Passage to Dawn is a series of choreographed video tableaux created in partnership with renowned choreographer and dancer Benjamin Millepied. Maiyet commissioned the films, along with an exclusive track, “Where I Belong,” by London Grammar, as a complement to its Spring/Summer 2015 collection.
Millepied’s resulting creation, a modern “symphonie choreographique,” is based on Daphnis and Chloé, a Greek pastoral love story that is the only known work of the 2nd century AD Greek novelist and romancerLongus. The project was shot using a super slow motion video camera and filmed on location in Los Angeles with the participation of dancers from L.A. Dance Project. Costumes for the cast were specially created by Maiyet, based on pieces from the Spring/Summer 2015 collection.
In the last scene of the first act of American Ballet Theater’s “The Nutcracker,” choreographed by Alexei Ratmansky, a gentle snow suddenly turns into a blizzard, a thrilling dark detour in this acclaimed production. But after last year’s harsh winter, Ballet Theater has had enough. Or perhaps after five years, it has been unable to find a real toehold in this city’s crowded Nutcracker marketplace. Either way, the company is off to Southern California: Beginning next year, Ballet Theater’s “The Nutcracker” will become an annual tradition at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa. Which means this is your last chance to see Mr. Ratmansky’s astute interpretation of the holiday classic in New York. All the ingredients are there: the opening party, the Christmas tree on steroids, a world tour of cultural stereotypes. But the great adventure at the heart of this version is the journey from adolescence to adulthood, dramatized with touching innocence and wonder. (Through Dec. 21, Brooklyn Academy of Music, 30 Lafayette Avenue, at Ashland Place, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org.)
‘Getting to the Nutcracker’ on screen in Jamestown
Published: December 02, 2014 01:00 AM
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“Getting to the Nutcracker” is a feature-length, behind-the-scenes documentary focusing on a ballet school preparing for their production.
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Film meets ballet in a holiday offering from Flickers and the Rhode Island International Film Festival Thursday at 7 p.m.
The ballet is the Christmas classic “The Nutcracker,” and the film, Serene Meshel-Dillman’s “Getting to the Nutcracker.” The feature-length, behind-the-scenes documentary focuses on the Marat Daukayev School of Ballet in Los Angeles from auditions to rehearsal with the young dancers (boys and girls ages 3 to 18) and their families profiled.
Celebrate the season with this family holiday treat at the Jamestown Arts Center, 18 Valley St. Tickets are $10, $7 for kids up to age 12. (Special group rates are available by calling the Festival office in advance of the screening.) Additionally, all attendees will be entered in a free drawing for a full Festival pass worth $350. Online ticketing: http://www.RIFilmFest.org or call (401) 861-4445.
The ballerina Alla Sizova in costume for “The Sleeping Beauty” with the Kirov BalletCredit The Leningrad Kirov Ballet
Alla Sizova, one of the leading ballerinas of the Kirov Ballet during the 1960s and ’70s and an early partner of Rudolf Nureyev, died on Nov. 23 in St. Petersburg. She was 75.
A friend, Marina Gendel, said the cause was cancer.
Ms. Sizova’s outsize talent was apparent even before she joined the Kirov (now the Maryinsky) in 1958. When she was still a student at the Vaganova Ballet Academy in Leningrad (as St. Petersburg was then known), her extraordinarily high jump and astounding technical prowess as the Queen of the Dryads in a school performance of “Don Quixote” won raves from the Leningrad critics and a nickname, Flying Sizova.
Her graduation performance was the pas de deux from “Le Corsaire,” in which she was partnered by the young Nureyev. He challenged her to substitute the more difficult Dryads variation for the usual one, and to further increase its difficulty by adding double pirouettes to a series of virtuosic steps known as Italian fouett?s. Few ballerinas, if any, have since repeated that feat.
Ms. Sizova was part of an exceptional generation of Kirov stars that, besides Nureyev, included Irina Kolpakova, Alla Osipenko, Yuri Soloviev and Natalia Makarova. Ms. Sizova was paired regularly with Nureyev in their first years with the Kirov, and the Soviet authorities gave them an apartment to share.
(In her 2007 biography of Nureyev, Julie Kavanagh quotes the ballerina Ninel Kurgapina recalling Nureyev’s reaction: “They’re giving me a flat! With Sizova! They think by doing so I’ll eventually marry her! Never!!”)
This group of dancers caused a sensation when they were seen on tour in the West in the early 1960s, Ms. Sizova not least among them. Reviewing a Kirov performance of “The Sleeping Beauty” at the Metropolitan Opera House in September 1961 for The New York Times, an enthralled John Martin began by writing, “If Alla Sizova of the Leningrad Kirov Ballet would like to have the City of New York, all she has to do this morning is ask for it.”
Alla Ivanova Sizova was born on Sept. 23, 1939, in Moscow, only weeks after Germany invaded Poland and started World War II. Her family moved to Leningrad soon after, but in 1941, Alla and her only sibling, a sister, were evacuated with their mother to the Ural region in the east. Her father remained in Leningrad, which by then was under siege by German forces, to work as a driver delivering bread.
The family was reunited in Leningrad toward the end of war, and Ms. Sizova began to attend an after-school dance program. Her talent was noticed. She was accepted at the prestigious Leningrad Choreographic School (later to be named after Agrippina Vaganova), where she was taught by Natalia Kamkova.
Unusually, she was taken into the Kirov Ballet with the rank of soloist, and promoted to principal soon after. During her first three years with the company, she performed at least 14 principal roles, including Masha in “The Nutcracker,” Princess Florine and Aurora in “The Sleeping Beauty,” Myrtha in “Giselle” and Katerina in “The Stone Flower.”
A back injury kept Ms. Sizova offstage for two years in the mid-1960s, but her career continued to flourish well into the ’70s, with particular acclaim for her performances in “Giselle” and “Cinderella” and her spirited Kitri in “Don Quixote.”
Ms. Sizova also created roles in a number of ballets, including Igor Belsky‘s “Leningrad Symphony,” Konstantin Sergeyev’s “Hamlet,” and Oleg Vinogradov’s “The Enchanted Prince” and “The Fairy of the Round Mountains.”
After Nureyev defected to the West in 1961, Soloviev, another brilliant young dancer, became her regular partner; in later years she also danced with the young Mikhail Baryshnikov.
Ms. Sizova married Mikhail Serebrennikov, a television producer and director, in the early ’70s. They had a son, Ilya, who was 6 when Mr. Serebrennikov died of an aneurysm in 1980. Ms. Sizova retired from the Kirov in 1988 and accepted a teaching position at the Vaganova Academy.
By 1991 Mr. Vinogradov was running the Kirov-affiliated Universal Ballet Academy in Washington and invited Ms. Sizova to join the faculty. The Soviet Union was dissolving, and Ms. Sizova was able to move with her son to Washington.
There she became a much-loved teacher, noted for her emphasis on musicality above technical proficiency and for her kindness to her pupils.
Her son had meanwhile returned to live in St. Petersburg, and when he died in a drowning accident in 2004, Ms. Sizova, too, went back to Russia. Mr. Vinogradov tried to persuade her to come back to the United States, or to rejoin the Vaganova Academy, but she refused and became a recluse, rarely seeing former colleagues or pupils while living with her sister, Nina Ivanova, who survives her, along with a niece.
Ms. Sizova developed Alzheimer’s disease in the late 2000s and received a diagnosis of cancer four months before her death.
Sophia Kishkovsky contributed reporting from Moscow.