Showing posts with label 'Serenade'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'Serenade'. Show all posts

Sunday, March 10, 2019

New York City Ballet's 2019 Winter Season


TSCHAIKOVSKY & BALANCHINE
SUNDAY MATINEE, JANUARY 27, 3:00PM (Conductor: Litton)
SERENADE:  Mearns, T. Peck, LeCrone, J. Angle, *Sanz (replaces Chamblee)
MOZARTIANA:  Hyltin, Huxley, Schumacher
TSCHAIKOVSKY PIANO CONCERTO NO. 2:  Bouder, *Gordon, King, Alberda, *Knight, *Adams, *Woodward  
[Solo Piano: Walters]
* First Time in Role on 1/23/19

This program of works choreographed by George Balanchine to the music of Peter Ilyitch Tschaikovsky looked on paper like an extravagant feast of works that span Balanchine's entire career in America.

'Serenade', of course, is the first work that Mr. B created in America.  It was choreographed on the students of The School of American Ballet -- which opened on January 2, 1934 -- and famously incorporates incidents that occurred at SAB during its creation.  A student arrives late and searches for her place in the ensemble; another student falls; the class size varies from 15 to 17 students.  At the ballet's initial performance at the estate of Felix Warburg (his son, Edward Warburg, was a Harvard friend of Lincoln Kirstein) on June 9, 1934, Balanchine used segments of the full score -- Tschaikosky's 'Serenade for Strings in C'.  In later years he added additional choreography to the remainder of the score.  The ballet that we see today uses the entire score, although the third (Elegy)and fourth (Russian) movements are reversed, allowing the ballet to end on a somber note.

Corps in the opening moment of Balanchine's 'Serenade'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for New York City Ballet
This performance on January 27th was breathtaking.  Sara Mearns was extraordinary as the "Waltz" girl and her partner, Jared Angle, offered ardent support.  Here's a link to a video of Sara and Jared performing a snippet of the "Waltz" while Sara talks about her connections to the ballet:



Tiler Peck as the "Russian" girl was musical, her swift pirouettes and incisive beats like plunging into a maelstrom;  Megan LeCrone was dramatic as the "Dark Angel"; and Aaron Sanz was a strong partner to all three ballerinas (and a few corps women as well).

Karinska's costumes lit by Mark Stanley's lighting design allow the women -- both principals and corps -- to sweep through the choreography on clouds of moonlight.

From a seminar on 'Serenade' the following evening I learned that all of the women's costumes have a slanted waistline -- longer on the right side and shorter on the left.  Marc Happel, the Company's current Director of Costumes, feels that this gives the dancers an even greater sense of grace and movement.

Balanchine first choreographed 'Mozartiana' to Tschaikovsky's 'Suite No. 4, Mozartiana' in 1933 for Les Ballets 1933.  This version of the work was also performed by students of The School of American Ballet at the Warburg estate in June, 1934 along with 'Serenade'.  In 1981 Balanchine returned to this score for a new ballet also titled 'Mozartiana' which had its premiere during the 1981 Tschaikovsky Festival -- it was his penultimate ballet.  The original cast in 1981 was Suzanne Farrell, Ib Andersen and Christopher D'Amboise along with four senior corps ballerinas and four students from the School of American Ballet.

Farrell had returned to New York City Ballet in 1975 following the rupture of her relationship with Balanchine in 1969.  By 1981 all had been forgiven.  'Mozartiana' was one of the great roles he created for her from 1975 through 1981.  The prima ballerina role is filled with Suzanne's mannerisms and characteristic large-scale.  The more filigreed style of Ib Andersen's role was tailored for his splendid Royal Danish Ballet technique.
Sterling Hyltin in the Preghiera movement of Balanchine's 'Mozartiana'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Sterling Hyltin does not have either the technique or stage presence for the ballerina role in 'Mozartiana'.  Farrell's mannerisms look applied rather than organic and the scale of her dancing does not fill the stage.  Anthony Huxley has the technique for the Andersen role and looked perfectly in it.

Balanchine first used Tschaikovsky's 'Piano Concerto No. 2 in G Major' for a ballet titled 'Ballet Imperial' that he created for an American Ballet Caravan tour of South America in 1941.  It used blue and white sets and costumes by Mstislav Dobuzhinsky that recalled czarist St. Petersburg during the Petipa era.  It utilized a hierarchical cast -- prima ballerina and cavalier; secondary ballerina; two soloist couples; and a corps of 16 women and 6 men (at times augmented by the two soloist men).

In 1964 'Ballet Imperial' was revived (for Suzanne Farrell) with decor by Rouben Ter-Artunian that recalled the orginal 1941 production.  For a 1973 revival Balanchine did away with the decor and renamed the ballet 'Tschaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 2'.  It had simple costumes by Karinska and the prima ballerina was Patricia McBride.  Over the years there were new costumes by Ben Benson (1979) and Gary Lisz (1990). 

Anna Light of NYCB's costume shop fitting the bodice of Marc Happel's new costume on Teresa Reichlen
Photo by Aja Skye Bivens
For the 2019 Winter Season, the costumes have been redesigned by Marc Happel, the Company's Director of Costumes.  The women are in steel blue chiffon skirts and brocade bodices worked with thousands of Swarovski crystals -- more for the lead dancers, fewer for the corps.  There are also tiaras of various heights for the women.  The men are in dark blue tights with brocade vests over steel blue chiffon shirts.  

With the rather murky lighting provided by Mark Stanley, the effect of these costumes when the stage is filled with dancers is unfortunately rather like a fleet of battleships on the stormy horizon in an old World War II movie -- not the glittering assemblage of czarist courtiers that I'm sure was envisaged.

The orchestra under Maestro Litton and the piano soloist, Susan Walters, struggled with coordination during the opening movement which only added to the troubles of this performance.

I've always been fascinated by a moment in the ballet where the prima ballerina performs a glittering solo on the right half of the stage while the entire 24 member corps dance on the left half.  Here Ashley Bouder struggled to bring this section into focus.


Joseph Gordon and Ashley Bouder in Balanchine's 'Tschaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 2'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Joseph Gordon as her cavalier was stately and a bit bland. Lauren King brought her usual sunniness -- much needed -- to the second ballerina role.

All-in-all, the arc of the program definitely progressed downward over the course of this performance.


NEW COMBINATIONS
SUNDAY MATINEE, FEBRUARY 3, 3:00PM 
HERMAN SCHMERMAN:  Corti* (replaces Hyltin), Mearns, T. Peck, Phelan, T.Angle, Ball, Gordon
PRINCIPIA:  Kretzschmar, T. Peck, Pollack, Applebaum, Stanley, Fahoury (replaces Coll), Conductor:  Capps; Piano Soloist:  Craig Baldwin
THE RUNAWAY:  Bouder, Grant, Hoxha, Mearns, Mejia, Pazcoguin, Stanley, Walker
*  Role debut and Apprentice

Every winter there is a New Combinations program in honor of Balanchine's birthday (January 22nd).  Balanchine said that "there were no new steps, just new combinations".  The program always includes new and recent works.

'Herman Schmerman' was created by William Forsythe to a commissioned score by Thom Willems for the first Diamond Project in 1992 when it consisted of a work for five dancers in black costumes with lattice work decolletage by Gianni Versace.  The work's title is a meaningless phrase from a Steve Martin movie which speaks to the abstract nature of the piece.

Harrison Ball with the three women in the first section of William Forsythe's 'Herman Schmerman'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet

The following year, Forsythe and Willems added a pas de deux performed by two different dancers (from the five in the first part).  Since 1994 just the pas de deux had been performed by NYC Ballet until the 2019 Winter season when the two parts were reunited for 'New Combinations'.

During that interim the 'Herman Scherman' pas de deux became closely associated with Wendy Whelan and the late Albert Evans.  Albert always seemed to relish the knowing giggle that erupted from the audience at his second entrance -- bare chested wearing Versace's yellow pleated skirt with black stripe -- just like Wendy's.  In fact Albert chose it for his farewell performance in June, 2010.


Albert Evans in the 'Herman Schmerman' pas de deux
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Here the pas de deux was capably danced by Tiler Peck and Tyler Angle. Tyler doesn't quite pull off the tongue-in-cheek humor at his second entrance though.

While it's nice to see the two parts reunited for this program, with their completely separate casts they could still easily stand alone again in the future.

Justin Peck's 'Principia' to a commissioned score by Sufjan Stevens by that name was first performed on the previous Thursday evening, January 31st.  The 'Principia' is Isaac Newton's three-volume treatise on the laws of motion -- you'll probably remember "every action has an equal and opposite reaction" from your high school physics.  It is a work for 24 dancers, and as Justin frequently does, he has mixed principals, soloists and corps members with little regard for status or sex.  They are costumed by Peck's frequent collaborators, Reid Bartelme and Harriet Jung in gauzy layered dance wear and beautifully lit by Jennifer Tipton.


The work begins with all of the dancers crouched in a pool of golden light at the center of the staged with arms raised up and behind them hands clasped.  First Taylor Stanley pops up from the thicket of arms and hands perhaps searching the horizon -- he retreats and Tiler Peck pops up -- then Clair Kretzschmar -- then I lost track.



Taylor Stanley rising out of the opening formation of Justin Peck's 'Principia'
Photo by Erin Baiano
 The ballet continues to the sometimes twinkling sections of Stevens' score for piano and orchestra.  Groups and individual pairs come together and separate.  Taylor Stanley and Tiler Peck have a lovely duet at one point and then walk off stage hand-in-hand.  At another point, Harrison Coll and Daniel Applebaum are attracted to each other from across the stage , dance together briefly, but then wistfully separate.


Harrison Coll (center) with Ralph Ippolito, Lars Nelson, Devin Alberda, Christopher Grant, Gilbert Bolden III, and Jonathan Fahoury in Justin Peck's 'Principia'
Photo by Andrea Mohin for NYTimes
At one point groups of dancers form pods around the stage -- each in a pool of golden light.  Another dancer, Miriam Miller I think, touch each pod which unfolds to disclose another dancer within -- rather like lily buds that open when they are reached by sunlight.


Miriam Miller (I think) with a pod of dancers in Justin Peck's 'Principia'
Photo by Erin Baiano
Here's a link to the NYCB web site where there are three short videos of 'Principia':

https://www.nycballet.com/ballets/p/principia-new-peck-1.aspx

'Principia' is wonderful -- a complex work that will reveal even more on subsequent encounters.

Kyle Abraham's 'The Runaway' had it's premiere at the Company's 2018 Fall Fashion Gala.  The very weird costumes are by Giles Deacon, the British fashion designer, and the effective lighting is by Dan Scully.


Peter Walker and Roman Mejia in Giles Deacon's costumes for Kyle Abraham's 'The Runaway'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet  
Georgina Pazcoguin and Sara Mearns in Giles Deacon's costumes for 'The Runaway'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet

'The Runaway' is choreographed to a collage score that includes music by Nico Muhly, Kanye West, Jay-Z and James Blake -- interesting choices in a broad range of musical styles.

Much of the piece seems insignificant -- I didn't even realize that Sara Mearns and Ashley Bouder were in it until I reread the program later.


Taylor Stanley in Kyle Abraham's 'The Runaway'.  Taylor holds this pose for a seeming eternity.
Photo by Paul Kolnik



The most important thing about  'The Runaway' are the two solos that Abraham created for Taylor Stanley that open and close the work.  Mr. Stanley may be the 'runaway' of the title -- it is certainly a 'runaway' success for him.

Here is a link to a video where Taylor talks about these solos while you watch parts of them:

https://ballethub.com/ballet-video/anatomy-of-a-dance-taylor-stanley-on-the-runaway/


There is no question that this work has given Taylor Stanley a starring role that is tailor-made for his unique abilities.

THE SLEEPING BEAUTY
SUNDAY MATINEE, FEBRUARY 17, 1:00PM

Princess Aurora:   Tiler Peck
Prince Desire:  Tyler Angle
The Lilac Fairy:   Ashley Laracey
The Fairy Carabosse:   Sara Mearns
Conductor:   Daniel Capps

As we left the theater following this performance of 'The Sleeping Beauty' I wrote ''FLAT" on my ticket stub.  The orchestra played Tschaikovsky's beautiful score as if they were collectively recovering from an all-night bender and any loud noises or fast movements couldn't be tolerated.  This lack of musical support left the dancers to fend for themselves.  Maybe the black cloth that covers the orchestra pit does muffle the sound (it makes the projections easier to see on the front scrim) but certainly their conductors must know how to make up for most of that.

This is a particularly extravagant production with gorgeous sets designed by David Mitchell and sumptuous costumes created by Patricia Zipprodt and executed by Barbara Matera.  It is a real shame that the lovely projections that lead us into the castle during the overture; indicate the passage of time between scenes; and accompany Prince Desire on his journey to find Princess Aurora were short-changed by their wan orchestral accompaniment.

The program credits for 'The Sleeping Beauty' say "Choreography by Peter Martins [after Marius Petipa] with ["Garland Dance" by George Balanchine]".

There is no question that Balanchine's Garland Dance, which he created for the Company's Tschaikovsky Festival in 1981, is one of the choreographic highlights of this production.  Balanchine uses 56 dancers: 32 villagers, 8 maids of honor, and 16 children (students from The School of American Ballet).  They form kaleidoscopic patterns that break apart and come together with each entrance of more dancers.  The villagers hold arches of pastel flowers that are manipulated to form virtual arcades and arbors; carousels and gazebos.  It is all wondrous and ingenious.

George Balanchine's 'Garland Dance' from 'The Sleeping Beauty'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet


Tiler Peck and Tyler Angle are old hands at this choreography (Tyler danced Prince Desire with Ana Sophia Scheller as Aurora and Sara Mearns as the Lilac Fairy at their SAB workshop in 2003).  They did their best to infuse some excitement into the Vision scene and the Wedding pas de deux, but they were undermined by the orchestra's plodding tempi and inadequate contrasts.


Tyler Angle and Tiler Peck in the Wedding Pas de Deux from 'The Sleeping Beauty'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
The battle between good and evil that runs throughout 'The Sleeping Beauty'-- personified by Ashley Laracey as the benevolent Lilac Fairy and Sara Mearns as  Carabosse, the evil fairy -- seemed to be particularly undermined by the lack of musical support.  Tschaikovsky's shimmering and expansive music for the Lilac Fairy was bland and his stormy and vindictive music for Carabosse was wan.

In staging 'The Sleeping Beauty' Martins did a great deal to streamline this version -- cutting out two intermissions, eliminating a game of blind-man's bluff, shortening some solos.  Why did this performance seem so long?  so boring?  so FLAT? 

MARTINS' MEDDLING . . .

On February 22nd -- the Friday after we saw 'The Sleeping Beauty' -- the New York Times published an article about Peter Martins interfering with the ballet's opening performance on February 13th.  You can read the article here: 

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/22/arts/dance/peter-martins-city-ballet.html 

Among the thoughts I've had while reflecting on this story:
  • Martins is the choreographer for a sizable portfolio of works performed by the Company including the full-evening works 'Swan Lake', 'Romeo+Juliet' and 'The Sleeping Beauty';
  • The full-evening works at New York City Ballet also include Balanchine's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream', 'Coppelia', and 'George Balanchine's The Nutcracker';
  • Collectively, these full-evening ballets tend to fill the house, while the rest of the repertory often does not;
  • Few of Martins' shorter works are considered to be more than mediocre and could easily be replaced with other works, but the box-office draw of his three full-evening works gives him leverage to interfere in the Company's normal operations whenever these works are performed.
There are four entities in which Martins had been involved prior to his abrupt 'retirement' on January 1, 2018:
  • The New York City Ballet founded by George Balanchine and Lincoln Kirstein in 1948.  Martins was the Ballet-Master-in-Chief from Balanchine's death in 1983 until his abrupt retirement on New Year's Day, 2018.   
  • The School of American Ballet founded by Balanchine and Kirstein in 1934.  Martins had been Co-Chairman of the School's faculty with Kay Mazzo before his retirement.
  • The Balanchine Trust established after Balanchine's death in 1983 as a vehicle for overseeing the rights to most of the Balanchine ballets.  Balanchine had bequeathed these works individually to his dancers, colleagues and friends.  Barbara Horgan, 86, who is quoted in the Times article, is the remaining Founding Trustee and Ellen Sorrin is the current Director.  The Trust is listed in the Company's current programs as an entity within the Company, which surprised me, since it purports to authorize performances of the works it controls, collect royalties for those performances, and provide ballet companies around the world with approved repetiteurs to supervise and teach the works it controls.
  • New York Choreographic Institute was founded in 2000 by the late Irene Diamond and Peter Martins as a vehicle to support and develop new choreographers and choreography.  Except when one of his ballets is on the program, the only mention of Peter Martins in the Company's current performance programs is as co-founder of the Institute .
While the Times article had not yet appeared when we saw 'The Sleeping Beauty' on Sunday, February 17th, I'm wondering how much the incidents that are described may have had a detrimental effect on the Company's morale during the two-week run of the ballet.  No matter where individual members of the Company's community fall on the spectrum from approval to disapproval of Martins' actions -- both over time and immediately preceding and during the opening night on February 13th -- the facts as reported would naturally lead to disequilibrium.  The well-known members of the community --including current and former Board members quoted in the article -- can only have exacerbated a delicate situation. 


.  .  .  AND FINALLY GOOD NEWS

On Thursday, February 28th, the Boards of Directors of both New York City Ballet and The School of American Ballet announced the selection of Jonathan Stafford to become the Artistic Director of their organizations.  New York City Ballet also announced the appointment of Wendy Whelan as Associate Artistic Director.

Wendy Whelan and Jonathan Stafford, NYC Ballet's newly appointed
Associate Artistic Director and Artistic Director 
Photo by Todd Heisler for The New York Times
You can read more about their appointments and backgrounds here:

It is a great relief for all of us who support the Company and the School to have the turmoil that began in late 2017 with accusations of sexual misconduct against Peter Martins followed his abrupt retirement and later the dismissal of three of the company's male principals in a sexting scandal during the summer of 2018 come to a successful conclusion.

Jonathan Stafford has been a steady, sure presence throughout these difficulties as the leader of the Interim Artistic Team -- Justin Peck, Craig Hall and Rebecca Krohn.  Thanks to all of them for their devotion to the Company throughout this interim period.

Since her retirement from NYC Ballet in October, 2014 Ms. Whelan has continued her involvement with new choreography.  She initiated collaborations with four choreographers -- Kyle Abraham, Joshua Beamish, Brayn Brooks, and Alejandro Cerrudo -- for a touring program called 'Restless Creature' in which she danced a duet with each of them.  Kyle Abraham, of course, created 'The Runaway' which we saw at the February 3rd performance discussed above.  Hopefully as part of her new responsibilities, Wendy will take a leadership role in New York Choreographic Institute, which is one of the feeders for the Company's new choreographers and choreography.

While I was initially skeptical of the ability of interim artictic team to manage such a sprawling operation as New York City Ballet,  it quickly became apparently that all four of them were determined to make the bold decisions that were needed to steady the ship and keep it focused on its artistic mission.  In the process Mr. Stafford rose in stature and leadership ability to the point where his appointment as Artistic Director became virtually inevitable.  With Ms. Whelan as Artistic Associate undertaking much of the programming of new works and polishing of existing repertory,  I am confident that they will bring continuity, stability and creativity to the Company.

ALL ROBBINS
SUNDAY MATINEE, MARCH 3, 3:00PM (Conductor: Otranto)
INTERPLAY:
*Villwock, Segin, Adams, Woodward, Walker, Alberda, Hoxha, Mejia [Solo Piano: Moverman]
IN THE NIGHT:
Lovette, Kowroski, Mearns, Gordon, Janzen, J. Angle [Solo Piano: McDill]
NY EXPORT: OPUS JAZZ:
Villwock, *Fahoury Coll, Habony, Walker
* First Time in Role 


We approached this program with some trepidation.  Although Jerome Robbins could be a wonderful choreographer, he was a lousy editor of his own work.  This made the prospect of an entire program of his works daunting.

I have always thought of 'Interplay' (1945) as an early sketch of Robbins' choreography for 'West Side Story' (1957).  It has a delightful jazz/swing score -- Morton Gould's 'American Concertette' -- and was first performed on Broadway in Billy Rose's 'Concert Varieties'.  It entered the Company's repertory in 1952 following Jerry's becoming Associate Artistic Director in 1949.

It is divided into four sections -- 'Free Play', 'Horseplay', 'Byplay', and 'Team Play' -- and is usually performed by eight corps dancers, as it was here except for Indiana Woodward and Peter Walker -- who are recently promoted soloists.  It is an early example of Robbins' emphasis on personal interactions between the dancers in his works.


Peter Walker with Erica Pereira in the 'Byplay' pas de deux of Jerome Robbins' 'Interplay'
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Following the success of 'Dances at a Gathering' (1969) to Chopin piano music, Robbins choreographed four different Chopin solo piano pieces for 'In the Night' the following year:  the 'Nocturnes' -- No. 7 in C# minor, Opus 27, No.1; No. 15 in F minor, Opus 55, No.1; No. 16 in E major, Opus 55, No.2; and No.2 in E major, Opus 9, No.2.'.  Whereas 'Dances at a Gathering' is primarily a sunlit gathering of 10 dancers, 'In the Night' is a dark night of romance for three very specific couples -- Kay Mazzo with Anthony Blum, Violette Verdy with Peter Martins, and Patricia McBride with Francisco Moncion in 1970.

At this performance, Nocturne No.7 was danced by Lauren Lovette and Joseph Gordon.  They portray the youngest couple, rapturously in the first bloom of love.  Lauren is wonderful in this role, but Joseph is a bit too blank in his responses to her.  They had a slight bobble on the floor at one point with legs and arms going briefly askew.

I always think of the couple in the second section to Nocturne No. 15 as a more mature, aristocratic pair.  Maria Kowroski and Russell Janzen have a natural reserve that suits this section well.  The spectacular spot where Russell holds the rigid Maria in an upside-down verticle lift and gradually rotates her to the floor while she flutters one foot against the opposite ankle came off without a hitch -- demonstrating not just their superb technique but also the rather cool and aloof characters they portray.


Maria Kowroski and Russell Janzen in the second Nocturne of Jerome Robbins' 'In the Night'
Photo by Erin Baiano
As the tempestuous couple in Nocturne No. 16 Sara Mearns and Jared Angle were at their finest.  Sara plays up the drama and willfulness of the woman, while Jared is imperious and implacable as her lover.  Her submission to him at the end of their duet always reminds me of a line from the reconciliation sextet at the end of Gilbert & Sullivan's 'Patience' (I played the Duke when I was a junior in high school):

"and the pain that is all but a pleasure will change

for the pleasure that's all but pain
and never, oh never our hearts will range
from that old, old love again"


It seems risky to portray this level of misogyny in age of #MeToo, but its tumultuous love-hate relationship is beautifully portrayed by Sara and Jared.


Sara Mearns and Jared Angle in the third Nocturne of Jerome Robbins' 'In the Night'
Photo by Erin Baiano
All three couples return during Nocturne No.2.  They awkwardly acknowledge one another before returning to their partners.  There is an ominous sense that some of them have met before under different circumstances -- some have secrets to protect -- that the fragile status quo must be maintained.  This section is filled with gorgeous lifts that were beautifully executed by all three couples.

'New York Export: Opus Jazz' was created in 1958 for Jerome Robbins' Ballets: USA and first performed at Gian Carlo Menotti's first Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto, Italy that year.  When put in the context of 'West Side Story' which Robbins choreographed in 1957 it seems derivative and not particularly imaginative.  The jazz score by Robert Prince and the scenery by Ben Shahn add to the late 50's atmosphere without seeming very special. 

The ballet is for 16 dancers in black tights and colorful T-shirts with matching sneakers for the first four sections:  'Entrance: Group Dance'; 'Statics'; 'Improvisations'; and 'Passage for Two'.  


Dancers in the opening sections of Jerome Robbins' 'New York Export: Opus Jazz'
Photo by Erin Baiano
In the final section, 'Theme, Variations and Fugue' the dancers switch to white sweatshirts and sneakers and Shahn's backdrop switches from black on white to colorful.


Dancers in the final section of Robbins' 'New York Export: Opus Jazz'
Photo by Erin Baiano
These dancers are used to performing in Justin Peck's contemporary 'sneaker' ballets and they easily adapt to the 50's vernacular of 'Opus Jazz'.  So in this day and age, 'Opus Jazz' is nothing extraordinary for them or the audience.  On this program it just seemed redundant.

*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

The Company's 2019 winter season was a bit of a roller coaster ride with a few highs and several lows and twists and turns.  We're anxious to give our new artistic direction a chance to settle into their roles and take ownership for New York City Ballet's future.

2/01/19)

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

SAB on 'Live from Lincoln Center'

We taped the School of American Ballet Workshop Performance shown on 'Live from Lincoln Center' on PBS on Sunday afternoon.  It seemed like a strange time to air it -- but maybe it was smart counter-programming for PBS to spotlight these graceful young athletes as an antidote to all of that football mayhem on other channels.  The broadcast was extremely well done.

We had seen two of the three Workshop performances back in June, so we had a pretty good idea of the shape of the performances.  What was truly exceptional, though, was how well they were filmed and pulled together as a coherent TV show.  Too often, dance on television is difficult to watch because the cameras insist on close-ups or tracking an individual dancer when there is a larger -- and usually better -- stage picture that is being ignored.  Here the cameras pulled back to include the entire stage (or at least the entire dancer), closing in for close-ups only when there were infrequent static moments.  Feet were not chopped off and there was also sufficient screen space around the dancers to allow them to move -- and boy can they move!

By the way, here's a link to Alistair Macaulay's review of the broadcast in last Friday's New York Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/12/arts/dance/live-from-lincoln-center-to-air-curtain-up.html?


Beyond praising this broadcast, Macaulay bemoans the lack of American companies in the high-definition broadcast of dance performances.  I would add that this in part due to the intransigence of the various unions required to stage and broadcast dance -- they have allowed the market to shift to overseas dance companies.
Balanchine's 'Serenade' at the 2014 SAB Workshop Performances.  Addie Tapp's grand jete among the corps.
Still from 'Live from Lincoln Center' broadcast.

Balanchine's 'Serenade' is really about all of the dancers -- the seventeen member corps as well as the five principals -- interacting and creating beautiful shifting patterns and perhaps telling a story or several stories or no story at all.  Suki Schorer's meticulous and vivid staging was beautifully captured on camera.  We got close enough to the student dancers to feel the adrenalin rush of their performance as well as their caring, careful execution of Mr. B's steps and never losing the beauty of his sweeping patterns.  And we got a brief snippet of Ms. Schorer preparing the students for the performance and another snippet of the leads, 16-year-old Dammiel Cruz, talking about his training and preparation.

In the excerpts from the Balanchine/Danilova 'Coppelia' we got close enough to see the solemnity and mischievous joy of 24 little girls dancing in one of Mr. B's great ballets for children.  And we could watch them interact with four lovely student ballerinas -- providing each with an animated frame of changing patterns for their solos.  Then we saw the concentration of 18 advanced students making the best case for the 'War and Discord' divertissement -- one of Mr. B's least persuasive pieces of choreography.


Finale tableau from Balanchine's 'Swan Lake' with Alston Macgill and Joshua Shutkind.
Still from PBS 'Live from Lincoln Center' broadcast.
Then in Balanchine's one-act 'Swan Lake' we saw the ballet cycle of life happening before our eyes -- Darci Kistler, who was coached in 'Swan Lake' by Alexandra Danilova for her Workshop performance in 1980, coaching Alston Macgill in 'Swan Lake' for the 2014 Workshop performances -- promising student taught by former star ballerina becomes a radiant star ballerina who becomes an inspiring teacher for the next generation of promising students.

One thing to note here is that the 'Live from Lincoln Center camerawork brought us close to the gallant partners, especially in 'Serenade' and 'Swan Lake', who allowed their ballerinas to shine.  Having watched them in Adagio Classes with Jock Soto and Darci Kistler, I've come to appreciate the special accomplishments of these self-effacing young men.  This broadcast allowed the entire viewing audience to see their strength, their poise, their determination to get beyond the mechanics of a partnership into the artistry and chemistry that make each pairing special.


The Fourth Movement of Balanchine's 'Western Symphony'.  Clara Miller wows the corps with her pointe work.
Still from PBS 'Live from Lincoln Center' broadcast.
Finally, we witnessed the exuberance of the final movement of Balanchine's 'Western Symphony'.  Susan Pilare, the wonderful SAB teacher and stager, drove her student cast hard in the months leading up to the June workshop, but then encouraged them to go on stage and have fun.  They obviously did -- and the PBS audience did, too.  It was a wonderful conclusion for a wonderful broadcast.  

Bravo, PBS 'Live from Lincoln Center'!  Bravo, SAB faculty and students!

Saturday, April 26, 2014

2014 School of American Ballet Workshop Program -- It's all about the anniversaries

When I first learned of the program Peter Martins had selected for the School of American Ballet's 2014 workshops (on Saturday, May 31st at 2pm and 8pm and gala performance on Tuesday, June 3rd at 7pm) it seemed a bit of a jumble.  But the more I've looked at it the more Peter's choices make sense to me.

First, it's all Balanchine choreography, because he co-founded the School with Lincoln Kirstein in 1934 -- making 2014 the School's 80th anniversary year.

The opening work will be 'Serenade' to Tschaikovsky's 'Serenade for Strings' -- because it was the first work that Balanchine choreographed in America.  He made it in 1934 (also it's 80th anniversary) for SAB students.  According to legend Balanchine incorporated things that actually happened in the School during that first year -- creating each section for the number of students who showed up for class that day; using a student's late arrival for class and finding her place in the opening formation; incorporating a student's stumble and fall to the floor.


The opening moments of Balanchine's 'Serenade' from an earlier SAB Workshop performance, 
photo by Paul Kolnik
But 'Serenade' is far from improvised and remains one of the most cherished works of the Balanchine repertory.  It will be staged by Suki Schorer for the workshop.  Suki has staged this work many times before for SAB performances -- and also for companies around the world as a repetiteur for the Balanchine Trust.  

For anyone who wants to know what dancing in 'Serenade' feels like, I suggest that they get their hands on Jenifer Ringer's new book, 'Dancing Through It', wherein she describes just how dancing in 'Serenade' (at the Washington Ballet School, at SAB and at NYC Ballet) changed her life. 


Jenifer Ringer & Philip Neal in Balanchine's 'Serenade, photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet


The second work will be selections from the last act of 'Coppelia' which was co-staged by Balanchine and Alexandra Danilova in 1974 (40th anniversary) for New York City Ballet -- based on original choreography by Arthur Saint-Leon in 1870, restaged by Petipa in 1884 (130th anniversary) and by Cechetti in 1894 (120th anniversary).  The Petipa/Cechetti version is the one that Balanchine and Danilova would have known from their student days at the Maryinsky in Saint Petersburg.  Mme. Danilova had a long and distinguished stage career and was a noted interpreter of Swanilda, the heroine, in 'Coppelia'.


Alexandra Danilova coaching Helgi Tomasson & Patricia McBride in 'Coppelia',
photo by Martha Swope

The selections from 'Coppelia' are being staged by SAB several SAB faculty members -- Sheryl Ware, Katrina Killian, Lisa de Ribere, Yvonne Borree, and Jock Soto.

When Mme. Danilova began to teach at SAB in 1964 (50th anniversary), she persuaded Balanchine to present the annual workshops as a way to showcase the students' talent and hard work and give them invaluable on-stage experience. Balanchine resisted calling them 'graduation' performances because it sounded too final and too judgmental, but agreed that a public showcase at the end of the school year for a select audience would be appropriate. The first workshop was performed in 1965, making the workshops in June, 2014 the 50th workshop performances. 

Of course, Peter Martins knows that the inclusion of 24 little girls in this section will add to the demand for workshop tickets, as parents, grandparents, uncles, aunts, and siblings will have to be accommodated.

Balanchine's one-act 'Swan Lake' based on Ivanov's choreography of the lakeside scenes for the Maryinsky was also selected by Martins as a tribute to Mme. Danilova, who was a renowned Odette/Odile.  


Alexandra Danilova as Odile in 'Swan Lake', photo from the Bettman Archive

Balanchine created this 1-act version for Maria Tallchief (his third wife) who has been deemed America's first native-born prima ballerina.  There is a wonderful photo of Mme. Danilova coaching Darci Kistler and Cornell Crabtree for the 1980 SAB workshop. 


Cornell Crabtree and Darci Kistler being coached by Alexandra Danilova for the 1980 SAB Workshop,
photo by Carolyn George
Darci, of course, went on to a distinguished career at New York City Ballet where in 1982 she was the last dancer to be promoted to principal by Balanchine before his death in 1983.  She became a full-time member of the SAB faculty in 1994 (20th anniversary) and retired from NYCB in 2010. Darci is staging the 'Swan Lake' excerpt -- symbolically closing the circle of ballet life -- student-performer-teacher.


It will be interesting to see if they use the ice cave scenery and/or the black costumes for the corps that are the current decor for the New York City Ballet version or hark back to earlier, more traditional decor. 

The last work on the program will be the final movement (Rondo) of 'Western Symphony', the four movement work to traditional American folk music orchestrated by Hershey Kay that Balanchine created in 1954 (60th anniversary). 'Western Symphony' is Balanchine's buoyant tribute to the mythical American West of cowpokes and dance-hall girls. The finale finds the enormous cast all on stage doing fouettes as the curtain descends.  It's a favorite workshop closing ballet because it provides parts for lots of advanced students to perform a high-spirited, yet classical piece to familiar music.  

The original fourth movement cast was led by Tanaquil LeClercq and Jacques d'Amboise.  LeClercq was Balanchine's muse (and his fourth wife) from the late 1940's through the mid-1950's when this work was created.  Known both for her superb classical technique and her sly humor she was ideally cast as the strutting dance hall queen in the extravagant, black hat:  
Tanaquil LeClercq in costume for 'Western Symphony'
You can find a black & white video of the original cast performing the entire work here:
http://www.ina.fr/video/VDD11021500/western-symphony-video.html
The music in this video is extraordinarily fast, but the insouciant personalities of LeClercq and d'Amboise come through clearly in the fourth movement (Rondo).

The excerpt from 'Western Symphony' will be staged by Susan Pilarre who has staged it for several prior SAB workshop performances.

So this workshop program has a lot to do with anniversaries and tributes.  It provides challenging roles for the students, interesting contrasts in mood and style, and ends with a crowd pleasing bang!  

In order to get a jump on all of those little girls' families, go to:
https://www.sab.org/news_events/workshop_performances/tickets.php 
for tickets to the Saturday, May 31st performances, or to:
https://net.sab.org/development-/workshop-benefit-ticket-order-form--for tickets to the Gala Workshop Performance on June 3rd. You'll see the ballet stars of the next generation performing in works by the greatest choreographer of the last century.