Category: Dance

  • NYCB Tchaikovsky Festival 2013 #5

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    Friday January 25, 2013 – There nothing like a late seating to ruin an evening at the ballet. And it’s particularly maddening when the opening ballet is BAISER DE LA FEE: a ballet where atmosphere is everything. Yet conductor Andrews Sill had no sooner begun to spin this delicious score when the ushers began tromping up and down the aisles with their little flashlights and urgent stage whispers and their footfalls on the uncarpeted floor: the magic of the Tchaikovsky/Stravinsky score went out the window. Once the spell of a ballet has been broken there’s no redeeming it, and so despite truly gorgeous dancing from Tiler Peck, Robert Farchild, the lovely demi-solistes Alina Dronova and Erica Pereira and the pretty flock of corps ballerinas, BAISER went for nought tonight.

    There’s really no excuse to seat people after the conductor enters the pit: there are closed-circuit screens on each level where latecomers can watch the first ballet. Excuses like “the traffic”, “the MTA”, “the weather” don’t fly: that’s life in Gotham. Why should the seating of a score of stragglers infringe on the enjoyment of the vast majority of people who have made the effort to be there on time? I suppose there’s no point in kvetching: no one cares anyway.

    Unfortunately, the bad vibe stretched into Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux also, and despite the charming dancing and daredevil flourishes of the beloved Megan Fairchild/Joaquin de Luz partnership, I was feeling grumpy. Soon the two dancers cheered me up, and Megan’s marvelous fouettes in the coda were a real treat. Joaquin’s solo drew sighs of admiration from the crowd, and even though the second fish dive in the coda was a bit off-kilter, this delightful duo already had their success sewn up.

    BAL DE COUTURE is a Peter Martins ballet created to show off costumes designed by Valentino; it is a sort of pageant in which twenty principal dancers promenade and waltz to Tchaikovsky. A dreamy adagio for Janie Taylor and Sebastien Marcovici seems unrelated to the rest of the ballet, and their romance is intruded upon by Rob Fairchild who momentarily lures Janie’s attentions. The choreography throughout is formulaic with ballroomy touches. The women’s costumes are singularly unflattering, with Janie’s wafting pink a la SONNAMBULA bearing no relation to the black-white-and-red get-ups the other girls are wearing. The dancers went thru the motions sportingly, the music is so much more-than-pleasant (both dance numbers EUGENE ONEGIN are played) but the sum total effect of the piece is negligible: the time, expense and talent involved could have been better put to use elsewhere.

    At last the evening bloomed in full with DIAMONDS; I don’t like the gaudy tinsel-town decor of the current setting but from a musical and choreographic viewpoint DIAMONDS always glows. Sara Mearns danced with meltingly magical style in the adagio passages: she gracefully incorporates the allusions to Odette and Raymonda into the ballet, and she is simply gorgeous to watch. In the allegro section, her bravura dancing did not quite have its usual impetuosity but in the finale she was grand in every way. Ask LaCour made his debut in this ballet tonight: his partnering was very supple, his expression noble and poetic, his sense of the underlying courtly romance of the piece right on the mark. Long-legged danseurs do not always command the allegro footwork in a given ballet, but Ask came thru very nicely in the showy moments. As the ballet drew to its final minutes, Sara beamed her luxuriant smile on Ask and it seemed this rather last-minute partnership had worked out well in every regard: Sara and Ask basked in a very warm ovation and took and extra curtain call, very well-deserved. The demi-soliste quartet of Lauren King, Ashley Laracey, Gwyneth Muller and Megan LeCrone and the excellent work of the corps helped to compensate for the evening’s unsavory start: thoughts of the late seating were gone. But not forgotten.    

    DIVERTIMENTO FROM ‘LE BAISER DE LA FÉE’: T. Peck, *R. Fairchild, Pereira, Dronova

    TCHAIKOVSKY PAS DE DEUX: M. Fairchild, De Luz

    BAL DE COUTURE: Kowroski, Reichlen, Krohn, Scheller, Hyltin, A. Stafford, T. Peck, M. Fairchild, Bouder, Taylor, J. Angle, la Cour, Danchig-Waring, Veyette, R. Fairchild, Ramasar, Finlay, De Luz, Carmena, Marcovici

    DIAMONDS from JEWELS: Mearns, *La Cour

  • Carrie & Kate

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    Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch (above, photographed by Brian Krontz) will be dancing a solo made on her by Kate Skarpetowska during the upcoming Buglisi Dance Theatre season at The Joyce. Details of the season are here; the new Skarpetowska solo entitled Sjawa is scheduled as part of Program B.

    Kate, an outstanding dancer from Lar Lubovitch‘s company, has in the past two seasons created two very distinctive works for Parsons Dance: A Stray’s Lullabye and Black Flowers. I first encountered Carrie when she was dancing with the Martha Graham Dance Company; more recently she made a beautiful impression dancing with Martin Lofsnes’ 360° Dance Company. I’m very much looking forward to seeing what the collaboration of Kate and Carrie will produce.

  • In the Studio with Tom Gold & Willy Burmann

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    Monday January 21, 2013 – Tom Gold is creating a new ballet to be premiered at the upcoming Dance From The Heart gala performances. This annual dance event, which benefits Dancers Responding to AIDS, will take place this year at the Cedar Lake Theater on January 28th and 29th. Details and ticket info here. Tom’s ballet will be performed on the 29th at both the 6:30 PM and 8:30 PM shows.

    The new ballet is entitled SOME KIND OF ROMANCE and will feature five dancers: Abigail Mentzer, Alexander Peters and Amir Yogev from Pennsylvania Ballet, and Zoe Zien and Ezra Hurwitz from Miami City Ballet. Earlier in the week, Tom invited me and photographer Brian Krontz to a studio rehearsal at DANY where the three Pennsylvania-based dancers were working on the piece.

    We arrived near the end of the rehearsal period and watched the dancers run the ballet twice: it is fast-paced, witty and physically demanding, and I was constantly wondering how it will look with the two additional dancers. 

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    Above: Willy Burmann with Amir Yogev.

    Willy Burmann is Tom’s ballet master, and at the rehearsal he was giving a virtual master-class in technical refinement. His suggestions and his hands-on shaping of the dancers at various points in the rehearsal are a revelation to observe and a key element in preparing the ballet for the stage. Willy’s spot-on analysis of the steps and combinations and his wry sense of humour create a tension-free work environment; he treats the dancers like colleagues and his advice invariably turns something that already looks really good into something that looks great. There were plenty of laughs but also a sense of diligence as the dancers took Willy’s suggestions to heart. As the rehearsal progressed the ballet took on a very nice polish. It’ll be interesting to see it onstage next week, and Tom spoke of his plan to expand on it in the future.

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    Abigail Mentzer

    Amir

    Amir Yogev

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    Alexander Peters

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    Abigail

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    Stretch: Amir

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    Abigail

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    Tom Gold in a Bad Boy of the Ballet moment.

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    One of the best things about going to Tom Gold’s rehearsals is watching him demonstrate!

    All photos by Brian Krontz. Click on each image to enlarge.

    Tom Gold Dance will have their second New York season March 12th and 13th, 2013 at the Gerald Lynch Theater at John Jay College. Details will be announced soon.

  • NYCB Tchaikovsky Festival 2013 #4

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    Tuesday January 22, 2013 – Where better to be on January 22nd than in the house that Philip Johnson built for George Balanchine? Today we celebrate the great choreographer’s birthday and New York City Ballet saluted their founding father with a beautiful evening of Balanchine ballets set to the music of Tchaikovsky.

    Conductor Gerry Cornelius and the NYCB musicians mined all the melodic gold to be found in these three marvel-filled Tchaikovsky scores. Six principal ballerinas appeared (including our newest two) along with four of the Company’s most impressive and unique cavaliers; two handsome boys from the corps de ballet assumed major roles, and two girls who should be soloists led the ensemble passages in SWAN LAKE.

    No one who was there will ever forget the performance of Peter Martins’ SWAN LAKE in 2006 in which Sara Mearns – then a young unknown from the corps de balletstepped into the role of Odette/Odile and took her first leap to stardom. Tonight she re-created her Odette in the Balanchine setting and danced radiantly and with a quiet intensity that was enhanced by the nobly responsive presence of Jared Angle as her cavalier. Both the partnering and the poetry of this pairing made the familiar ballet seem fresh and ever-resonant. Megan LeCrone leading the Pas de Neuf has her own brand of magic – a truly intriguing dancer – while Lauren King, always a pleasure to watch, seemed particularly ravishing tonight as she embraced the full-bodied lyricism of the Valse Bluette. Scanning the ranks of the black-clad corps de ballet, faces and forms both familiar and new to me continually seized my imagination.

    Megan Fairchild’s plush technique finds a perfect expression in ALLEGRO BRILLANTE; she begins in a rather serious mode but as the ballet sweeps onward her smile illuminates the stage just as her silky-smooth pirouettes illuminate the music. Amar Ramasar’s space-filling dance, his deft partnering and sheer magnetism all add up to a top-notch performance in this ballet. The ensemble of King, Laracey, LeCrone, Gretchen Smith, Laurent, Peiffer, Tworzyanski and Andrew Scordato (stepping in unannounced) added nicely to this charming classic-style ballet all underscored by Elaine Chelton’s playing from the pit.

    Rebecca Krohn appeared in the haunted ballroom of TCHAIKOVSKY SUITE #3 to dance the Elegie, which has over the years become one of my great favorites among all of Balanchine’s works. Bare-footed and beauteous, Rebecca seemed so Farrellesque to me tonight. Zachary Catazaro, his pale and handsome face recalling the great matinee-idols of the silver screen era, made a wonderful impression as the lonely lover who momentarily finds his ideal. As Rebecca wafted her gorgeous gown and hair thru the music, Zachary was an ardent dream-cavalier; yet when the moment of their parting came his downcast expression of resignation was so moving: his fingers brushed the spot on his face where her hand had caressed him – did her perfume linger there? – and then he looked at his hands which had held his beloved and which were now empty. A frisson swept thru me at that moment.

    In the Valse Melanconique, Abi Stafford looked so angel-like and lovely with her hair down and clad in diaphanous white; as she swept about the ballroom amidst the bevy of beautiful corps ballerinas, Abi constantly kept us aware of the pulsing nuances of the waltz tempo. Justin Peck was excellent in the cavalier role here. And it’s always a real pleasure to see Faye Arthurs onstage.

    Beauty and brilliance combine in Ana Sophia Scheller’s superb dancing of the Scherzo; she brings a touch of prima ballerina elegance to everything she does and she puts her own gracious signature on every ballet in which she appears. Viva Ana!! Antonio Carmena’s vivid leaps and the handsome polish of his dancing matched up so well with the remarkable Scheller as they flew about the space in high style.

    Costume note: could we get rid of the blouse-like Pagliaccio tops for the men in this ballet’s first three movements?

    Ashley Bouder whipped up a delicious frosting for this evening’s Balanchine birthday cake with her brilliant dancing in Theme and Variations. In total contrast to her wonderfully lyrical performance of SERENADE‘s Russian Girl last week, here was Bouder in full ballerina tutu-and-tiara mode and dancing with regal aplomb. Andrew Veyette’s dynamic series of stupefying air turns won the crowd’s cheers, and his partnering was strong and sincere. The demi-solistes Mlles. Hankes, Sell, Muller and Pollack were finely shown-off by their handsome cavaliers: Devin Alberda (welcome back), Cameron Dieck, Daniel Applebaum and David Prottas. 

    In recent seasons they’ve taken away the lyre and re-branded the Company
    (like cattle?), changed the name on the theater’s facade, carved aisles
    in the seating where Balanchine/Johnson wanted none, arranged an
    alienating ticket-pricing scheme, scattered the faithful of the 4th Ring
    Society, put butt-ugly furniture on the wonderful wide-open space of
    the Promenade – where they have also (currently) piled up a useless
    tower of mediocre MoMA PS-1-type artwork – and all for what? But it
    doesn’t matter in the end because all that really matters is the dancers
    and the dance, the music and the movement. And in those essential
    elements, the Company stays strong.

    There was no Balanchine Birthday Vodka Toast this year but I’d rather be intoxicated by the dancers than by any beverage that might be served up. Happy Birthday Mr. B !!

    SWAN LAKE: Mearns, J. Angle, LeCrone, King, Dieck

    ALLEGRO BRILLANTE: M. Fairchild, Ramasar

    TCHAIKOVSKY SUITE NO. 3: ELEGIE: Krohn, Catazaro; WALTZ: A. Stafford, J. Peck; SCHERZO: Scheller, Carmena; THEME & VARIATIONS: Bouder, Veyette

  • Preview of Justin Peck’s New Ballet

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    Watch a brief video preview of Justin Peck’s new ballet for New York City Ballet here. Entitled PAZ DE LA JOLLA, the ballet is set to Bohuslav Martinu‘s Sinfonietta La Jolla and will premiere on January 31st, 2013 with additional performances February 2nd, 6th and 8th. Justin talks about the work and his choreographic career in a Time Out New York interview here.

    Photo of Justin by NYCB‘s Paul Kolnik.

  • My Only 2012 NYCB NUTRACKER

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    Sunday December 23, 2012 matinee – Due to the rise in ticket prices at New York City Ballet, I’ve had to adopt strict budgeting rules: for the first time since moving to NYC, I found myself forced to skip NUTCRACKER season altogether. I’d been in the habit of going as many as eight times each year, seeing debuts and covering interesting casting combinations for my blog with genuine enthusiasm. I came to really love and admire the entire Balanchine NUTCRACKER experience, always finding fresh details in the thrice-familiar production.

    But this year, with prices really out of my reach and with the Tchaikovsky Festival looming ahead (I want to go every single night!), I was forced to forego NUTCRACKER; I’ve looked at the casting each week, wishing I could be there but simply unable to deal with the monetary situation.  Fortunately, my friend Monica very kindly offered me a ticket to today’s matinee.

    The cast this afternoon included some debuts, and there wasn’t a principal dancer to be seen onstage. But the soloist and corps de ballet did the Company proud, stepping into the leading roles with confidence and charm. Clothilde Otranto led a lively performance, and special kudos to concertmaster Kurt Nikkanen for his ravishing playing of the Interlude, replete with shimmeringly subtle trills in the highest register.

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    Lauren Lovette’s debut as the Sugar Plum Fairy was a major point of appeal in the casting today. This young ballerina has been doing excellent work in the corps, and she always makes a beautiful impression when she’s cast in a prominent role; her debut recently in Christopher Wheeldon’s POLYPHONIA was a real eye-opener, for she held the stage in mesmerizing fashion in her mysterious solo, danced to one of Ligeti’s most trance-like works. Her Sugar Plum today was lyrical and light in the opening solo, and showed the confident radiance of a seasoned star-ballerina in the pas de deux where her cavalier, the story-book-prince Chase Finlay, showed off his ballerina with  élan. Together they sailed smoothly thru the duet’s many difficulties: difficulties that have been known to undo the most seasoned dancers. Lauren and Chase drew the audience in with their youth and poise, winning a particularly warm reception.

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    I met Mary Elizabeth Sell shortly after she joined the Company in 2006, and have kept an eye on her ever since. She and I share a birthday; I took the above picture of her one day a couple years ago when I ran into her on a rehearsal break. Always a dancer to draw the eye in any ballet because of her vivid presence and perfect smile (she was one of the few dancers to make an impact in the leaden OCEAN’S KINGDOM), her performances stand out in a way that have always made me think she could do well in major roles. This Winter the opportunity came her way – she had debuted yesterday as Dewdrop – and, just as I suspected she would, she seized the opportunity and gave a really exciting performance. Her Dewdrop was on the grand scale, able to make her own musical statement in the role by playing ever so subtly with the timing: holding an arabesque one moment, then swirling forward in a flurry of pirouettes. Her jeté was effortlessly brilliant, her extension regally unfurled, her attitude turns silky, her fouettés gracefully swift and sure. To all of this she added her dark eyes and gracious smile. Her performance had amplitude and (rare commodity:) glamour; in short, she put me in mind very much of one of my all-time-favorite Dewdrops, Colleen Neary. There’s no better compliment, in my book.

    Other notable newcomers were Cameron Dieck (handsomely squiring the marvelous Gwyneth Muller in Spanish), Claire Kretzschmar (leggy and cool as Arabian), and Joseph Gordon (bouncing high in Chinese). Sara Adams was pretty, precise and perfectly pleasing as Marzipan; Anthony Huxley – he of the fabulous feet – a stellar Candy Cane (I was hoping he’d jump thru his hoop on his exit in the finale, as he did when he first danced the role); Andrew Scordato an amusing Mother Ginger; Lauren King and Ashley Laracey led the Waltz of the Flowers with distinction…two of my favorite ballerinas.

    In Act I, Sean Suozzi replaced David Prottas as Drosselmeyer; the change was unannounced. Sean was superb, as we could expect from one of the Company’s most intriguing personalities; he even gave the grandmother a startlingly emphatic kiss. Amanda Hankes and Christian Tworzyanski were the appealing Stahlbaums, Kristen Segin and the very pretty Claire von Enck danced charmingly as Harlequin and Columbine, and Giovanni Villabos neatly executed the Soldier Doll’s solo.

    It’s kind of amazing that there are now dancers in the Company I cannot
    identify onstage; things seem to be changing more rapidly that ever in
    terms of the roster. During 2012 some of my favorite dancers left the
    Company unexpectedly; others are currently injured (an ongoing problem).
    The total complement of dancers stands at 85, the smallest number in my
    years of attending,; apprentices and (sometimes) senior SAB students
    seem to be filling the ranks in the big ensembles.

    SUGARPLUM: *Lovette; CAVALIER: Finlay; DEWDROP: Sell; HERR DROSSELMEIER: Suozzi; MARZIPAN: Adams; HOT CHOCOLATE: Muller, *Dieck; COFFEE: *Kretzschmar; TEA: *Gordon; CANDY CANE: Huxley; MOTHER GINGER: Scordato; FLOWERS: King, Laracey; DOLLS: Von Enck, Segin; SOLDIER: Villalobos, MOUSE KING: J. Peck; DR & FRAU STAHLBAUM: Hankes, Tworzyanski

    The house seemed nearly full, and so nice to run into some of the Company’s most ardent supporters during intermission.

    Thanks so much, Monica!

  • Steps Repertory Ensemble Rehearse Vignoulle

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    Wednesday November 28, 2012 – I stopped by at Steps on Broadway today where the Steps Repertory Ensemble were rehearsing a new work by Manuel Vignoulle. I got to know Manuel as a dancer through his performances with Cedar Lake Contemporary Ballet. This was my first time meeting him, and his infectious energy and devilishly sexy accent made the studio hour fly by. It’s always fun when a choreographer leaps in to demonstate during rehearsals, and Manuel was continually showing the dancers what he wanted. His choreography is athletic and risky; a passage of repose contrasts to the edgy, restless atmosphere that the work has built up.

    Manuel’s piece for the Steps Repertory Ensemble is entitled “Le Moi Sauvage” and it will be part of the Company’s Celebrate Dance performances at Ailey Citigroup scheduled for April 19-21, 2013. Chances are it will be shown sooner than that in a studio setting.

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    Britney Tokumoto, Lane Halperin, Marielis Garcia and Katherine Spradzs

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    Victor Larue

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    David Scarantino, Gabriel Malo

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    Landes Dixon

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    Marielis Garcia

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    Manuel Vignoulle

    Now that I’ve had my introduction to the Steps Repertory Ensemble (thanks to Mindy Upin), I’m hoping to cover more of their work in the coming months, leading up to their April performances.

  • Lauren Alpert for CBC

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    Lauren Alpert created a new ballet for Columbia Ballet Collaborative‘s recent performances at MMAC. Above: dancer Gabriela Minden, photo by Jade Young.

    I was unable to attend the CBC performances this Autumn, but I did stop by at one of Lauren’s rehearsals of her new creation. Entitled signal:noise and set to a collage of contemporary music, this is probably one of the few danceworks ever to be inspired by working in a neuroscience lab. But it was there that Lauren developed the concept for her ballet.

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    Lauren Alpert and dancer Rebecca Walden

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    Audrey Crabtree-Hannigan and Rachel Silvern

    signal:noise is an ensemble work for seven women; although there are unison passages, much of the work is devoted to indivdual expression, some of it with an improvisational quality. I hope there’ll be a chance to see it again sometime.

    Photos: Jade Young.

  • Salonen Conducts WOZZECK

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    Monday November 19, 2012 – The Philharmonia Orchestra under the baton of Esa-Pekka Salonen (above) offered a concert performance of Alban Beg’s WOZZECK at Avery Fisher Hall. Incredibly, it was the first time I have experienced this opera in a live performance that was conducted by someone other than James Levine.

    The particpating artists:

    Philharmonia Orchestra
    Westminster Choir 
- Joe Miller, director
    The American Boychoir – Fernando Malvar-Ruiz, music director

    Conductor: Esa-Pekka Salonen

    Simon Keenlyside Wozzeck
    Angela Denoke Marie
    Hubert Francis Drum Major
    Joshua Ellicott Andres
    Peter Hoare Captain
    Tijl Faveyts Doctor
    Henry Waddington First Apprentice
    Eddie Wade: Second Apprentice
    Harry Nicoll Idiot
    Anna Burford Margret

    The performance was compelling both in the awe-inspiring magnificence of the orchestral playing and in the powerful simplicity of the semi-staging: the singers, clad in contemporary everyday chic, moved thru the drama in a narrow space at the lip of the stage. Direct and uncomplicated in its presentation. the drama was expressed with stripped-down clarity. Thanks to a cast of singing-actors each vividly inhabiting his or her character, this tale of madness, despair, bullying and betrayal cast its extraordinary spell.

    The score unfolded under Maestro Salonen’s baton like a vast dark tapestry; individual orchestral voices shoot thru the fabric of sound like shimmering threads. As in SALOME, the musical imagery often evokes moonlight seen thru sooty, scudding clouds…but here the moon is blood-red. The conductor struck an ideal balance of unleashing the insane power of the orchestra yet never overwhelming his singers. The cumulative effect was electrifying..

    In the early scenes of the opera, dark comedy runs rampant: the Captain and the Doctor who hold Wozzeck their mental hostage are so deranged and their words so far-fetched as to evoke laughter. Brilliant characterzations from Peter Hoare and Tijl Faveyts respectively set their vignettes in high relief. Hubert Francis was the swaggering bully of a Drum Major and Joshua Ellicott as Andres – one of Wozzeck’s few links to normalcy – sang with clarity. Anna Burford as Margret delivered her Swabia-lied with drunken blowsiness; Harry Nicoll was an eerily happy Idiot. I took special pleasure in the robustly earthy singing of Henry Waddlington and Eddie Ware as the two apprentices. Their scene simply crackled with verbal and vocal power and they steered clear of the comic cliches of acting out drunkiness, making their performances all the more impressive.

    Angela Denoke, a soprano still talked-about in Gotham for her only Met performances (a series of Marschallins in 2005) was a wonderfully feminine and vunerable Marie. For all her toughness (“better a knife in my heart than lay a hand on me”), Marie is a marvelously human woman torn between desire and guilt, and Ms. Denoke’s portrayal struck an ideal balance while providing vocalism of gleaming lyricism and intriguing colours. She now proudly joins my gallery of memorable portrayals of this character over the years: Janis Martin, Anja Silja, Hildegard Behrens, Katarina Dalayman and Waltraud Meier.

    As Wozzeck, Simon Keenlyside enjoyed a great personal triumph. Hurling himself into the drama with a dazzling affiinity for the expressive physical manifestations of madness and with tortured facial responses to Wozzeck’s downward spiral, the baritone sang with unfettered power and a full palette of vocal colours which he drew upon to project the character’s ravaged humanity. Keenlyside’s performance was nothing short of perfection.

    And so, one of the most thrilling nights of opera in recent seasons…and the proof of it was in the utter silence of the audience in those unexpected stillnesses that Berg applies from time to time. They are as key to the dark glory of WOZZECK as the shocking power of the great post-murder crescendos. Salonen and his mighty forces gave us an exciting evening, reaffirming the still-powerful desire of the New York public for meaningful operatic experiences.

  • Miro Magloire Goes Classical: New Chamber Ballet

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    Above: Elizabeth Brown of New Chamber Ballet, photo by Kokyat. Click to enlarge.

    Saturday November 17, 2012 – Performances at New Chamber Ballet always feature live music, and quite often it is music that has been written in the 20th or even the 21st century. Tonight’s programme varied a bit from the New Chamber Ballet norm as three of the four works choreographed by the Company’s director Miro Magloire were set to works of Old Masters: Bach, Handel and Tchaikovsky.  In such company, the fourth work – by Karlheinz Stockhausen – gave the evening a nice tangy jolt.

    Super-familiar melodies from THE NUTCRACKER were transcribed for solo violin and played with alternating currents of delicacy and gusto by Clara Lyon. There were no candy canes or snowflakes to be seen, however: instead, three women (Elizabeth Brown, Nora Brown and Holly Curran) became obsessed with a gift-wrapped silvery pendant that changed hands several times in the course of the ballet. Technically demanding solos were spun thru the musical fabric, and elements of chase and deceit played out as each girl tried to claim the bauble for her own.

    Melody Fader attacked the hammering motif that opens Karlheinz Stockhausen’s Klavierstuck IX with flair; Elizabeth Brown and Holly Curran sit on either side of the pianist as Miro’s KLAVIERSTUCK commences: a ballet that became a memorial to the composer who passed away in 2007, shortly after having given Miro his blessing to choreograph the piece. The piano itself becomes the central element of the ballet, functioning as a barre and as an altar. Miro’s affectionate gesture to the composer he so admired has become New Chamber Ballet’s signature work.

    After a short break, Melody Fader switched modes and played a transcription of a Handel violin sonata (arranged by Miro) as the Company’s newest member Nora Brown gave lyric sweep to the pure classic vocabulary of the solo SPIEGELEIN. Wearing Candice Thompson’s fetching pale rose and white tunic, Nora’s graceful dancing had a lovely fresh quality.

    Its premiere having been delayed a couple of months, Miro’s new ballet THE OTHER WOMAN proved one of his finest works to date. Set to Bach’s B-minor sonata (played by Clara Lyon and Melody Fader) this ballet about duplicity and its resulting emotional impact on the personalities involved struck close to home. Elizabeth Brown and Holly Curran are the two women – and who could choose between them? – while Sarah Atkins en travesti gives a wonderful performance as the object of their affections. Sarah, in a black suit and bowler hat, danced her jaunty solo with  élan while the two girls vied for his attention in a situation where someone is bound to lose.

    New Chamber Ballet‘s audience continues to grow, with new faces among the crowd of familiar long-time supporters. In their mixture of classic, on-pointe dancing and live music in an intimate setting, Miro’s evenings hold a unique place in the Gotham dance scene. Their next performances are slated for February 15th and 16th, 2013.