Showing posts with label Richard Strauss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Strauss. Show all posts

Saturday, October 8, 2016

New York City Ballet: Matinee on Sunday, September 25th . . .

SUNDAY MATINEE, SEPTEMBER 25, 3:00 PM 

BALANCHINE x VIENNA

DIVERTIMENTO NO. 15: *Pollack, Pereira, *Laracey, *Isaacs, M. Fairchild, *Finlay, *Ball, *Gordon [Conductor: Litton]

EPISODES: A. Stafford, Suozzi, Lowery, J. Angle, Phelan, *Chamblee, Mearns, Janzen [Conductor: Otranto]

VIENNA WALTZES: Krohn, Janzen, Bouder, Garcia, *Pollack, Stanley, Schumacher, Lovette, Finlay, *Reichlen, J. Angle [Conductor: Litton]

* First Time in Role on Friday, September 23

The Company's rationale for this program is that it brought together three works by George Balanchine to music of composers who lived and worked in Vienna.  While I admit that this is true, it doesn't explain the enormous differences in both the music and the choreography.  In fact, the greater miracle of the program is that all three works were choreographed by a single choreographer.

George Balanchine had first choreographed 'Caracole' to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's  'Divertimento No. 15 in B-flat major, K. 287' in 1952.  Four years later when the Company was invited to participate in a Mozart Festival at the American Shakespeare Theater in Stratford, CT, Balanchine used the music and much of the earlier choreography for a new work that he titled 'Divertimento No. 15'.

'Divertimento' uses eight soloists -- five women and three men -- and a corps of eight women.  The costumes by Karinska evoke Vienna with tutus for the women that are based on Viennese window shades and vaguely military tunics for the men -- all in shades of yellow and pale blue.  The dancers are deployed in a kaleidoscopic array of patterns -- ever evolving and dissolving.  With its odd numbers of male and female soloists Balanchine seems to take great delight in creating shifting arrangements -- two trios and one couple; two couples and a quartet; five women and three men in same-sex circles; a line of five women supported by three men; on-and-on.

In the opening movement, 'Minuet', the soloists are introduced weaving through the corps more regimented patterns.  At the end of the movement the eight soloists are left center stage as the corps bows and withdraws.  In the following 'Theme and Variations' each soloist is shown individually in variations of crystalline grace.  

The 'Andante' has been called a pas de deux for five ballerinas and three cavaliers.  In it each ballerina in succession is partnered by one of the three cavaliers -- the exit of each couple overlapping with the entrance of the next.  The movement ends with a dance for all eight soloists to a cadenza for violin and viola by John Colman that was added in the 1960's.  The five women and three men then form two same-sex circles each with one arm raised before bowing to each other and leaving the stage.  The 'Finale' brings together the entire cast in an exhilarating romp.


The five ballerinas of Balanchine's 'Divertimento No. 15' from a recent performance.
 (Abi Stafford, Meagan Fairchild & Lauren King, I think).
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
'Divertimento No. 15' often serves as an introduction of promising young dancers to the Company's audience.  At Sunday's matinee six of the eight soloists had made their debuts the previous Friday evening -- Ashly Isaacs, Erica Pereira, Indiana Woodward, Harrison Ball, Chase Finlay and Joseph Gordon.  Dancing the 'Theme' of the second movement Mr. Ball and Mr. Gordon were refined and elegant.  Ms. Woodward was a bit edgy in the 'First Variation', taking particular delight in its shifts of weight and emphasizing its off-centeredness.  Ms. Pereira danced the 'Second Variation' with delicate crispness.  The veteran, Ashley Laracey, performed the 'Third Variation' with a mixture of natural graciousness and politisse.  Ms. Isaacs bounded through the 'Fourth Variation' with vigor and grace.  Mr. Finlay danced the 'Fifth Variation' with dignity and ballon.  Megan Fairchild, dancing with a new expansiveness since her return from Broadway, sparkled brightly in the 'Sixth Variation'.

In this most egalitarian of ballets, Balanchine takes care to provide interesting passages for each of the soloists, but it is Ms. Fairchild and Mr. Finlay who occupy the center of his formations and provide the overall focus.  This was a beautifully executed performance and provided a coolly effervescent start to our 2016-17 ballet season.

Egged on by Lincoln Kirstein, Balanchine conceived 'Episodes' in 1959 in conjunction with Martha Graham as a piece that would use all of the orchestral music of Anton von Webern.  In the first section to Webern's 'Passacaglia and Six PiecesGraham choreographed the rivalry between Mary Queen of Scots and Queen Elizabeth I as a tennis match.  Graham herself played Mary with Sallie Wilson, a NYC Ballet ballerina at the time, as Elizabeth.  Balanchine choreographed the remaining five sections -- including a long solo for Paul Taylor, who was a dancer with the Graham company at the time.  Currently, 'Episodes' is performed by the Company without either the opening Graham section or the Taylor solo. 

In 1986, Paul Taylor taught his solo to Peter Frame, one of the Company's principal dancers.  From 1986 until 1989, Mr. Frame danced the 'Taylor' solo in the Company's performances of 'Episodes'.  When Peter retired from the Company in 1990, the 'Taylor' solo was also dropped.  Peter Frame discusses learning the solo from Paul Taylor in his blog here:




As you will learn, Peter mounted the 'Episodes' solo for Miami City Ballet in 2013.  Peter is on the faculty of Ballet Academy East and teaches Weight Training for Men (a preventive injury program) at The School of American Ballet.

The four remaining movements of 'Episodes' as currently performed by the Company are austere -- verging on arid.  In the first, 'Symphony, Opus 21', Abi Stafford and Sean Suozzi fronted a corps of three couples -- the bland leading the bland thru a bleak musical landscape.

Abi Stafford and Sean Suozzi in the 'Symphony, Opus 21' section of George Balanchine's 'Episodes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet

Savannah Lowery and Jared Angel danced 'Five Pieces, Opus 10' -- a series of five short duets on a dark stage under spotlights that includes the grotesque but memorable 'antlered man' image plus several other uncomfortable and slightly erotic moments -- always ending abruptly and inconclusively.
  
Savannah Lowery in the 'Five Pieces, Opus 10' section of George Balanchine's 'Episodes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Here's a link to a video of part of the 'Five Pieces, Opus 10' danced by Teresa Reichlen and Ask la Cour on the Company's website:




Unity Phelan and Preston Chamblee danced 'Concerto, Opus 24' with a corps of four women.  The focus here is on the manipulation of the ballerina by her partner through a series of convoluted, evolving steps and poses -- almost as if she is a puppet and he the puppet master.  Ms. Phelan and Mr. Chamblee are to be congratulated on presenting these knotty movements with a semblance of continuity despite the Webern music.  Mr. Chamblee's whose first performance in this role was on the previous Friday evening continues to make very positive impressions as he takes on an ever expanding selection of the Company's repertory.

The 'Ricercata in six voices from Bach's Musical Offering' was lead by Sara Mearns and Russell Janzen backed by a corps of 12 women.  Webern's use of Bach's 'Musical Offering' as the basis for his composition makes it by far the most accessible music of 'Episodes'.  Ms. Mearns, ably supported by the tall and confident Mr. Janzen, amplifies whatever shreds of lyricism and drama exist in the score and makes another strong case for her musicality and sense of theater.

In 'Episodes' I am always put off by Webern's music which mostly seems like disjointed squiggles and burps.  It is certainly one of the most problematic scores for the Company's dancers to interpret since it lacks much character or continuity and often lacks any dance rhythm.

I wrote extensively about 'Vienna Waltzes' in a post last spring which you can read here:




So here I'll concentrate on the cast in this performance.

In 'Tales of the Vienna Woods' Rebecca Krohn and Russell Jansen were convincing as a shy couple whose love blooms over the course of the movement.  Their waltzing in the woods of silvery trees with ten supporting couples conveyed both the innocence of the mid-19th century and of their relationship.

Ashley Bouder -- recently returned to the stage from maternity leave and partnered by Gonzalo Garcia -- led 'Voices of Spring' with confident elan and controlled bravura.  It seemed surprising that the audience response to Ms. Bouder's performance was fairly muted while Mr. Garcia's solo was greeted with a large (and disruptive) ovation.  Perhaps Ms. Bouder's failure to call attention to her technical feats with her pre-motherhood look-at-me antics left the audience without sufficient clues to her virtuosity.  Let's hope that her return to the stage brings greater maturity worthy of her undisputed artistry and technical brilliance.

Erica Pereira and Troy Schumacher did what they could to enliven the 'Explosion Polka' -- executing the very fast heel-and-toe footwork with extraordinary precision even at Maestro Andrew Litton's breakneck pace.  Still, they can't get through this section fast enough for me.

Lauren Lovette -- another Friday evening debutante -- and Chase Finlay lead the 'Gold and Silver Waltz' from Lehar's 'Merry Widow' which makes allusions to the characters and plot of that operetta.  Ms. Lovette who dances many bubbly lyrical roles in the repertory seemed wildly miscast as the mysterious woman in black.  While I love her dearly in most other roles, she lacks the physical presence and temperament to portray the aloof, worldly widow.  Her partnership with Mr. Finlay here (they were engaged to be married a little over a year ago, then broke up) seems awkward here and they never rose to the heights that can make this most complex waltz sequence memorable.

Teresa Reichlen had also made her debut in the 'Waltzes from Der Rosenkavalier' on Friday evening.  In the opening sequences she was compelling as the innocent waif dreaming of an imaginary ballroom with ghostly waltzing couples and a materializing/dematerializing dance partner -- Jared Angle.  With a deep, deep backbend she left the stage just as the chandeliers blazed on for the finale.  With 25 waltzing couples -- including all five principal couples -- magnified by the wall of mirrors across the back of the stage, it was once again a magnificent theatrical spectacle.


Massed waltzing couples in the finale of Balanchine's 'Vienna Waltzes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
There is no question that every performance of 'Vienna Waltzes' that we see carries whiffs of nostalgia for dancers who have long since retired from the stage -- the original cast, memorable replacements, even some casting misfires along the way.  Here is a video of the 'Der Rosenkavalier' section with the incomparable Suzanne Farrell -- for whom Balanchine created the role -- dancing with Adam Luders.  It's taken from the 1983 Balanchine Tribute which was aired by the PBS show 'Dance in America': 




Still, 'Vienna Waltzes' remains a showcase for each succeeding generation of dancers to leave their own after images as they deepen their interpretations of a role or advance from one role to the next.  Sometimes they remake themselves to fit these roles, sometimes they simply emerge in them fully formed and occasionally their interpretations evolve into memorable artistry.


Monday, June 13, 2016

New York City Ballet Matinee on Sunday, May 8th

SUNDAY MATINEE, MAY 8, 3:00 PM (Conductor: Sill)

ALL BALANCHINE:

BALLO DELLA REGINA: T. Peck, Garcia, Laracey, Pereira, Isaacs, King 

KAMMERMUSIK NO. 2: Krohn, Ramasar, A. Stafford, Danchig-Waring [Solo Piano: Grant] 

VIENNA WALTZES: Reichlen, T. Angle, M. Fairchild, Huxley, Pereira, Schumacher, Krohn, la Cour, Mearns, J. Angle

For this matinee performance we sat in the Orchestra, Row S, rather than in our normal seats on the right side of the Second Ring.  While the sight lines were fine, the sound from the orchestra was spotty and wan.  There were times in 'Vienna Waltzes' where all we heard were the double basses.  Although the Company sells some seats as 'partial view' at reduced prices, they should really designate these particular seats as 'partial sound'.

The three works on this program were all created by George Balanchine during a concentrated period from June 1977 through January 1978.

George Balanchine choreographed 'Ballo della Regina' in 1978 to ballet music intended for Giuseppe Verdi's opera 'Don Carlo'.  Verdi created a libretto for the ballet about a fisherman searching for the perfect pearl to present to the queen of Spain (who is a character in the opera).  Balanchine alludes to Verdi's story with an iridescent decor, a few 'swimming' movements for the ballerina and a 'searching' motif for her cavalier.

Balanchine's primary reason for creating the ballet was to showcase Merrill Ashley's extraordinary speed, clarity and sunniness.  Although Ashley had been with the Company since 1967 and had danced featured and principal roles in large swaths of the NYCB repertory, this was the first (of only two) ballets that Balanchine choreographed for her.
  
George Balanchine, Merrill Ashley and Robert Weiss working on 'Ballo della Regina'.
Photo by Martha Swope
It remains a daunting challenge for the most accomplished of ballerinas.
Merrill Ashley dancing in Balanchine's 'Ballo della Regina'.
Photo by Martha Swope

Here's a clip of Ms. Ashley discussing the creation of 'Ballo della Regina' (1:29):



And here's another made while she was staging the ballet for The Royal Ballet (3:01):



At this performance Tyler Peck met the technical challenges with great glee. 
 
Tyler Peck in Balanchine's 'Ballo della Regina'.
Photo by Julieta Cervantes for NY Times
Gonzalo Garcia 
in the role Balanchine created for Robert Weiss offered Ms. Peck tremendous support in the pas de deux and displayed his own sparkle in the male solos.  Ms. Peck and Mr. Garcia are ideally suited to take on the ballet's technical demands while remaining bouyant and carefree.  Their jaunty presentation stopped just short of cockiness.  Ashley Isaacs and Lauren King seemed particularly delightful among the four demi-soloists.

Balanchine's created 'Kammermusik No. 2' to Paul Hindemith's music of the same name for piano and orchestra in 1978.  It is an astringent, spiky work for two principal couples and a corps of eight men.  At times the eight-man corps dancing primarily to the music of the orchestra is the star of this ballet.  They execute the complicated knots and clots that Balanchine usually created for the female corps -- providing both a frame and a counterpoint to the dancing of the four principals.
The eight-man corps in Balanchine's 'Kammermusik No. 2'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet

Of the principals, Rebecca Krohn and Amar Ramasar definitely understand the hard-edged, austere choreography that Balanchine devised to the complicated piano part.  Abi Stafford and Adrian Danchig-Waring seemed both less comfortable and less assured.  It's difficult music and requires razor-sharp reflexes and clarity of execution.  Blurring of movements makes the whole thing look sloppy.  There are several passages in canon for the two women that tend to look uncoordinated unless they both dance with conviction. 


Abi Stafford and Rebecca Krohn with the all-male corps in Balanchine's 'Kammermusik No. 2'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
'Vienna Waltzeswhich Balanchine created in 1977 is a five-part survey and celebration of 19th century social dancing.  The transforming scenery by Rouben Ter-Artunian sets the stage for each of the five sections and acts as an important adjunct of the choreography.  The sumptuous costumes are the last created by Mme. Barbara Karinska for the Company.

Balanchine seeded the original principal cast with European dancers -- Karin von Aroldingen (with Sean Lavery) in the first part, Helgi Tomasson (with Patricia McBride) in the second, Peter Martins (with Kay Mazzo) in the fourth, and Jorge Donn (with Suzanne Farrell) in the fifth -- because he believed they had grown up amidst the Viennese waltz tradition and were therefore more naturally attuned to its refined execution.  The third part is a polka which he created for Sara Leland and Bart Cook.

Here's a video of Ms. von Aroldingen and Mr. Martins dancing together in the fourth section (Lehar's 'Gold and Silver Waltz') which clearly demonstrates their waltzing dexterity (8:45):

The first 'movement' is set to Johann Strauss II's 'G'Schichten Aus Dem Wienerwald (Tales of the Vienna Woods)' from 1868.  The setting is a magical silvery forest with five trees scattered across center stage.

The ten corps couples waltzing amid the trees in 'Tales of the Vienna Woods' from Balanchine's 'Vienna Waltzes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
They form a kind of obstacle course to be negotiated by the dancers 
 -- Teresa Reichlen and Tyler Angle with ten corps couples -- and contributing to the complexity of Balanchine's choreography.  The women are in pale pink ball gowns and the men are in military uniforms -- perhaps cadets and their dates taking a woodland break from a military ball.  Ms. Reichlen and Mr. Angle projected the right combination of flirtatious innocence and romantic ardor -- while proving that American dancers of the current generation can indeed waltz.


Teresa Reichlen and Tyler Angle in the 'Tales from the Vienna Woods' section of Balanchine's 'Vienna Waltzes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
The second 'movement' is set to Johann Strauss II's 'Fruhlingstimmen (Voices of Spring)' from 1848.  It is the only section done on pointe.  The music begins with a kind of prelude while three of Ter-Artuniun's five trees rise into the overarching forest canopy.  Megan Fairchild and Anthony Huxley and the corps of eight corps women gamboled through this section with the abandon of forest nymphs.

Megan Fairchild and Joaquin De Luz leading an earlier performance of 'Voices of Spring'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet

As the last two Ter-Artuniun's trees disappeared into the flies we are greeted by the rather grotesquely attired dancers in the 'Explosions-Polka' -- set to a polka by Johann Strauss II from 1848.  Erica Pereira and Troy Schumacher executed the rapid heel-and-toe steps with great glee backed-up by three corps couples.  However, since 1977 the humor in this section has palled and as usual in recent years I couldn't wait until it was over.


 Ana Sophia Scheller and Sean Suozzi lead a different cast in the 'Explosion Polka' from George Balanchine's 'Vienna Waltzes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Now Ter-Aruniun's forest completely disappears and the stage is transformed into a belle epoque society cafe with art nouveau overlays.  There Chase Finlay's prince met Rebecca Krohn's merry widow to the strains of Franz Lehar's 'Gold und Silver Walzer (Gold and Silver Waltz)' from 1905.  Their waltzes amidst ten couples are among Balanchine's most complex and beautiful waltz variations.  It is worth returning to the video of von Aroldingen and Martins to enjoy the set transformation and these wonderful waltzes -- which were beautifully executed here by Mr. Finlay and especially Ms. Krohn. 


Ask la Cour and Rebecca Krohn in the 'Gold and Silver Waltz' movement of
George Balanchine's 'Vienna Waltzes'.  Chase Finlay replaced Mr. la Cour at this performance.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
After the final embrace of the prince and the merry widow -- an ending that Balanchine added after the initial performances to mollify critics who found their separation too harsh -- Ter-Artuniun's set transforms into a fin de siecle mirrored ballroom during the pensive opening phrases of the first sequence of waltzes from 'Der Rosenkavalierby Richard Strauss which were arranged by the composer in 1944.  Several couples in formal dress -- the women in white ball gowns with trains and long white gloves and the men in white tie and black tail coats -- criss-cross the stage. 


Sara Mearns in the 'Der Rosenkavalier' movement of 'Vienna Waltzes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
As the final couple leaves the stage, Sara Mearns appears alone in reverie.  She dances a private waltz, frequently joined by a seemingly phantom partner, Jared Angle.  Several couples whirl around them but Sara evenutally leaves the stage alone.  It is a breath-taking sequence and Ms. Mearns executed it with gorgeous drama.

With her exit the chandeliers blaze on and the casts of each prior movement swirl on and off stage -- lead by Ms. Reichlen and Tyler Angle.


Tyler Angle and Teresa Reichlen in the final movement of 'Vienna Waltzes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Gradually the stage fills with 50 dancers magnified by the mirrors covering the entire back wall in a triumphant whirlwind of complex choreography.  All 25 women suddenly drop into a reverence curtsey and the curtain falls.

Here's a link to a video of the final 'Der Rosenkavalier' movement of  'Viennna Waltzes' featuring Suzanne Farrell partnered by Adam Luders (13:45):



Dance lovers will also spot Kyra Nichols with Sean Lavery, Heather Watts, Judith Fugate, Karin von Aroldingen and Peter Martins, the Sackett brothers and many others.

If you'd like to see a more recent cast in only the swirling final minutes of 'Vienna Waltzes' here's a link to a NYC Ballet video (0:46):




The entire cast in the finale of George Balanchine's 'Vienna Waltzes'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet

Saturday, October 18, 2014

New York City Ballet -- Thursday, October 9, 2014

Thursday evening, October 9th, we went to New York State Theater to see New York City Ballet's '21st Century Choreographers' program -- basically the program from it's opening night gala (subtitled 'fashion's back at the ballet') with the addition of the new ballet by Alexei Ratmansky and the last minute subtraction of Christopher Wheeldon's 'This Bitter Earth'.  Even with this change, the program was way too long.

THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 9, 7:30 PM
MORGEN: *Reichlen, *Isaacs, *Krohn, *Catazaro, *Finlay, *Janzen [Conductor: Sill, Guest Soprano: Jennifer Zetlan]
CLEARING DAWN (New Greenstein/Schumacher): Bouder, Reichlen, Kretzschmar, Pazcoguin, Veyette, Prottas
pause
FUNÉRAILLES (New Liszt/Scarlett): T. Peck, R. Fairchild [Solo Piano: Chelton]
pause
BELLES-LETTRES (New Franck/Peck): Krohn, Lovette, Laracey, Pollack, J. Angle, Danchig-Waring, T. Angle, Stanley, Huxley [Conductor: Capps; Solo Piano: Walters]
PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION (New Ratmansky/Music by Modest Mussorgsky): Mearns, T. Peck, A. Stafford, Whelan, Smith, T. Angle, Danchig-Waring, Garcia, Ramasar, Gordon [Solo Piano: Grant]

Peter Martins' 'Morgen' started the evening.  Choreographed to 10 songs for soprano and orchestra by Richard Strauss, it is basically six dancers in search of a ballet.  There is a succession of nine pas de deux, as each of the three women dances with each of the three men among a grouping of five Doric columns, followed by a final coming together of all six dancers as dawn breaks over the temple ruins.
The opening night cast in Peter Martins' 'Morgen' with new costumes by Carolina Herrera.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
This entire cast was making their debuts on Thursday evening and frankly they looked unprepared for Martins' tricky, awkward partnering.  Ashley Isaacs seemed the best of the women -- throwing herself heedlessly into the arms of her partners.  Russell Jansen fared best among the men -- a strong, attentive partner to each of the women, particularly Teresa Reichlen.  The men, in their drab costumes, seem like anonymous Bunraku puppeteers manipulating the women in complex lifts and movements.  Perhaps this ballet could be subtitled 'misogyny among the ruins'.

The soprano, Jennifer Zetlan, shrill and distracting, seemed ill-suited to the Strauss material, which itself seems ill-suited for dance.  The new costumes by Carolina Herrera, however, look lovely on the women and move easily.

Troy Schumacher's new ballet, 'Clearing Dawn', uses music by Judd Greenstein played by a chamber sextet.  Troy uses a sextet of dancers (four women and two men) costumed by Thom Browne in chic grey, black and white prep school style uniforms.  The costumes were too tight, unfortunately restricting the dancers freedom of movement.

Andrew Veyette being fitted for his costume in 'Clearing Dawn' in the NYC Ballet costume shop while
Thom Browne looks on.  Photo by Matt Bockelman for NYTimes
The choreography looks like stylized schoolyard behavior -- two men in a fist fight, butch girl and man in a fist fight, mean girls intimidating the others, two showoffs (Bouder and Veyette).  It is all light and fun and harmless, but looks strenuous because of the tight costumes.
Georgina Pazcoguin, Ashley Bouder, Claire Kretzschmar, Andrew Veyette, David Prottas and Teresa Reichlen in Troy Schumacher's 'Clearing Dawn'.
Photo by  Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
'Funerailles' by Liam Scarlett to Franz Liszt piano music played on stage by Elaine Chelton is a murky pas de deux for Tiler Peck and Robert Fairchild all but swallowed up in costumes by Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen.  There are Soviet-style lifts and partnered maneuvers to the dramatic music, but the heavily embroidered costumes leave them blurry.
Tiler Peck and Robert Fairchild costumed by Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen in Liam Scarlett's 'Funerailles'.  Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Whether Ms. Burton's costume designs or Mr. Scarlett's choreography are individually worthy, together they fight to a nondescript draw -- dance lovers will resent the costumes and fashionistas will resent the movement.

'Belles-Lettres' choreographed by Justin Peck to the music of Cesar Franck with costumes designed by Mary Katrantzou is not one of Peck's best works.  It starts promisingly with four couples clustered around Anthony Huxley, who is seated on the arms of  two men with a third providing support behind him and the fourth at his feet.  The four women fill out the corners of what looks like a Buddhist mandala -- which then dissolves as the piece begins.
Justin Peck's 'Belles-Lettres' with costumes by Mary Katrantzou.  Photo by Paul Kolnik
Ms. Katrantzou's costumes for the women are long flesh-toned dresses with re-embroidered lace tops and lace 'head-ache-band' head pieces.  The men wear flesh-colored body suits appliqued with letters ('beautiful letters') in lace that give the impression on some (the Angle brothers and Huxley) of Tongan tattoos.

There are some beautifully constructed moments of partnering for the four couples, especially Lauren Lovette and Jared Angle, but they don't tell us much about their relationships.  Mr. Huxley is the outsider, sometimes rushing in to demand the group's attention, sometimes remaining aloof -- content to dance on his own.  Huxley has remarkable presence as 'the other' in this little society -- perhaps the artist striving for acceptance or refusing to conform.

Unfortunately, the patterns and dynamics for the full cast are the least memorable aspects of this piece.  In his other works, these have been among Peck's greatest strengths.  

At the conclusion, the women remove their lace head pieces.  In Balanchine's ballets loose hair is often a sign of romantic abandon, but here it adds nothing to the piece except removing something rather distracting from the heads of these four lovely women.
The full cast at the conclusion of Justin Peck's 'Belles-Lettres'.  Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Clearly the highpoint of the long evening was 'Pictures at an Exhibition' by Alexei Ratmansky which uses the piano suite of 16 short selections by Modest Mussorgsky, thrillingly played on the stage apron by Cameron Grant.  It features costumes by Adeline Andre and projections designed by Wendall K. Harrington, both derived from the paintings of Wassily Kandinsky.

The first section opens with nine dancers clustered in a square in front of a projection of Kandinsky's 'Color Study: Squares with Concentric Circles' -- their colorful costumes echoing the shapes and colors projected behind them -- the women in loose, translucent hip length smocks and the men in loose sleeveless tops and pants.  Soon Gonzalo Garcia breaks free to dance a solo while the rest watch intently. 
Gonzalo Garcia dancing the first solo in Ratmansky's 'Pictures at an Exhibition'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
The projection and the cast break up as Sara Mearns dances a spectacular solo to 'The Gnome'.  The extreme clarity of the shapes that Mearns etches in space in this remarkable solo are the major highlight of this ballet.
Sara Mearns in 'The Gnome' from Ratmansky's 'Pictures at an Exhibition'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
Elements of the Kandinsky 'Color Study' continue to skitter and converge on the projection screen at the back of the stage as the work progresses.

Wendy Whelan and Tyler Angle dance the first (and best) pas de deux to 'The Old Castle'.  Tyler is an assured partner for Wendy's shape shifting aerial presence -- a bird of prey, a ghostly wraith, a flickering flame, a hovering angel.   
Wendy Whelan and Tyler Angle in 'The Old Castle' from Ratmansky's 'Pictures at an Exhibition'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet
As usual with Ratmansky, the ten dancers are a community of individuals -- defined perhaps by the colors of their costumes, the music that they dance to, or the projections behind them -- but still themselves beneath the patina of score and decor.

There is a section for four women (Mearns, Whelan, Abi Stafford and Gretchen Smith) to 'Bydlo' that is playful and almost slapstick.  Tyler Angle and Joe Gordon engage in a kind of competition with support from the other three men (Garcia, Adrian Danchig-Waring and Amar Ramasar).  There are three more pas de deux -- for Smith and Danchig-Waring; Stafford and Gordon; and Tiler Peck and Garcia.  After a group number, there is a last high-flying, barely-in-control pas de deux for Mearns and Ramasar.
Sara Mearns and Amar Ramasar in 'Baba Yaga' from Ratmansky's 'Pictures at an Exhibition'.
Photo by Andrea Mohin for NY Times
Near the end, there is an ensemble piece where Whelan seems to re-enact the scene from 'Dances at a Gathering' where the man in brown crouches to touch the earth while the rest of the cast looks on.  

And finally, there is Cameron Grant brilliantly playing the magisterial 'The Great Gate of Kiev' while the cast slowly processes in opposing lines.
Entire cast in 'The Great Gate of Kiev' from Ratmansky's 'Pictures at an Exhibition'.
Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYC Ballet

Ratmansky's 'Pictures at an Exhibition' is a worthy addition to City Ballet's repertory.  Hopefully it will be programmed more congenially in the future when there are no screeching sopranos or ill-conceived costumes fighting for attention.