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innopac

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Posts posted by innopac

  1. I am puzzled. This entire documentary seems to focus solely on Gergiev's energy and commitment to Russian culture. But there was one segment that didn't fit. This is when Uliana Lopatkina comes into his office to say that she is unhappy with a current production. Gergiev has the television on in his office and is clearly watching the sport during the conversation. He does agree to come to a rehearsal but I found the segment quite strange and wondered at it being included.

    Has anyone else seen this dvd?

  2. The ROH's Create contract tells the truth about the rights grab - from The Arts Desk 22 Sept 2010

    And in Paragraph 19, not only does the ROH say they will be entitled to edit, change, adapt and do anything else they want to the entries as they think fit, but also “in respect of your contribution, you irrevocably waive the benefits of and agree not to assert any provision of law known as ‘moral rights’ or any similar laws of any jurisdiction.”

    Link to The Arts Desk's article

  3. Further response from the Royal Opera House:

    "Rights and copyright have become even more complicated in the digital age. Like a lot of arts organisations, we need to protect our rights and those of our artists, while also finding the best ways to share our work and encourage people to participate in it. Until now, the way we use social media has not been connected to our rights-management strategy, but it’s very clear that we need to bring the two closer together.

    We’re now talking to a group of bloggers to help us determine some guidelines for how Royal Opera House publicity is used in the blogosphere, and hope to have some guidelines available for publication very soon."

  4. the first version of THE MOOR'S PAVANE noted here is one more or less pirated by N. Dolgushin in his admiration for the work while still behind the Iron Curtain.

    if mem. serves the Limon foundation etc. was much against this appropriation of Limon's work more or less second-hand from video(s) and insisted that work be staged by someone directly connected to Limon or not at all.

    the Shakespeare bill is typical of Dolgushin's eagerness to give late Soviet ballet a modernist 'twist' etc.

    tho' the video cassette was released after the fall of the soviet union, i believe it was all filmed before that, or at least the stagings were arranged sometime before the filmings themselves.

    here are the NYPL credits for the bill in question:

    Shakespeare dance trilogy/ presented by FPA Ekran, Gosteleradio, Czech TV Bratislava, and Directfilm ; director, A. Murgazin ; producer, Felix Slidovker. New York, NY : V.I.E.W. Video, 1993, c1991. (70 min.) :

    Notes: Performed by dancers from the Kirov Ballet [and other companies?].

    Music for Tchaikovsky scores performed by the State Academic Orchestra of the USSR, conductor, Eugene Svetlanov ; music for Purcell score performed by the Symphony Orchestra of St. Petersburg Conservatory, conductor, V. Chernushenko.

    Romeo and Juliet (ca. 22 min.) / choreography, Nataly Rizhenko and Viktor Smirnov-Golovanov ; music, Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky ; performed by Svetlana Smirnova (Juliet), Aleksandr Semenchukov (Romeo), Nikita Dolgushin (Master Lorenzo), and others.

    The moor's pavane (ca. 24 min.) / choreography, José Limón ; music, Henry Purcell ; performed by Andres Williams (Othello), Svetlana Semenova (Desdemona), Dolgushin (Iago), and Gabriella Komleva (Emilia, Iago's wife). [Although attributed to Limón, the choreography has been somewhat revised, as have the characters' names.]

    Hamlet (ca. 24 min.) / choreography, Rizhenko ; music, Tchaikovsky ; performed by Vlastimil Garalis (Hamlet), Smirnova (Ophelia), Dolgushin (Claudius), Komleva (Gertrude), and others.

    Camera, Alexander Taffel ; art direction, Eleonora Vinitskaya.

    Three ballets based on plays by William Shakespeare, recorded on location at a medieval castle, and linked by the framing device of a troupe of traveling players.

    The Moor's Pavane with Andres Williams, Svetlana Semenova, Nikita Dolgushin and Gabriella Komleva.

    Jose Limón's The Moor's Pavane (excerpt)

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCySMG6hRi4&feature=related

  5. The writer of the blog Intermezzo has been told to remove images and has been threatened with being barred from future ROH performances.

    I do not know the background of this story and was wondering if anyone else does. I also was wondering if this has happened before or if the copyright policing we have been seeing on youtube is moving over a wider catchment area now?

    "The ROH head of legal & business affairs has written me a couple of emails (below), culminating in a demand to "Remove all images referenced to performances at the Royal Opera House" - whatever that means. If he had threatened only litigation I would fight it. The grounds are weak; he can't even spell 'counsel'; I can smell victory from where I'm sitting.

    However he has also made the threat of "future exclusion from future Royal Opera House membership and performances". This obviously hits where it hurts. The ROH can bar entry to anyone, for any or no reason, right or wrong, whether they''ve used "images referenced to performances at the Royal Opera House" or not. So in the interests of my continued attendance at Covent Garden, I have reluctantly removed all Royal Opera House-related posts, as it was the quickest way to comply with the demand made."

  6. Ilyaballet is uploading a wonderful series of videos:

    "Pas de duex technique from Vaganova Ballet Academy.

    Back in the middle of XX century, in Leningrad USSR, in Vaganova ballet school, it was one of the greatest ballet Pas de deux teachers - SEREBRIANIKOV. He wrote a book about partnering in ballet, and this film was his idea."

  7. This youtube posted by ditogam has English subtitles.

    Chabukiani's Laurencia returned to stage ... rare shots from the premiere 1939

    "Vakhtang Chabukiani's name may not be on everyone's lips in the west but, as a dancer of great power and virtuosity and the choreographer of Laurencia in 1939, he played a vital role in the development of ballet in the Soviet Union.

    The Mikhailovsky Theatre presents the revival of Vakhtang Chabukiani's masterpiece Laurencia, based on the play Fuente Ovejuna by Lope de Vega. Chabukiani was one of the first to create a new choreographic language by means of his own particular blend of folk dance and classical ballet. Laurencia was premiered of 1939 at the Kirov Theatre.

    Following the St Petersburg premiere of Laurencia in June 2010, London will be the first city to witness the historical revival of this famous ballet, after a forty year absence from the Russian stage, in a new full-length production created for the Mikhailovsky Ballet by Mikhail Messerer."

  8. A friend has just written:

    "That is certainly not the way Hilarion is interpreted today. With the original interpretation, it would be a lot easier to have more sympathy for Albrecht. However, he knows he can never marry that girl. To promise her marriage is immoral. A flirtation would have been okay, but to swear! Consequently, he has to lose our sympathy. Yes, it is true that men of higher class often took advantage of women, usually servants in the household. However, that does not excuse Albrecht in my mind. He may well have been attracted to the girl, he may even have thought he loved her, but he certainly knew he could never marry her."

  9. In the article Bart mentioned it sounds as if the removal can now be partially automated with a content ID system...

    "Since its filing, though, those tensions have eased substantially, as YouTube has set up an automated system to detect and block infringing videos and has signed revenue-sharing agreements with more than a thousand media companies."

  10. "The Contract Behind the Curtain: A Glimpse into the San Francisco Ballet Dancer’s Contract" By Robin Gross (29 February 2008)

    Link

    The San Francisco Ballet is one of the finest ballet companies in the world and the oldest company in the United States. The company produces its ballets through the utilization of collective bargaining agreements with the American Guild of Musical Artists (AGMA).

    The Basic Agreement between AGMA and the San Francisco Ballet details many of the key terms of every ballet dancer’s contract with the company. The AGMA Basic Agreement is the collective bargaining agreement that all dancers with the SF Ballet sign when they join the company. It sets out the minimum terms and conditions that all dancers (and other artists) employed with the company are entitled to receive (like minimum salaries and benefits, publicity issues, and minimum health and safety standards)

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