka, though this would appear to be a male costume. Let's hope, at least, that Ratmansky comes up with better choreography.

  13. If they are truly interested in the arts, why do these people make it about themselves?

    For one thing, I think it can have beneficial consequences. Human pride being what it is, one-upsmanship can be exploited to positive ends. Zillionaire X donates a lot of money to get his or her name on a PBS program, a concert hall or an art gallery. Zillionaire Y wants to keep up and does the same or one better. If that's what it takes to persuade someone to donate their private collection of masterpieces to a museum where anyone can see them, I don't think it's a bad thing.

  14. Starting on Saturday, August 21, at 12:00 a.m. ET, Canada's Artv will be dedicating most of its weekend schedule to dance. I can't say that ballet is especially well represented, but there are some balletic connections, such as the Paris Opera Ballet in Pina Bausch's Orphée et Eurydice, Alberta Ballet's The Fiddle and the Drum, two programs about Rudolf Nureyev (L'attraction céleste and Moze Mossanen's more dubious telefilm) and both versions of Uwe Scholz's Le sacre du printemps. There are also several examples of modern choreographers playing with pointe shoes (La chambre blanche, Amélia, Body_remix).

    http://artv.ca/emiss...d-de-danse.html

  15. Those points sound pretty convincing to me, too, and they're the sort of thing that sound great when rallying the troops, but in the light of the fact that government spending on the arts is going to come under intense scrutiny every time the economy goes south, I do think it would be a good idea to be armed with better arguments.

    Certainly I think of the arts as an essential part of what makes life worth living, but given that hundreds of millions of Americans are managing without any opera, it's not a very good argument.

    The part about arts actually getting very little in the way of government money could be made more persuasively than it is. Years and years ago I remember that many people attending the Oscars wore lapel pins with stamps painted on them. They were intended to illustrate that the contribution of the average taxpayer to the NEA was equivalent to the price of a postage stamp. That struck me as a good illustration, but I doubt many people remembered it once the award ceremony began. I happen not to be much acquainted with Hollywood flicks, so I remembered the lapel pins and thought it was a pretty good argument. Too bad it was a one-off. But I'm also very wary of this sort of argument because it can end up sounding like: Don't worry. The government actually wastes very little money on the arts. It wastes far more money on other stuff. To which a person could easily responding that the government shouldn't be wasting money, period.

    I think that arts institutions could do worse than give concrete illustrations of how they contribute to the life of the community, economic and otherwise. I know it's difficult to measure, but my own experience with fundraising tells me that donors respond well to itemized lists of how money is spent and for what it's needed, as well as specific examples of how the organization benefits the community. But I acknowledge that I'm dealing with voluntary donors. In the case of state funding, this is more difficult to do precisely because people don't get much say in how the money is spent, and that's why the arguments have to be that much stronger.

    North Americans may be operating under a particular disadvantage because I don't think there is any particular sense of national pride associated with the arts, as I suspect there is in other countries. Years ago I was introduced to a retired Soviet general, and when he found out I was a dancer, he immediately said something to the effect of, ah, but our ballet is the best in the world. Can you imagine an American general saying something similar?

×
×
  • Create New...