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volcanohunter

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Everything posted by volcanohunter

  1. Here's a recent performance of Merce Cunningham's Roaratorio performed by his company at the Montpellier Dance Festival. http://liveweb.arte.tv/fr/video/Roaratorio_de_Merce_Cunningham_au_festival_Montpellier_Danse/
  2. Arte will be streaming Stravinsky's Le Rossignol, Renard and Petites Pieces from Aix-en-Provence on Wednesday, July 7, at 19:55 local time (1:55 p.m. ET). The Nightingale: Olga Peretyatko The Cook: Elena Semenova Death: Svetlana Shilova The Fisherman: Edgaras Montvidas The Emperor of China: Ilya Bannik Chamberlain: Nabil Suliman The Bonze: Yuri Vorobiev Renard cast: Marat Gali, Edgaras Montvidas, Nabil Suliman, Ilya Bannik Trois pièces pour clarinette seule: Jean-Michel Bertelli Pribaoutki: Svetlana Shilova Berceuses du chat: Svetlana Shilova Deux poèmes de Constantin Balmont: Elena Semenova The staging is by Robert Lepage, and the conductor is Kazushi Ono. http://liveweb.arte.tv/fr/video/Le_Rossignol_et_autres_fables_au_Festival_d_Aix-en-Provence
  3. Everyone lives in the big house. The staging seems to be concerned primarily with turning the piece into a family soap opera. Obviously the idea of Don Giovanni trying to seduce his wife's niece is pretty creepy.
  4. The opera's just started. I'm often surpised by the revisionist takes directors take with operas, particularly when you'd think the libretto wouldn't allow it. From what I gather, in this production the Commendatore is the father of Donna Anna and Don Ottavio is her fiancé. So far so good. But Donna Anna is a middle-aged woman and Zerlina is her daughter; Masetto is still her fiancé. Donna Elvira is Donna Anna's cousin, and she's married to... Don Giovanni.
  5. http://www.roh.org.uk/uploadedFiles/Press_and_Media/Press_Releases/IvanPutrovtoleaveTRB.pdf
  6. Here are a couple of TV reports about the production. I'm only slightly familiar with the work of director Dmitri Tcherniakov, namely the Bolshoi production of Evgeniy Onegin that Galina Vishnevskaya hated so much, but from what little I've seen, he sure seems to have a thing for setting operas in wood-paneled interiors. http://videos.tf1.fr/jt-20h/don-giovanni-revisite-a-aix-en-provence-5904578.html http://culturebox.france3.fr/#/opera/25033/le-don-giovanni-de-tcherniakov-ouvre-aix-en-provence http://culturebox.france3.fr/#/opera/24907/aix-en-provence-s_ouvre-sur-don-giovanni
  7. If anyone is flying via Air Canada in the near future, the film is available on the airline's entertainment system. It's located in the 'Franco-Cinema' folder in the movie section. I just watched it again returning home from New York.
  8. As of now, Dorothée Gilbert has replaced Delphine Moussin as the ballerina. http://www.operadeparis.fr/cns11/live/onp/actualites/index.php?lang=en#news2345 According to the distributor, the Lady of the Camellias and Swan Lake screenings will of the existing performances already available on DVD. The other ballets will be beamed live. http://www.cielecran.com/assets/files/font..._BALLET_BAT.pdf There's also something of a trailer about the series, along with a list of participating French cinemas and stuff available for download at the bottom of the page linked below. http://www.cielecran.com/index.php?id=16&fiche=96
  9. Arte Live Web will stream Mozart's Don Giovanni live from the Aix-en-Provence Festival on Monday, July 5, at 21.25 local time, or 3:25 p.m. ET. Don Gionanni: Bo Skovhus Leporello: Kyle Ketelsen Donna Anna: Marlis Petersen Donna Elvira: Kristine Opolais Zerlina: Kerstin Avemo Don Ottavio: Colin Balzer Masetto: David Bizic Commendatore: Anatoli Kotscherga Conductor: Louis Langrée http://liveweb.arte.tv/fr/video/Don_Giovan...ix-en-Provence/ If you're unable to watch it live, Arte streams are usually available on demand within 24 hours of being broadcast.
  10. In anticipation of tomorrow's broadcast, PBS has posted some excerpts from the film. Paquita rehearsal Genus rehearsal Lefèvre/Gat meeting
  11. Here are two video reports about the POB's new production of Jiří Kylián's Kaguyahime. http://culturebox.france3.fr/#/danse/24256...e-de-kaguyahime http://videos.tf1.fr/jt-we/ballet-le-tcheq...is-5880445.html
  12. For Francophones, here's an interview with Bullion from the French morning news (interrupted pointlessly with info about new CD releases). http://videos.tf1.fr/infos/2010/une-etoile...ur-5878688.html
  13. Armand is definitely reading Marguerite's diary at the end. http://www.hamburgballett.de/e/rep/kameliendame.htm
  14. I can understand your doubts, smokeyjoe. Two years ago Kirk Peterson was nominated for his ballet Othello. I can't imagine that any of the jury members actually traveled to Calgary or Edmonton to see it, but I did have the misfortune of sitting through it, and the ballet was perfectly dreadful, a complete waste of time and space. I can't see Alberta Ballet reviving it, no matter how much was spent on the production. Of course the ballet didn't win the prize, but I was absolutely astonished that it was nominated in the first place, and I have to admit that its inclusion pretty much exploded any idea I may have had about this prize being some sort of ballet "Oscar."
  15. B.C's Knowledge Network will air three ballet-related programs on Wednesday, June 9, starting at 9:00 p.m. PT. 9:00 p.m. - Royal Winnipeg Ballet: 40 Years of One-Night Stands is a documentary about the early years of the company. 10:00 p.m. - Flamenco at 5:15 is a documentary about flamenco classes taken by senior students of the National Ballet School of Canada. I haven't seen this film in years, but as I recall the students included future National Ballet principals Martine Lamy, Owen Montague and Rex Harrington. 10:30 p.m. - A Delicate Battle is the filmed version of Matjash Mrozewski's ballet featuring the National Ballet of Canada. The programs will repeat starting at 1:00 a.m. PT. Knowledge Network is available outside British Columbia on satellite service from Bell (ch. 268) and Shaw Direct (ch. 354).
  16. Now I'm officially envious. Over the next year six performances by the Paris Opera Ballet will be beamed to more than 100 cinemas in France and Europe. La Petite Danseuse de Degas (Patrice Bart/Denis Levaillant) - 8 July 2010 La Dame aux camélias (John Neumeier/Frédéric Chopin) - 16 September 2010 Swan Lake (Rudolf Nureyev/P.I. Tchaikovsky) - 2 December 2010 Caligula (Nicolas Le Riche/Antonio Vivaldi) - 8 February 2011 Coppélia (Patrice Bart/Léo Delibes) - 28 March 2011 Les Enfants du Paradis (José Martinez/Marc-Olivier Dupin) - 9 July 2011 Presumably all of them, except Lady of the Camellias, which was performed earlier this seaon, will be beamed live. I do wish they would take pity on those of us living on the other side of the Atlantic! http://www.operadeparis.fr/cns11/live/onp/...dex.php?lang=en
  17. I'm always grateful to quick-thinking people who capture these moments on their cell phones and the like. Personally, I find this nomination particularly inspiring. I may be wrong, of course, but I'm guessing that Bullion is the first cancer survivor to become an étoile. http://www.culturekiosque.com/dance/inter/...Bullion367.html
  18. A bit but I came across a listing for Graeme Murphy's Swan Lake on British Amazon today. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Tchaikovsky-Graeme.../dp/B003O2AHSG/
  19. Here's the info we've been looking for. It's the recent TV biopic, plus Fonteyn dancing the second act of Swan Lake, The Firebird and Ondine. If I'm not mistaken this Royal Ballet film hasn't been available on DVD in the U.S until now. http://www.bfsent.com/item_detail.asp?number=31000
  20. I have the first pressing of the DVD released by EMI Classics. Assuming you have the newer edition, it would seem that both version have the same options. Does your DVD also include Neumeier's English and German introductions? The background on how the ballet came to be is very interesting and basically tells you everything you need to know about the production. If anyone's unfamiliar with the staging I'd suggest watching it first.
  21. Where Peter Wright's Nutcracker is concerned, he has said that "there's very little of the original Nutcracker remaining" in his production, only 10 mintues or so of the original choreography. http://www.ballet.co.uk/dcforum/happening/7094.html#49
  22. For Francophones, here is a nine-minute television interview with Agnès Letestu. There are also a number of clips from the POB's current run of La Bayadère which obviously don't require any knowledge of French. http://videos.tf1.fr/infos/2010/agnes-lete...ev-5859992.html
  23. The infrequently used Sapphire variation from Sleeping Beauty is written in 5/4 time. Nureyev changed the gemstone to gold and turned it into a male role, but he used the music.
  24. The short answer is, yes. So I'll admit to jumping on planes to New York also. Yup. Consider what I have to look forward to season: a company of 30 dancers, not remotely competent in the Petipa style, attempting Sleeping Beauty, a lousy production of The Nutcracker and a trashy pop extravaganza for the third year in a row. If not for a program that includes Balanchine's Serenade and a couple of touring (modern) companies, it wouldn't even be worth the effort.
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