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volcanohunter

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Everything posted by volcanohunter

  1. The Bravo site describes the film this way. http://www.bravo.ca/SCHEDULE/Default.aspx?date=12-1-2009
  2. The CBC will re-air its "Life and Times" episode about Evelyn Hart on Monday, November 16. The program airs on CBC stations at 1:00 p.m. local time. http://www.cbc.ca/li...times/hart.html
  3. Giselle is now listed on the Kultur web site. It will be released on DVD and Blu-Ray on January 26, 2010 (surely not 2009, as stated on the site). http://estore.websitepros.com/1652646/-str...r%2C/Detail.bok http://estore.websitepros.com/1652646/-str...r%2C/Detail.bok Edited to add: Amazon.com is taking pre-orders.
  4. I wonder whether anyone is familiar with live recordings of Maya Plisetskaya's The Seagull. On November 10 VAI is scheduled to release it on DVD, and Arthaus Musik is set to release its own DVD a week later. Supposedly the VAI version was filmed in 1982, while the Arthaus version was filmed in 1980. However, since both performances star Plisetskaya and Alexander Bogatyrev, and both were conducted by Alexander Lazarev, I'm inclined to think it's actually the same performance. I've known Arthaus Musik to be a little sloppy with its jackets, booklets and sometimes even its subtitles, though I haven't had reason to complain about their video quality. Any clues? I'm actually surpised that Amazon.com has the Arthaus version listed. Presumably VAI would have secured the North American rights to the video rather than compete directly against a less expensive rival. http://www.vaimusic.com/VIDEO/DVD_4497_Seagull.htm http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/images/B0...8418&sr=1-1
  5. Artv will air Uwe Scholz's two versions of Le Sacre du printemps as performed by the Leipzig Ballet: the creepy solo set to the two-piano version of the score and the ensemble version to the orchestral score. Monday, November 16 at 9:00 p.m. ET Tuesday, November 17 at 2:00 p.m. ET Friday, November 20 at 9:00 a.m. ET Sunday, November 22 at 8:00 a.m. ET http://artv.ca/emissions/grands-spectacles.html http://www.medici-dvd.com/artikel/dvd/?id=...pher_uwe_scholz
  6. According to Amazon, the Royal Ballet's Manon, filmed a year ago, will be released on DVD on November 17. Manon: Tamara Rojo Des Grieux: Carlos Acosta Lescaut: José Martín Lescaut’s Mistress: Laura Morera Monsieur G.M.: Christopher Saunders I couldn't find a Blu-Ray listing, but perhaps someone else will have better luck.
  7. Actually, I would be grateful for the reviews of our French posters as well. Quite recently I had cancelled Artv because it hadn't shown anything of interest to me in what seemed like an age. Now I'm debating whether to reconfigure my TV package again in order to watch the program.
  8. Bravo will replay the program this Monday, October 19, at 7:00 p.m. ET/4:00 p.m. PT.
  9. For Francophone Canadians out there, Artv will be airing Sonia Paramo's film Noureev: L'attraction céleste this week. Sunday, October 18 at 7:00 p.m. ET Tuesday, October 20 at 8:00 a.m. ET Wednesday, October 21 at 12:00 a.m. ET Friday, October 23 at 7:00 a.m. ET Saturday, October 24 at 7:00 a.m. ET http://artv.ca/emissions/portraits.html Here is a blurb in English about the film: http://www.fipa.tm.fr/en/programmes/2009/mus_18796.htm
  10. There's no word yet on when this DVD will be available in North America, but here is a link to a web site dedicated to Sylvie Guillem: On the Edge. I'm posting it on the board because the track list includes an unidentified 10-minute excerpt from Swan Lake, perhaps the White Swan adagio. http://www2.deutschegrammophon.com/special/?ID=sylvieguillem
  11. I hadn't heard that but it would certainly be nice if that was the case. A problem though is that none of these theatrical properties last forever. They are subject to hard use being trucked in and out of the theater. And all kinds of things seem to happen in the warehouses. As I had mentioned, the Met revived Adriana Lecouvrer last season but when they took the sets out of storage some of them were deteriorated beyond the point of refurbishing/repainting. They usesd the ones that were able to be salvaged and used projections for the rest. Still, it would be great if they still had the Chagall. It's really something a bit beyond a typical group of theatrical sets. When I went to the movies to see the Liceu's Aida, the production's big selling point was the restoration of Mestres Cabanes' trompe-l'oeil paper (!) sets, originally painted in 1945. I have to say that the sets were pretty astonishing, very beautiful and looked terrific on a big screen in HD. That Aida gave me hope that the Chagall Flute could be revived in similar fashion. http://www.opusarte.com/productGallery_ima...92407/aida2.jpg http://www.musicweb-international.com/sand.../aida2_1024.jpg http://www.musicweb-international.com/sand.../aida1_1024.jpg
  12. Oh, certainly. This continues into act 2 prior to Othello's arrival, where it's pretty obvious that he would never engage in the sort of witty banter that goes on between Desdemona and Iago. There are lots subtleties lost in the opera. I'm sorry to lose Emilia's cynicism, too, but these elements aren't terribly operatic, so Boito was completely right to drop them and pare the story down to its violent emotions. These, I think, register more powerfully in the opera than they do in the play. Not to mention the fact that "Ah, sangue, sangue, sangue!" sounds so much better than "O, blood, blood, blood!", especially with cymbals crashing in the background.
  13. Venus, no? I agree that it's a brilliant condensation. Makes me wonder why Shakespeare bothered with an entire act. Opening with the storm is so much more dramatic.
  14. Wouldn't this just mean that the conductor has the score memorized? It's not at all unusual in my experience.
  15. A number of years ago when I went to see the film Le roi danse, about Louis XIV, Lully and Molière, I sat in my seat dreading the arrival of this moment. Fortunately, director Gérard Corbiau decided to get it over with right at the beginning and turn the rest of the film into a flashback.
  16. I'm sorry to say that this kind of thing sometimes happens with VAI releases and the Hardy Classic DVDs they distribute. The good news is that the DVD is still listed on the VAI site and can be purchased there, albeit for a higher price. I wouldn't be at all suprised if the DVD reappeared on Amazon under a different product number, at which point you'll be able to buy it, but you'll no longer get the pre-order discount you should have been entitled to. It's happened to me before.
  17. La Bayadère will be showing at five UltraStar locations in southern California and Arizona. Thurday, October 8, at 7:00 p.m. Sunday, October 11, at 10:30 a.m. The participating cinemas are located in San Diego, CA (Mission Valley Cinemas); Oceanside, CA (Mission Market); Apple Valley, CA; Surprise, AZ; and Lake Havasu City, AZ. http://www.ultrastarmovies.com
  18. Heinz Spoerli's Peer Gynt, performed by the Zurich Ballet, can be pre-ordered at Amazon. It's scheduled for release on October 27, 2009.
  19. However, be warned that it's a pirate with somewhat inferior video quality. The DVD is still in print in Europe, courtesy of Arthaus Musik. If you've got a region-free player, you can get it for a good deal less than $525 on German, French or British Amazon. http://www.arthaus-musik.com/templates/tyC...etail.php?id=86
  20. The North American release date is October 27. Amazon is now taking orders for the DVD and Blu-Ray.
  21. I suppose I have two separate categories in my mind: 'illustrious dancers who leave me cold' and 'illustrious dancers who drive me up a wall.' Most of the dancers in the latter group are divisive enough not to enjoy universal critical and popular acclaim in the first place, e.g. Svetlana Zakharova or Nikolai Tsiskaridze. Even though he seems to enjoy critical favour in the U.S., I'd have to add Ethan Stiefel to the list. Zoltan Solymosi and Rex Harrington had a similar effect on me, though they had nothing like Stiefel's technique. These are the dancers who make me squirm in my seat, as though my consciousness were desperate to tear itself away from my body and hightail it away from the theatre. I think it's a reaction to what comes across as extreme narcissism on their part. The other group is made up of dancers whom I don't necessarily dislike, and who are often superb technicians, but who don't do much for me. They would include Darcey Bussell, Miyako Yoshida, Viviana Durante, Cynthia Gregory, Kyra Nichols, Uliana Lopatkina, Gillian Murphy, Aurélie Dupont, Emilie Cozette, Roberto Bolle and Carlos Acosta. I am sympathetic to detractors of Makarova, though over time I learned to live with her eccentricities and came to see her as a net positive for ballet. I also agree that Mukhamedov was ill-suited to the classical roles. Agnès Letestu frustrates me about 50% of the time, though I have to acknowledge that her ballerina aura is very real.
  22. I can think of many examples. This is heresy for someone living in Canada because she has the status of national icon, but for me the most obvious case is Karen Kain, whose performances usually bored me to tears... until she began dancing the works of Glen Tetley, in which she was terrific. Unfortunately, it didn't do anything to loosen up her Odette-Odile.
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