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abatt

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Posts posted by abatt

  1. This musical has been reworked and  will be playing in Seattle shortly.  Tiler Peck is still  playing the lead, but it looks liike all other members of the original cast have moved on.  I hope we get to see this in New York at some point, even for a limited Off Broadway run.

     

    http://www.playbill.com/article/see-the-cast-and-creative-team-of-marie-dancing-still-meet-the-press

  2. 14 hours ago, Kathleen O'Connell said:

    Sigh. Liebeslieder is like Halley's Ballet: it only comes around every seven seasons. 

     

    Yes.  Ditto with Robert Schumann's Davidbundertanze.  I guess audiences are more into electronica music (Times are Racing) and hiphop lyrics (Runaway) than "old fashioned" masterpieces.

  3. I would guess that the 2019-2020 season has already been fully mapped out, and that it will probably be announced shortly.  At the earliest, any impact that Whelan might have on programming would not be until the following season.

  4. Lovette also had some stumbles when I saw her on Tuesday of last week.  Of the five casts, she was my least favorite.  I don't think her technique is strong enough for Aurora. In most of the NYCB rep, Lovette performs well.  However, in the role of Aurora, there is nowhere to hide.  If you have weak technique, it will show.

  5. 4 minutes ago, cobweb said:

    I find this whole story baffling and a little ridiculous. Is Bouder really so up in arms over not dancing opening night? Really? And IMHO, this makes Stafford look like a weak leader, if not a complainer. 

    Yes, he definitely comes off as a weak leader.  However, since they seem to be looking for a kinder and gentler leader to run the company - someone who is not  "mean"  to use Bouder's word- Stafford fits the bill.  There are numerous comments on Bouder's instagram praising her, but nobody seems to care that she insulted Hyltin.

  6. 3 minutes ago, JuliaJ said:

    Ever since the Martins resignation the NYT arts section seems really set on making the company (and ballet as an art form) look bad. They must be super proud of such "investigative" journalism in an area where performance reviews are supposed to be the norm. I

    I question whether the Times initially "investigated"  or alternatively whether Bouder contacted the NYTimes.

  7. 25 minutes ago, balletforme said:

    Why do you think Stafford, who is usually quite low key, chose not to give "no comment?"  

    The Board of Directors is now hearing about Martins' alleged retaliation and his going backstage, all courtesy of the NYTimes.  This is the same Board that is now deciding if Stafford will run the company permanently.  I guess he was sending a direct message out to the public and the Board that he attempted to control the situation, but Martins did not comply.  Stafford is being defensive regarding why he apparently had no control over the situation.  Ironically, Martins has been the impetus for Stafford's administrative rise within the company.  It was Martins who invited him to teach and take on numerous admin. duties while Martins still ran the company. 

  8. 28 minutes ago, dirac said:

    This.

    My takeaway is that Board needs to make its long-overdue decision about the leadership pronto. This is inside baseball of the worst kind and it's unfortunate that Stafford decided to fan the flames. I certainly can’t imagine any responsible company leader whining to the press about such a matter. 

    Good to hear that Martins will be working for the Trust. I expect that will also give him something to do and get him out of town for long stretches, which will likely be beneficial for all concerned until things have settled.

    I'm sorry for Hyltin. 

     

     

    Stafford should have given a simple "no comment" to the NY Times.

     

    25 minutes ago, Kathleen O'Connell said:

    Hyltin doesn't post to Instagram very often, but her post wishing Indiana Woodward every success in her debut as Aurora is an example of how it should be done. 

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BuKH1ZHgZiw/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

    Class and integrity personified.

  9. Vipa, I completely agree with you.  SB has been running for two weeks without any review by the NYTimes.  Instead, they decide to publish Bouder's complaints about getting third cast.  While I do believe Bouder was  switched as a result of retaliation from Martins, I'm also lacking in sympathy for her.  She did, after all, get cast and has performed the role several times during the run of SB.  She thoughtlessly put Hyltin in an awful position.  For someone who purports to care about the health and well being of her fellow dancers, she had no problem throwing Hyltin under the bus. 

     

    Hasn't this company had enough of its dirty laundry aired in public already?  Do we really want to see a NY Times article every time a dancer feels she was undervalued and switched to third cast instead of first cast?

  10. 12 minutes ago, nanushka said:

    In what way do her words suggest that she is naive to that fact? She didn't say or suggest that NYCB, as a workplace, was unique in being led by a tyrant (her word, not necessarily mine), so far as I can see.

    From the fact that there are multiple tyrants it doesn't necessarily follow that a person shouldn't call someone out for being one of them.

    I guess the unique thing is that people who  deal with unpleasant bosses daily generally don't get a chance to complain about it in a published article in the New York Times.  Poor Jon Stafford.  He's caught in the middle of all this.

  11. 37 minutes ago, FPF said:

     I respect Bouder for not backing down from her previous statement, but I wonder if she will continue to be cast at all in Martins' works after this statement: “Dealing with somebody like Peter — who could be mean and could be a tyrant,” she said, “how do you change that reality when it’s been that way for so long?” 

    It is likely that Bouder has never worked anywhere other than NYCB.  If she did, she would know that the working world is full of bosses who are tyrannical and unpleasant.  This is not unique to NYCB.

  12. I saw both Hyltin's first performance and Bouder's first performance of SB during this run.  I can say with absolute certainty that Bouder was thrilling and excellent, while Hyltin was weak and clearly having difficulty.  I cannot imagine any reason for putting Hyltin in as first cast instead of Bouder other than to retaliate against Bouder.   However, the company gave Martins that right as the choreographer, so even if his motives for the cast change was not ethical, they are nevertheless stuck with his decisions and control.  

    I am pleased to learn that Martins will stage Balanchine ballets around the world.  Love him or hate him, he has extensive knowledge which should be passed on to others.

  13. 8 hours ago, Fleurfairy said:

    She is getting to the age where ballerinas are retiring roles. It nice to see her acknowledge that younger dancers deserve their place in these roles. 

    I suspect that this season will be Bouder's final run of Aurora.  

  14. I was trying to figure out why Janzen was standing around at the side of the stage during the vision scene.  Is that part of the choreography?  At the end of Aurora's solo variation, Desire runs across the stage to run after her upon her exit.  Did Janzen arrive too early for his cue?  It was truly bizarre and distracting to have him stand around at the side of the stage. I don't recall that happening when I've seen this production in prior years, but I could be wrong. 

    It was not Hyltin's best performance.  Most of  her performance was well done, but she was obviously struggling with some of the choreography.  There were too many uncharacteristic little stumbles. A friend/co worker of mine who rarely attends ballet performances but took ballet classes during her youth asked me if there was something wrong with Hyltin's foot.  This was a very astute observation.

    Janzen definitely needs improvement, but he did manage to do the fish dives well.  His partnering was strong, and I thought he did a fine job in supporting Hyltin.  There was one fish dive where she appeared to tilt off center and he immediately was able to bring her into the correct position to execute the fish dive.  In the hands of a lesser partner, that would have turned into a disaster.    

    Maria was vivid in her acting as Carabose, although I wish that someone at NYCB could give this character some dignity.

    I thought Reichlin was a bore as Lilac Fairy. She executed the steps well enough, but I rarely felt that she radiated warmth or dominated the action when she was on stage.

    The precious metal and jewel dances were marvelous, especially Huxley.   Ulbricht's Bluebird was also a highlight.

     

     

  15. 2 hours ago, BLalo said:

     

    Perhaps most problematic for me was Taylor Stanley appearing as a character called “Africa” in Act I. Not the “African Prince” but “Africa”. The suitors are all pretty nondescript anyway, but why on earth are they each representing an entire continent (Europe, America, Asia, Africa)? It comes across instead as representing a race. They could easily just be “Four Suitors”.

     

    This makes the point that Aurora is being courted by the regal heads of state from around the world.   Referring to them as four suitors does not convey their high statures.

  16. 1 hour ago, fondoffouettes said:

    Ashley Laracey’s thoughts on not being cast for the first four weeks of the winter season. Unless she’s been dealing with an injury,

     

    By using words like left out and invisible, I get the impression that her absence was not due to injury.  I agree with others that Laracey is much more interesting to me than some of the other soloists like LeCrone. 

    I have to wonder if Ashly Isaacs's absence was due to injury or because Stafford isn't casting her.

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