Category Archives: Ballet Zine

beat that! Millepied’s plans for the Paris Opéra


REPOSTED FROM DANCING TIMES

Millepied’s plans for the Paris Opéra : Wednesday, 04 February 2015

Benjamin Millepied has announced plans for the 2015–16 season of the Paris Opéra Ballet, the first he has programmed as director. It’s an ambitious season, with many new works, including one by new associate choreographer William Forsythe and a new production of The Nutcracker, to be choreographed by Arthur Pita, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, Liam Scarlett, Edouard Lock and Millepied.

Millepied announced his season alongside Stéphane Lissner, who has been general director of the Opéra since July 2014: the two leaders promise a new level of cooperation between the ballet and opera companies. The new Nutcracker will be performed as a double bill with Tchaikovsky’s opera Iolanta – as these works were performed together at their premiere in 1892. The five choreographers will create separate scenes for the new production.

Millepied has also commissioned new works from Justin Peck, Wayne McGregor, Jérôme Bel and himself. Peck’s work will be danced to Poulenc’s Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra, with designs by artist John Baldassari. McGregor’s piece will be set to Pierre Boulez’s Anthème II as part of an evening celebrating the composer.

Millepied, who danced at New York City Ballet (NYCB) from 1995 to 2011, brings an American slant with some of his programming. The season will include Balanchine’s Theme and Variations, Duo Concertant and Brahms-Schönberg Quartet, Jerome Robbins’ Opus 19/The Dreamer, Goldberg Variations and Other Dances. Justin Peck, the resident choreographer at NYCB, is represented by In Creases as well as his new commission; Christopher Wheeldon’s Polyphonia, created for NYCB, also joins the repertoire. The season will also include company premieres by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, Alexei Ratmansky and Maguy Marin.

There are just three evening-length revivals: Giselle and Rudolf Nureyev’s productions of Romeo and Juliet and La Bayadère. There will also be works staged in the foyer of the Opéra Garnier. Choreographer Boris Charmatz will stage a new event to open the season, with 20 dancers performing solos from the 20th-century repertoire in the public spaces of the Opéra Garnier.

Millepied and Lissner also announced a new digital platform, “3e Scene”, or “Third Stage”. Hosted on the Paris Opéra website, this will present new work by composers, choreographers, directors, visual artists, filmmakers and writers. There will also be a new Paris Opéra Academy, which will offer residencies to young choreographers from inside and outside the company. The choreographers will be mentored by William Forsythe. Millepied told the New York Times that the academy aimed to teach dance-making as a craft. “We won’t necessarily discover more geniuses, but there will be more competence,” he said. “Composers learn the principles of harmony, counterpoint, technique, and choreography is no different.”

Millepied has also announced touring plans, and works scheduled for later seasons. The company will visit one French city each season, touring to Brest in the 2015–16 season. Major tours to the US are being planned. Guest companies at the Paris Opéra will include Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s Rosas, Batsheva Dance Company and English National Ballet, who dance Le Corsaire at the Opéra Garnier in June 2016.

Looking ahead, Millepied has commissioned an evening-length work from Alexei Ratmansky for the 2016–17 season. He also expects to schedule some work by the iconic modern dance choreographer Merce Cunningham. At the press conference, critic Laura Capelle reports, Millepied explained that he had almost left NYCB to dance for the Cunningham company.

Performances for the Paris Opéra Ballet’s 2015-16 season are now on sale.

Picture: Benjamin Millepied at the Opéra Garnier. Photograph: Julien Benhamou

via Millepied’s plans for the Paris Opéra.

Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui to direct Royal Ballet Flanders


REPOSTED FROM DANCING TIMES Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui to direct Royal Ballet Flanders: Wednesday, 04 February 2015

Choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui is to be the new artistic director of Royal Ballet Flanders, it was announced on February 4. Cherkaoui will take up his post on September 1, 2015, with Tamas Moricz as his associate artistic director.

Cherakaoui joins the company after a series of upheavals. In 2012, director Kathryn Bennetts left Royal Ballet Flanders after clashing with Flemish culture minister Joke Scahuviliege; her successor, Assis Carreiro, left abruptly in 2014.

As a contemporary choreographer taking over a classical ballet company, Cherkaoui has said that “The course I will be seeking to pursue with the company is one of reconciliation”. Tamas Moricz said: “We want to take Royal Ballet Flanders to a new and inspiring place in the world of dance. We both share the aim of allowing dancers to maintain their firm classical background by continuing classical training and repertoire, while also bringing the company into a contemporary space. Classical ballet and contemporary dance can exist alongside each other, and that is the situation at present. Our aim is to draw both these worlds into a creative hub within this company.”

Cherkaoui praised the company’s achievements: “As a contemporary choreographer who was born in Antwerp, I have been following the development of Royal Ballet Flanders for 20 years now. The talent, technical virtuosity, sensitivity and musicality of its dancers have always inspired me, so it was an honour for me to share a piece from my own repertoire with the company last season. Faun [as part of Diaghilev Unbound, 2013–2014 season] was a first step towards an exchange of repertoire with the ballet company.

“For the past ten years, as well as developing my contemporary choreography work I have also worked with foreign ballet companies every year… Through all these experiences I have gained the confidence and energy that I will need in the role of artistic director at Royal Ballet Flanders…

“For a number of years there has been a constantly growing exchange between the different dance disciplines, as classical ballet and contemporary dance increasingly complement each other. Although there is always a key idea running through the content of my work, what I am able to achieve with ballet dancers in terms of form and technique is very different from my work with contemporary dancers. I am therefore looking forward to seeing these differences evolve further in future.

“At Eastman I open up specific themes that allow contemporary dancers to translate them into earthbound gestures with strong contrasts and an animalistic flexibility, but in ballet I can develop feather-light pointe movements to draw outlines in space in a more calligraphic way. In time, I also want to be able to reverse those ‘differences’; I find it exciting to let the two worlds flow into one another without losing any of their fascinating differences or nuances.

“I am not making this move to Royal Ballet Flanders alone. I am bringing with me Tamas Moricz as my right hand man: a highly talented dancer and dance teacher who has himself danced for many years in performances created by William Forsythe. Together with him I will be working out the future direction for the ballet. That direction will respect its history while also cherishing the ambition to open up new paths. Eastman will still be my contemporary company. Organic exchanges with Royal Ballet Flanders will of course develop, but I am definitely not going to force that.”

Picture: Sidi Larbi Cherkaou. Photograph: Koen Broos

via Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui to direct Royal Ballet Flanders.

$5 Million to Benefit New York Dance – NYTimes.com


 

Dance

$5 Million to Benefit New York Dance

JAN. 11, 2015

Arts, Briefly

Compiled by LORI HOLCOMB-HOLLAND

The Harkness Foundation for Dance announced on Sunday that it would distribute $5 million in grants over the next decade to five organizations that support dance. The recipients are the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Joyce Theater, City Center, the 92nd Street Y and the NYU Langone Medical Center’s Hospital for Joint Diseases, which houses the Harkness Center for Dance Injuries. Each organization will receive $1 million, making this the foundation’s largest grant to date. Plans for the funding include support for dance presentation at the academy; a new performance series at the Joyce; renovations at City Center; a new residency program at the 92Y; a new boardroom at the Hospital for Joint Diseases; and the development of online courses about dance injuries and treatment.

via $5 Million to Benefit New York Dance – NYTimes.com.

Pleasant Stuff: Understanding How Ratmansky Reminds Us of “The Art of Ballet”



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Cendrillon, Théâtre Mariinsky, 2002

Crédit : Iouri Belinski / ITAR-TASS

The Bolshoi is a hit on the big screen

En commandant à Ratmansky ce ballet en trois actes de Prokofiev, le théâtre a porté le chorégraphe de 36 ans du rang de débutant à celui de professionnel de haut niveau. Seul un maître peut donner vie à ce genre de partitions, et Ratmansky l’a fait comme l’un des plus grands. Il a invité d’autres artistes, Ilya Outkine et Evgueni Monakhov, qu’il aurait été auparavant impossible d’imaginer sur la scène académique russe.

By ordering Ratmansky ballet in three acts by Prokofiev, 
theater choreographer brought the 36 years of the rank beginner 
to high-level professional. Only a master can give life to this kind of 
partitions, and Ratmansky has done as one of the greatest. He invited 
other artists, Ilya Utkin and Yevgeny Monakhov, it would have been previously 
impossible to imagine the Russian academic scene.

Ensemble il ont conçu un hommage à l’utopie soviétique du ballet, avec une « valse des étoiles » citant subtilement la « valse de Mochkov » et les « études de Glier », que les ballerines adoraient danser avant la guerre et au son desquelles marchaient avec enthousiasme les jeunes du Komsomol.

Together they designed a tribute to the Soviet utopia of ballet, with a "dance 
of the stars" subtly quoting "Mochkov Waltz" and "Glier studies" that 
worshiped ballerinas dancing before the war and marched to the sound which 
enthusiastic young Komsomol .

Le Clair ruisseau, Théâtre du Bolchoï, 2003

Crédit : E.Fetisova / Bolshoï

L’idée de faire renaître un ballet soviétique réprimé sur la vie dans les kolkhozes a été accueillie avec scepticisme par plus d’un. Mais Ratmansky a choisi de se concentrer principalement sur la musique colorée et grotesque de Chostakovitch. Cependant, sous le voile du kolkhoze était caché un véritable vaudeville français, où le mari-agronome n’a aucune idée que sa femme du kolkhoze a étudié à l’école de ballet, ce qui donne lieu à de nombreuses situations comiques.

The idea of reviving a Soviet ballet repressed about life in the collective farms 
was greeted with skepticism by many. But Ratmansky has chosen to focus primarily 
on the grotesque and colorful music of Shostakovich. However, under the veil of 
the kolkhoz wa hidden a real French vaudeville, where the husband - agronomist 
has no idea that his wife kolkhoz studied at the ballet school, which gives 
rise to many comic situations .

Le clou du ballet est le solo d’un danseur classique avec un vieux paysan, qui doit jouer le rôle d’une partenaire-Sylphide. Dans cette scène le chorégraphe a finement joué avec le style du vieux ballet, la danse sur les pointes par un homme, et la psychologie masculine même. Contre toute attente, le spectacle a rencontré un grand succès lors de la tournée du Bolchoï à Paris et à Londres, et l’American Ballet Theater a même monté ce ballet sur la scène du Metropolitan Opera de New-York.

The ballet of the nail is the solo of a ballet dancer with an old peasant who 
has to play the role of a partner - Sylphide. In this scene the choreographer 
finely played with the style of the old ballet, dancing on the tips of a man, 
and the same male psychology. Against all odds, the show was a great success 
during the tour of the Bolshoi in Paris and London and the American Ballet 
Theater has even mounted this ballet on the stage of the Metropolitan Opera 
in New York.

Saisons russes, New York City Ballet, 2006

Crédit : New York City Ballet

Loin des réalités russes et des querelles de ballerines, Ratmansky a monté un ballet mordant basé sur la musique des chants du Nord russe, recueillis et revisités par le compositeur Leonid Desyatnikov. La musique de ce dernier sera, pour le chorégraphe, au moins aussi importante que celle de Chostakovitch.

Far from the Russian realities and ballerinas quarrels Ratmansky 
staged a bite ballet based on the music of the Russian North songs, 
collected and revisited by composer Leonid Desyatnikov. The music of the 
latter will, for the choreographer, at least as important as that of 
Shostakovich.

Malgré le nom du ballet, on n’y retrouve pas de détails ethnographiques : ces danses rappellent les rondes traditionnelles de manière subtile, comme les tuniques des ballerines les sarafanes, et la coloration nationale du spectacle ne vient pas des couvre-chef des danseurs mais du jeu irrégulier des rythmes.

Despite the name of the ballet, we do not find ethnographic detail: these 
dances are reminiscent of the traditional round subtly, like tunics ballerinas 
the Sarafan and the national color of the show does not come from hat dancers 
but the irregular rhythm game.

Ces combinaisons semblent très claires et le mouvement est facilement reconnaissable. Tantôt le festin, tantôt la grande nostalgie, sont incarnés par cinq couples de danseurs, et chacun de ces dix personnages conduit, à un moment, le reste du groupe.

These combinations seem very clear and movement is easily recognizable. 
Sometimes the feast, sometimes great nostalgia , are played by five pairs 
of dancers, and each of these ten characters leads at a time, the rest of 
the group.

Opéra, Théâtre La Scala de Milan, 2013

Crédit : Teatro alla Scala

Ce spectacle créé dans la maison d’opéra la plus connue d’Europe a dévoilé que Ratmansky était plus qu’un simple connaisseur et admirateur du passé du ballet soviétique. En collaborant de nouveau avec Leonid Desyatnikov, il a voulu rendre hommage au grand art d’avant-Mozart.

This show created in the most famous opera house in Europe revealed that 
Ratmansky was more than a connoisseur and admirer of the past Soviet ballet. 
By collaborating again with Leonid Desyatnikov, he wanted to pay tribute 
to the great art avant- Mozart.

Dans ce spectacle, les majestueux dieux et héros antiques se livrent à des festins baroques sur les textes de Metastasio et en paraphrasant Gluck. La chorégraphie conserve également tous les paradoxes subtils des rythmes de Ratmansky et la densité diabolique des mouvements de chaque action musicale.

In this show, majestic ancient gods and heroes engage in Baroque feasts 
on the texts of Metastasio and paraphrasing Gluck. The choreography also 
retains all the subtle paradoxes rhythms Ratmansky and diabolical density 
movements of each musical output.

Paquita, Ballet d’État de Bavière, 2014

Credit: Bavarian State Ballet
Crédit : Ballet d'État de Bavière

This former ballet by Petipa is another love of Ratmansky. 
When he headed the Bolshoi Ballet, Ratmansky was mounted it 
in collaboration with Yuri Burlak's luxurious Corsaire. 
Paquita is another rare piece of the ballet repertoire. 
To reconstruct this lost work after the Revolution, 
he had to study the Harvard University Archives. The 
ballet creates a perfect harmony of the past and present.
Cet ancien ballet de Petipa est un autre amour de Ratmansky. Quand il dirigeait le ballet du Bolchoï, Ratmansky avait monté en collaboration avec Yuri Burlak un luxueux Corsaire. Paquita est une autre pièce rare du répertoire de ballet. Pour reconstituer cette œuvre perdue après la Révolution, il a dû étudier les archives de l’Université d’Harvard. La ballet crée une harmonie parfaite du passé et du présent.
All the vicissitudes of fate of high French aristocrat in a gypsy camp in Spain
are told by expressive pantomime . Ballerina legs do not go up to the ears 
but gently raise a little above the waist.

Toutes les péripéties du destin d’une aristocrate française élevée dans un campement de bohémiens en Espagne sont racontées par des pantomimes expressifs. Les jambes de ballerines ne montent pas jusqu’aux oreilles mais se soulèvent délicatement un peu plus haut que la taille.

 

Leurs partenaires n’essaient même pas de lancer les danseuses au-dessus de leur tête mais touchent à peine leur ceinture, en les retenant dans des positions pittoresques. La bohémienne se permet d’accepter la proposition de l’aristocrate épris d’elle seulement quand elle découvre ses origines nobles.

Their partners do not even try to start the dancers over their heads but barely 
touch their belt, holding them in picturesque positions. It is only possible 
to accept the proposal of the aristocrat in love with her only when she discovers 
his noble origins.

Ballerina over the moon with selection | Illawarra Mercury


Dapto’s Charlee Corrie is headed for New York City

By LOUISE TURK

Jan. 6, 2015, 4:43 p.m.

Charlee Corrie is a finalist in the prestigious Youth America Grand Prix. Picture: CHRISTOPHER CHAN

Charlee Corrie is a finalist in the prestigious Youth America Grand Prix. Picture: CHRISTOPHER CHAN

The world is a stage for Dapto ballet dancer Charlee Corrie who has been selected as a finalist in the prestigious Youth America Grand Prix ballet competition.

The nine-year-old is among a shortlist of international finalists who will compete in the annual event, which is held in April over six days at multiple venues around New York City.

The Youth America Grand Prix is the world’s largest student ballet scholarship competition and is regarded by many as a stepping stone to a professional dance career for young people aged nine to 19.

Charlee will dance in workshops and in staged performances with other finalists, under the watchful eyes of judges and scouts from the world’s best ballet schools.

To be selected for the New York finals, Charlee submitted a DVD of her performance of the doll variation from the classical ballet Coppelia and a contemporary piece titled The Ballet Dancer.

Charlee is trained by her mother Vanessa Corrie, principal of the Vanessa Lee Dance Academy at Dapto, and dance teacher Chantelle Watts.

Ms Corrie choreographed the contemporary piece; and Ms Corrie and Ms Watts instructed Charlee as she learnt the classical variation.

The DVD audition took place in November and the Corries were notified of Charlee’s success by email on December 21.

‘‘I was shocked and over the moon with the news,’’ said Ms Corrie, who will accompany her daughter to New York.

Charlee’s father Brad Corrie and her younger sister Ruby, 6, will also make the journey to cheer on the budding ballerina.

‘‘We are all going over to support Charlee in this fantastic opportunity,’’ Ms Corrie said.

‘‘It will broaden her experience to participate in classes with kids from around the world and the performance experience will be amazing.

‘‘She will be dancing with the cream of the crop.’’

Charlee will compete in the 9-11 years age division of the competition which culminates in a gala night performance at the Lincoln Center’s David H. Koch Theatre.

Ms Corrie said she noticed her daughter’s strong dance potential around the age of seven.

‘‘She has the physical facilities – good flexibility and turnout – and she is also clever at picking up choreography and retaining it,’’ Ms Corrie said.

‘‘She is also very responsive in class and picks up the corrections easily.’’

Charlee successfully auditioned for a position in the Australian Ballet School’s Interstate Training Program in 2014. She will start attending workshops and personal visits with the esteemed Melbourne-based school this year.

Meanwhile, before Charlee starts polishing her New York routines, she is rehearsing this week with other Vanessa Lee Dance Academy students in the lead-up to the Showcase National Dance Championships, to be held at Jupiter’s Casino on the Gold Coast from January 12 to 19.

The dance school is competing in 20 troupe dances at the event which attracts competitors from Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United States.

Charlee will perform in 16 routines during the week.

via Ballerina over the moon with selection | Illawarra Mercury.

Theatres Closing Down Means Fewer Venues Featuring Dance and Other Productions


Reposted from the New York Times-Arts Beat

Théâtre de la Ville
Théâtre de la Ville

 

ArtsBeat – New York Times Blog

Theater

Dark Times Ahead for Two Major Paris Theaters

By Roslyn Sulcas

January 1, 2015 2:07 pm January 1, 2015 2:07 pm

PARIS — The Théâtre de la Ville and the Théâtre du Châtelet, two of the most important theaters in Paris, will close for extensive renovations at the end of the 2016 season, darkening the houses for one and a half to two years.

The theaters, which face each other on the Place du Châtelet, next to the Seine in the heart of the city, were designed by Gabriel Davioud and constructed between 1860 and 1862. Both have been important to theater and dance history. Sarah Bernhardt directed the Théâtre de la Ville (at the time, named the Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt) and appeared there in her most important roles between 1899 and her death in 1923, and the Ballets Russes presented its first European seasons at the Théâtre du Châtelet.

Théâtre du Châtelet
Théâtre du Châtelet

The theaters have different artistic mandates. Châtelet, where “An American in Paris” is currently playing to sold-out houses, tends to program musicals and concerts; the Théâtre de la Ville is an important destination for international theater, contemporary dance and world music. Both receive large subsidies from the city of Paris: 17 million euros (about $20.5 million) a year at the Théâtre du Châtelet, which has an annual audience of around 320,000; and 10 million euros at the Théâtre de la Ville, which has about 260,000 spectators each year.

The announcement of the long closures, made this week by Bruno Julliard, the mayoral deputy responsible for culture, did not specify what arrangements would be made for the employees of both theaters (130 at the Châtelet, 110 at the Théâtre de la Ville, according to a report in Le Figaro). Although Mr. Julliard did not offer details, he said that the closures “did not mean that programming would come to a complete stop.”

He did not give figures for the renovations, which fall within a 100-million-euro budget for refurbishment allocated to the two theaters and a number of museums.

The Théâtre de la Ville, directed by Emmanuel Demarcy-Mota, has a second, much smaller house in the 18th Arrondissement, but its larger productions are unlikely to be shown there. The Théâtre du Châtelet, directed by Jean-Luc Choplin, is likely to have a harder time finding alternative venues, particularly as another Paris theater, the Opéra Comique, will also be closed for renovation for at least 18 months from mid-2015.

Darcey Bussell dazzles in elegant Audrey Hepburn documentary – and gets Twitter in a spin – Mirror Online


Darcey Bussell dazzles in elegant Audrey Hepburn documentary – and gets Twitter in a spin

Dec 30, 2014 11:47

By Kara O’Neill

The Strictly Come Dancing judge proved to be a hit as she delved into the glamorous actress’s life and the secrets of her past.

Darcey Bussell is already a firm favourite on primetime telly, and her latest venture in the land of showbiz has made her even more popular.

The former ballerina, who is also known as a Strictly Come Dancing judge, was a hit on Monday night with her documentary Looking For Audrey.

Delving into the past of glamorous film star Audrey Hepburn, Darcey stepped back in time to uncover the truth about the actress behind the glitz of a Hollywood smokescreen.

Paying visits to locations all around the globe that played an important part of Audrey’s life and career, Darcey discovered how she started as a dancer, risked her life in the war, and was often a lonely individual looking for true love.

But while Audrey’s past swept enthralled viewers along quite nicely, it seems that Darcey’s softly softly presenting style and her clear passion for her idol really shone through.

Twitter users were suitably impressed with her performance with one writing: “Brilliant, Darcey. Do more. You both sparkled!”

This could be just the beginning for Darcey, who also made her name as a dancer.

The 45-year-old trained at the Royal Ballet School before going on to have a long career in The Royal Ballet.

She is most widely know now as a judge on BBC One show Strictly Come Dancing, when she joined the panel in 2012.

Speaking to the Telegraph about her idol, Darcey admitted she had been obsessed with Audrey and her life from a very young age.

“She has inspired and intrigued me since I was about 10.

“She was always very real, one of those natural stars who never tried to be anything other than who she was. It’s hard to stay true to yourself and it’s rare, especially today.”

*Catch up on Darcey Bussell’s Looking For Audrey on BBC iPlayer

Patricia McBride-Still Living the Dancer’s Dream (Protege of George Balanchine)


Patricia McBride lived a dancer’s dream: Her mentor was George Balanchine

2   Patricia McBride and George Balanchine

Patricia McBride rehearsing with choreographer George Balanchine.

This was normal for McBride, then the New York City Ballet’s principal dancer (now the associate artistic director at the Charlotte Ballet), but working with Balanchine would have been a dream come true for aspiring ballerinas around the world.

He is known as an artistic genius in the ballet world. A gifted choreographer responsible for changing the face of dance and famous for the New York City Ballet’s ” Coppélia” and “The Nutcracker.” And this man personally invited McBride to join his company when she was just 16 years old.

Balanchine and McBride would work alone in a studio, not speaking much. Balanchine would cue the music and dance in front of McBride. A pianist himself, musicality was of the utmost importance to Balanchine. He wanted the dances to flow naturally, so he let the music do the speaking. McBride followed along behind him, learning the steps. Forty-five minutes later, McBride would have a new solo in her repertoire.

“He worked so quickly and he didn’t have to experiment with you. He knew exactly what you could do,” McBride said in a phone interview. “Once something was made to you, you had to remember it forever. You were the guardian of the choreography.”

Balanchine trained McBride for a 30-year career with the New York City Ballet. She danced over 100 ballets in that time, including 30 choreographed just for her. When she performed her final ballet in 1989, McBride was showered with 13,000 roses and a standing ovation.

But McBride did not leave dance behind. She went on to teach at Indiana University and then took over the Charlotte Ballet in North Carolina with her husband and dance partner, Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux in 1998. She’s now 72 and still teaches eight ballet classes at a time, on top of running rehearsals for performances like The Nutcracker.

This lifelong dedication to dance has been noticed by the outside world, too.

Earlier this month, McBride walked down a red carpet in Washington, D.C., to be honored for her commitment to the performing arts. She mingled with Tom Hanks and Sting, had dinner with John Kerry and met the Obamas. She was given a rainbow-colored Kennedy Center Honors ribbon and listened to actress Christine Baranski praise her accomplishments.

It was a celebratory weekend all about honoring the ballerina (among other honorees), but McBride was quick to thank others in our interview. Especially Balanchine, her mentor.

Theirs was an intimate setting to work in, but Balanchine was more than a teacher to McBride. She looked up to him as a role model and desperately wanted to please him. McBride‘s own father left her family when she was just 3 years old, so Balanchine stepped in to fill that role.

“I grew up without a father so he was everything to me — the man I most admired and just the most wonderful role model anyone could have,” McBride said.

And their relationship was not lost on the outside world.

“A true muse for George Balanchine, he created many ballets especially for her,” said Larry Attaway, executive director of ballet at Butler University. “She was one of the most remarkable ballerinas of the 20th century.”

McBride still remembers leaping for joy when Balanchine invited her to join the New York City Ballet Company all those years ago — and did not hesitate to give up a normal teenage life for one of endless rehearsals, travel and intense dedication.

Balanchine took McBride under his wing and trained her to dance his ballets, many of which are still performed around the world today. She traveled to Tokyo, Italy, Germany, London, Paris, South America and Russia to dance, including five performances for U.S. presidents. Leading roles in her repertoire include the Sugarplum Fairy in “The Nutcracker” and Colombine in ”Harlequinade.”

“I cherish the ballets made for myself by Mr. Balanchine,” McBride said in a phone interview. “He never lost his temper. He was quiet, humble, the genius of the 20th century. He changed the face of what dance is today.”

Balanchine was her teacher, her mentor and inspiration during her long-lived dancing career. He pushed her and drove her to perform at the highest possible level, but he was also kind and patient — a notable trait in the perfectionism-driven world of ballet.

“In the beginning, he taught you how to hold your fingers, use your head, hold your shoulders, how you glissade, bourre — the exact way he wanted you to do the steps,” McBride said. “It was relearning the whole Balanchine technique.”

He was not a man of many words, but when he did offer praise, it stayed with McBride for years to come.

“After performances he would say, ‘Good, good.’ He never really gave a harsh word. I don’t ever remember him saying, ‘That was awful,’ ever. He didn’t praise that much, but when he did, it was wonderful. He would say, ‘I loved how you used your eyes, you were mysterious.’ It would make you feel like a million dollars.”

Balanchine passed away in 1983, but McBride carries on his legacy by teaching her students his ballets with patience and kindness. She gives her students at the Charlotte Ballet Academy praise and talks highly of her “beautiful dancers.” She believes in nurturing her students and making them feel secure in themselves.

“Mr. Balanchine wanted me to be myself. He didn’t want me to look like anyone else,” McBride said. “I love teaching our company dancers the Balanchine ballets. I try to give them what was passed down to me and what I learned from him. They dance it so beautifully. It also keeps me close to Mr. Balanchine. He’s with me every single day.”

Children’s Hospital Hosts Annual Holiday Ballet


Children’s Hospital Hosts Annual Holiday Ballet

Students, pediatric patients enjoy ‘Nutcracker’ ballet in Washington Heights

By Catherine Yang, Epoch Times | December 22, 2014 | Last Updated: December 22, 2014 10:27 pm

NEW YORK—”Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” echoed through the lobby of the NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital and 4-year-old Madeline sat up and clapped, engrossed in the ballet before her.

“When she was here two years ago, she was upstairs in her room, quarantined,” said Madeline’s mother Jenna Kellerman. Kellerman had come downstairs for a cup of coffee, and caught a glimpse of the New York Theatre Ballet’s (NYTB) annual performance at the hospital, but had to rush back upstairs.

“She likes it when they’re on their toes and spin around,” Kellerman said of her daughter, and Madeline mimicked pirouettes with her fingers. Christmas means baking cookies, watching holiday movies, and “The Nutcracker” on television, but she has never seen it live. “Every time they had the performance she was sick upstairs.”

Madeline was born at the hospital and had open-heart surgery at 1-week-old, a second surgery when she was 6 months old, and a third when she was 2 1/2, for the same heart condition.

This year, Kellerman came to the hospital to visit a friend with a child in the intensive care unit, and Madeline came along for the performance.

Mice in polka dots and dancers with oversized chopsticks performed the holiday favorite, choreographed by Keith Michael in the art nouveau style, circa 1907. Costumes were designed by Sylvia Nolan, the resident costume designer of the Metropolitan Opera.

“I wanted her to see the show she actually missed,” Kellerman said.

Dancers of the New York Theatre Ballet performed “The Nutcracker” at the New York-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital on Monday, Dec. 22, 2014. For the last eight years, NYTB has performed a one-hour holiday ballet for the pediatric patients. (Benjamin Chasteen/Epoch Times)

Mental Healing

For the last eight years, NYTB has performed a one-hour holiday ballet for the pediatric patients and, more recently, grade students of the nearby PS 4. They have performed “Carnival of the Animals,” “Sleeping Beauty,” and “The Nutcracker” in previous years.

“The families and patients definitely look forward to it every year … it’s always nice to be able to bring the arts to our patients,” said Juan Mejia, vice president of operations at NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital. Many of the pediatric patients are at the hospital for extended stay, which means long hours and long days, Mejia said. “It’s nice for them to have a break from being on the floors.”

“There’s a lot to say about the mental healing of patients,” Mejia said. “The ability for them to have a break from the day allows them to really heal mentally.”

Dancers of the New York Theatre Ballet performed “The Nutcracker” at the New York-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital on Monday, Dec. 22, 2014. For the last eight years, NYTB has performed a one-hour holiday ballet for the pediatric patients. (Benjamin Chasteen/Epoch Times)

Giving Back

These sorts of intimate performances are the cores of NYTB’s mission, according to founder Diana Byer. NYTB performs in smaller venues, across the world, and “the theatrical experience is quite personal.”

“We can see gesture,” Byer said. Rather than seeing the overall picture from a great distance, “you’re seeing detail. It’s a personal, very intimate experience. It’s how an individual experiences it.”

This version of “The Nutcracker” was refreshed four years ago, from the version NYTB had performed for 26 years. After months of choreography, the ballet was adapted for today’s changing culture.

“It’s designed to appeal to today’s child. It’s in the narrative, the pacing, the costuming, the color,” Byer said.

In addition to small classic masterpieces and one-hour ballets for young children, Byer tries to unearth lost ballets—pieces by great choreographers that have not been performed for many years. “It’s part of our culture and should be seen,” Byer said.

To her, “Art is about generosity of spirit,” Byer said. And performing at the children’s hospital teaches the dancers that. “I think it’s good for the dancers to give back … that’s what art is. It’s something for the public.”

Margery (C), a patient at the New York-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital, poses with dancers of the New York Theatre Ballet after the troupe performed “The Nutcracker” for the children at the hospital on Monday, Dec. 22, 2014. For the last eight years, NYTB has performed a one-hour holiday ballet for the pediatric patients. (Benjamin Chasteen/Epoch Times)

Article printed from The Epoch Times: http://www.theepochtimes.com

URL to article: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1158119-childrens-hospital-hosts-annual-holiday-ballet/

via Children’s Hospital Hosts Annual Holiday Ballet.

South Coast Ballet Conservatory, The Nutcracker: December 20-21st, 2014


The Nutcracker Cap Perf Arts Cntr

‘Nutcracker’ Moves to Milder Climes


‘Nutcracker’ Moves to Milder Climes

By BRIAN SCHAEFER  DEC. 12, 2014

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.)

via ‘Nutcracker’ Moves to Milder Climes – NYTimes.com.

Feature Film, ‘Getting to the Nutcracker’, Illuminates Process of Production of Annual Event


getting_to_the_nutcracker_poster

‘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.

Lynne Chaput

via ‘Getting to the Nutcracker’ on screen in Jamestown | Entertainment – Music, Theater, TV & more | Providence Journal.

Alla Sizova, Star Kirov Ballerina, Dies at 75 – NYTimes Dance


 

Photo

The ballerina Alla Sizova in costume for “The Sleeping Beauty” with the Kirov Ballet Credit 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.

Alla Sizova, Star Kirov Ballerina, Dies at 75 – NYTimes.com.

▶ Sleeping Beauty 7 – To Celebrate, not a life passing, but a life danced!


Note: psst-the additional cast members! And 7 parts of this ballet posted by Ilya Kuznetsov (thanks!) 🙂 I think she won the Anna Pavlova for it-

http://youtu.be/7fFycmZqTKA

▶ Sleeping Beauty 7 – YouTube.

Another Late Starter Recognized for Hard Work Ethic and Unpretentiousness!


Late starter leaps into elite ballet school

dayna booth

 

A 15-year-old ballet dancer is the latest success story to come out of a small coastal dance school. Dayna Booth is ready to take on the next level of the art and will move to her new “second home” 2,000 kilometres away – the Australian Ballet School.

Dayna and her mum shed tears of joy when they received news the teenager had been accepted into the prestigious school.

She had dreamt of studying at the Australian Ballet School and had only recently asked the powers-that-be if they had room for someone of her talent and dedication.

The final word came in the mail a few weeks ago.

“My mum got [the letter] and half opened it because she was just so excited, but then realised it was for me,” Dayna said.

“I only read the first sentence and that was enough to know.

“My mum and I were crying.”

Dayna will move from Peregian Springs on the Sunshine Coast to Melbourne in 2015 and study in the school’s level five full-time ballet program.

The Australian Ballet School is Australia’s national centre for elite vocational dance training.

It is recognised internationally with over 90 per cent of its graduates gaining professional contracts at home and abroad.

Dayna is one of 700 dancers who applied for entry this year and will share her class with only 17 other successful level five students.

No short cuts

She says she is working hard in preparation.

“Right now I am doing 30 hours-a-week,” she said.

“I’ve mainly done 24 hours [but] it’s just in the last couple of months I’ve been doing 30 because I need to prepare myself for the big school.”

Dayna says her spins in particular are getting better with the increased training.

“There are these things called a fouette- it’s where you do multiple spins while flinging your leg around,” she said.

“I used to be able to do a single one but now I can do a single, a single and a double.

“I do get quite dizzy.”

Dayna says while her feet suffer from the hours of training they are getting stronger.

“I’ve got lots of blisters and right now I have half a bruised toe and half of [the nail] is coming off – it’s all part of the glory,” she said.

Masterful mentors

Dayna says her Peregian Springs teachers, Deborah Preece-Brocksom and Richard Leader, who were long time professional dancers in Europe, have been invaluable in her success.

“I can’t thank them enough, they’ve done so much for me,” she said.

“There’s been no other influence apart from YouTube.

“Mr Leader’s great at artistry and Ms Deborah is the master of technique [and she] is always kind and nurturing.”

Ms Preece-Brocksom says Dayna, who started ballet at the relatively late age of 10, has qualities beyond her physical skills.

“She’s very unpretentious,” she said.

“She’s got the hard work ethic.

“That’s what you look for in a child and if you find that, the level of talent is almost inconsequential.”

Ms Preece-Brocksom says the Australian Ballet School will be more competitive than what Dayna is used to, but her work ethic will see her succeed.

“[Ballet is] her hobby, her life, it’s her best friend,” she said.

“I think she will enjoy the challenge and they will enjoy having her down there.”

Late starter leaps into elite ballet school – ABC Sunshine & Cooloola Coasts Qld – Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

dance book discussion et al