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Neumeier ballets at Kirov


Guest amalinovski

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Posted

Greetings and Hello! This is my first posting...

In response to A.M.'s question, I did see the Kirov perform IN THE NIGHT and THE LEAVES ARE FADING when they performed at the Met in the summer of 1992. Also on the same program was the original APOLLO with Prologue, Epilogue and staircase.

Posted

Welcome to Ballet Alert, Patricia. I hope you'll post about what you're seeing today, as well.

I would have loved to see the Kirov in "In the Night" and "Leaves." They did an all-Balanchine evening in D.C. (which I thought was very fine) and a "Lilac Garden" which was peculiar -- but wonderful in its own way.

Guest amalinovski
Posted

Thanks for everyone who let me know about Kirov "modern" tours abroad. I only follow Kirov recently, and am not aware very well about its tours before 1996.

To Andrei: Neumeier was indeed praised as a great spokeperson in St.Petersburg. Unfortunately, I have no data about his speeches. But I do heard he was mysterious about his actual work, not revealing any details about it, and instead concentrated on ballet "general" history - just as you said.

Guest amalinovski
Posted

A big new article from St.Petersburg's "Chas pik" ("Rush hour") newspaper is posted in Russian forum. It is difficult to translate, but I'll try to do that ASAP.

Guest amalinovski
Posted

There were nothing like this in Mariinsky, since Balanchine's "Symphony in C" premiere.

So handsome is "Spring & Fall" young soloist Maxim Khrebtov! So beautiful is Svetlana

Zakharova, moving her body precisely in "Now and Then"! So revealing is Andrian Fadeev,

portraying an artist going crazy in "Sounds of Empty Pages"! So perfect is, finally, the

whole cast - dancing with emotional and technical "freedom" unheard of in Mariinsky,

some years ago momified in its classical heritage.

The post-Soviet Mariinsky was obsessed with the idea of bringing in modern choreographers. Balanchine, Petit, McMillan were not exactly so; Mariinsky needed a living and acting person. Like Normand Knights, invited to rule Russia at the beginning of time, there was a need to

invite someone to get the world's best ballet out of the aestetic stagnation. Bejart seemed

to be adequate: there would be an assured international notoriety, large media attention, tied-to-dollar ticket prices, new Russian elite coming to be seen, not to see, etc.

Neumeier does not seem able to get such attention. Russian fans had hard time learning his name's spelling. He has an image of a liberal high-school teacher, using a bicycle to get to his home Hamburg Theatre. His art is non-aggressive, well calculated, stylistically perfect, accepted by "comme-il-faut" public. But this isn't what was important to Mariinsky.

Neumeier's art is focused on the dancer. Not any one, but this one, who is present now and

here, waiting for choreographer's directions. Neumeier writes down a several pages' notes

about every corps-de-ballet dancer, let alone soloists. He gets inspired by this or that

unique person he works with.

The Death in "Sounds of Empty Pages" is "Uliana Lopatkina by Neumeier". He does not evaluate whether the dancer is beautiful or not; he's just mesmerized by this one-woman natural phenomenon, showing off her almost painfully thin arms and legs in positions emphasizing, not covering, the disproportions. Neumeier invents the role of a crazy artist for Fadeev, a blond with childish face and non-childish expression; because no other dancer can simultaneously

express the vulnerability and the force of an artist tormented by its own imagination. Neumeier dresses a big and slow Kuznetsov in a strong steel-coloured suit, hiding everything but the dancer's enormous hands. And an entranced spectator sees a senseless daemon, sadistically playing with the tormented artist.

Neumeier loves his dancers passionately, but never blindly. He creates them himself. Strongly speaking, the cast of his ballets is not a typical Mariinsky's cast. It's modeled by Neumeier. He loves short, feminine, brunette female dancers, whom he carefully chosed, and who are not exactly the type one is used to see today. Maybe this is coming from old postcards of 1900s, largely present in Neumeier's private collection...

An admirer of Dyaguilev's belle epoque, Neumeier uses the reminescences of that time as well. The bucolic "Spring & Fall" with its nymphs and young men falling down, recalls Anna Pavlova's plastic and Nijinsky's Faun. The sporty "Now and Then" resembles the "urbanistic" style of Ballets Russes; young men in swimsuits play joyful sensuality of physical training.

Neumeier's art is the capability of being liked by everyone, still playing by his own rules. This is the art of getting interested by twenty- or thirty-years-old things, as if they were discovered just yesterday.

Mariinsky is in luck with Neumeier. Neumeier is in luck with Mariinsky.

Posted

Thank you, A.M., for your reports, and for taking the time and trouble to translate for us. There are many readers of this board interested in the Kirov (Maryinsky) and who don't have access to Russian reviews. It's wonderful to keep up. This reviewer sounds very interesting and very perceptive -- I don't happen to agree with her, but I take her seriously :)

What she writes about Neumeier and the dancers is exactly what the Danish dancers say about him, by the way. That part could have been written by a Dane -- where Neumeier has long been the favorite modern choreographer. I see his value as a director and I understand why they like working with him, but I don't think being a good director is the same as being a good choreographer. Where he fails, for me and many others, is in the actual movement. It's a limited and often very awkward vocabulary.

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