Tag: Ballet Hispanico

  • Rehearsal: Claudia Schreier for Vail

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    Above: Claudia Schreier with dancers Chris Bloom and Dandara Veiga of Ballet Hispanico; photo by Dmitry Beryozkin 

    Tuesday July 24th – Photographer Dmitry Beryozkin and I stopped in at the Baryshinikov Arts Center this afternoon where choreographer Claudia Schreier’s newest creation was in rehearsal. The pas de deux is Claudia’s third commission from the world-renowned Vail Dance Festival: in 2016 she debuted there with SOLITAIRE, and last Summer, TRANQUIL NIGHT, BRIGHT AND INFINITE was presented on the Vail stage.

    Claudia’s new ballet, as yet untitled, it set to a score by Gabriela Lena Frank which is a joint commission by the Vail Festival and Brooklyn Rider. Two charismatic dancers from Ballet Hispanico, Dandara Veiga and Chris Bloom, are performing Claudia’s pas de deux, while the full company of Ballet Hispanico will also be dancing at the Vail Festival in a program that includes their brilliant rendering of CARMEN.maquia, choreographed by Gustavo Ramírez Sansano.

    Dmitry Beryozkin’s images from today’s rehearsal:

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    All photographs by Dmitry Beryozkin.

    ~ Oberon

  • Upcoming: A New Season @ New Chamber Ballet

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    Above: dancers Amber Neff and Kristine Butler of New Chamber Ballet

    Monday September 18th, 2017 – Today I stopped by at the Ballet Hispanico studios to visit some of my favorite people from the dance world: Miro Magloire and the ballerinas of his New Chamber Ballet. They are presently in rehearsal for the opening performances of their 2017-2018 season, which will take place on September 22nd and 23rd, 2017, at the City Center Studios. Tickets and more information about the performances here

    The all-Magloire program for the opening performances features a new ballet commissioned by Richard and Leslie Curtis to music by J S Bach. The other composers represented will be Luciano Berio, Beat Furrer, and Miro Magloire. The dancers are Sarah Atkins, Elizabeth Brown, Kristine Butler, Traci Finch, and Amber Neff. In keeping with New Chamber Ballet’s time-honoured tradition, all of the musical scores will be performed live by pianist Melody Fader and violinist Doori Na.

    The overcast sky and a recalcitrant camera kept me from getting any really good images today, but here are some of Amber and Kristine rehearsing the new Bach piece and Voicelessness, the Beat Furrer ballet:

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    Kristine Butler is the newest member of New Chamber Ballet

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  • Ballet Hispanico in Rehearsal

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    Above: Martina Calcagno rehearsing at Ballet Hispanico today; photo by Nir Arieli

    Monday March 28th, 2016 – In anticipation of Ballet Hispanico‘s upcoming season at The Joyce, photographer Nir Arieli and I stopped by the Company’s home space on West 89th Street to watch a rehearsal.

    The Hispanico dancers are among the most vivid in New York City’s vibrant community of dance. Watching them in the up-close-and-personal studio setting, their power, unstinting energy, and sheer sexiness are a testament to their generosity and commitment.

    For their impending Joyce performances, Ballet Hispanico will offer the New York premiere of Gustavo Ramírez Sansano’s Flabbergast. The Company have previously performed Mr. Sansano’s dramatic narrative ballet CARMEN.maquia and his charming El Beso.

    Flabbergast is a complete joy to experience: lively, sexy, and playful, the choreography calls for non-stop action. And the dancers are even called upon to sing, which they do enthusiastically. Here are some of Nir’s images from today’s run-thru of this exciting dancework:

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    Eila Valls and Lyvan Verdecia

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    Chris Bloom

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    Melissa Fernandez

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    Mark Gieringer

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    Mark (foreground) & Company

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    Kassandra Cruz

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    Cole Vernon

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    Mark Gieringer

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    The Flabbergast ensemble

    As an ideal contrast to the extroverted Flabbergast, choreographer’s Ramón Oller’s darkly ritualistic Bury Me Standing will also be on the Joyce program. A section of this ballet, in which a cortege of mourners move slowly across the space while a male soloist performs an expressive dance of lamentation, was being rehearsed today with Hispanico’s charismatic Mario Ismael Espinoza in the featured role.

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    Above, and in the following images: Mario Ismael Espinoza

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    During this run-thru from Bury Me Standing, I had one of those unusual experiences that you can only get at a rehearsal: while Mario was performing the solo and Nir was capturing it, I was at the other end of the studio where Mario’s alternate, Christopher Hernandez, was also dancing the solo directly in front of me. Mario and Christopher have very different physiques and stage personalities; shifting my gaze between the two, I was able to experience their interpretations simultaneously; an exciting finale to our studio visit.

    I want to thank publicist Michelle Tabnick for arranging everything, Mr. Sansano for his cordial greeting and very appealing choreography, Hispanico’s Michelle Manzanales – ever the gracious hostess – and every single one of the Company’s incredible dancers.

    And I’m particularly grateful – as always – to photographer Nir Arieli.

    I want to draw your attention to Nir’s upcoming gallery show of Flocks at Daniel Cooney|Fine Art on West 26th Street, which will run from April 21st thru June 4th, 2016. Ballet Hispanico is among the companies featured in this series. More information below:

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  • Rehearsal: New Chamber Ballet

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    Above: New Chamber Ballet dancers Amber Neff and Sarah Atkins

    Monday February 22nd, 2016 – I dropped in at Ballet Hispanico’s studios today where Miro Magloire, just back from choreographing the ballet sequences for Sarasota Opera’s production of Verdi’s AIDA, is preparing his New Chamber Ballet dancers for their upcoming performances: February 26th and 27th, 2016, at City Center Studios. Ticket information here.

    Marina Harss wrote a wonderful article for DanceTabs about Miro’s Sarasota experience: read it here.

    At today’s rehearsal, Miro was fine-tuning the ballets we’ll be seeing on the coming weekend at City Center Studios. Here are some photos of the dancers I took at the studio today:

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    Amber Neff

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    Shoshana Rosenfield, Amber Neff, Sarah Atkins

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    Shoshana Rosenfield, Sarah Atkins

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    Sarah Atkins, Amber Neff

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    Shoshana Rosenfield

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    Traci Finch

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    Elizabeth Brown, Sarah Atkins

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    Traci Finch, Elizabeth Brown

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    Elizabeth Brown, Traci Finch

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    Elizabeth Brown, Amber Neff

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    Elizabeth Brown, Amber Neff

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    Elizabeth Brown

    The works to be presented at the upcoming City Center Studio performances are: the premiere of the full version of Gravity to music by Austrian composer Friedrich Cerha, who turns 90 this month; the premiere of a new ballet to Maurice Ravel’s 2nd violin sonata; a revival of Quartet, a dramatic solo set to Arnold Schoenberg’s Six Little Piano Pieces; a revival of Two Friends, a trio danced to Claude Debussy’s violin sonata; and Miro’s recent success Voicelessness, a duet set to music by Beat Furrer.

    The dancers are Sarah Atkins, Elizabeth Brown, Traci Finch, Amber Neff, and Shoshana Rosenfield, and the music will be played live by Doori Na (violin) and Melody Fader (piano).

  • Upcoming: Ballet Hispanico @ The Joyce

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    Above: Ballet Hispanico‘s Mario Ismael Espinoza and Kimberly van Woesik in CARMEN.maquia; rehearsal photo by Nir Arieli

    Ballet Hispanico return to the Joyce Theater from April 14th – 26th, 2015 with 15 performances featuring five dynamic programs. Tickets start at $10 and are on sale here.

    Under the artistic direction of Eduardo Vilaro, Ballet Hispanico‘s style combines the fire and passion of their Latino roots with elements of contemporary ballet.

    Highlights of this year’s Joyce season include a raw and athletic world premiere by Mexico-based choreographer Miguel Mancillas and the dazzling New York premiere of Show.Girl. by Miami-based, Princess Grace Award-winning choreographer Rosie Herrera. Also in the Joyce repertory are Ballet Hispanico’s striking production of Gustavo Ramírez Sansano’s CARMEN.maquia, a contemporary look at the iconic story of a passionate gypsy woman; the marvelous all-male Sombrerísimo, choreographed by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa and commissioned by New York City Center for the 10thanniversary of the Fall for Dance Festival; and El Beso, choreographed by Gustavo Ramírez Sansano, with original costumes by Venezuelan fashion designer Angel Sanchez.

    For the first time during its New York Season, Ballet Hispanico will also offer a 90-minute matinee on Saturday, April 18th that is specially curated for children and families featuring excerpts from the Company’s diverse repertory and a Q & A with the dancers. Hosted by Artistic Director Eduardo Vilaro and Education Director AnaMaria Correa, Ballet Hispanico’s fun, interactive, and educational Performances for Young People – now celebrating 30 years – give families a glimpse into the beauty of the arts and Latino culture.

  • Preview: Ballet Hispanico’s CARMEN.maquia

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    Above: Ballet Hispanico‘s Chris Bloom and Kimberly van Woesik in rehearsal for CARMEN.maquia  Photo: Nir Arieli

    Normally I don’t do previews of upcoming dance productions unless I’m planning to see them in performance. Ballet Hispanico‘s premiere presentation of Gustavo Ramirez Sansano’s CARMEN.maquia happens to fall on a night when I have tickets for the New York Philharmonic. But because I admire the Hispanico dancers so much (and their director, Eduardo Vilaro, is such a wonderful guy) I jumped at the chance to see a rehearsal today. I was so impressed with the work – for so many different reasons – that I have to send out the word: this is a must-see dancework. Ticket information for the November 22nd performance at the Apollo Theater here

    Luckily, photographer Nir Arieli was available to meet me and document the rehearsal today, which – as it turned out – was the first ‘costume-run-thru’ of the full work. I’m so grateful to publicist Michelle Tabnick for arranging things and to Ballet Hispanico‘s rehearsal director Michelle Manzanales for welcoming us to the studio.

    As a long-time opera-goer (yes, I even went to the Old Met!) Bizet’s CARMEN has been in my blood for over half-a-century, starting with my first experience of hearing the great Rise Stevens singing the ‘Habanera’ on an old LP my parents owned. I know all the music intimately…and 99% of the words, which I found myself singing along today.

    I don’t want to give away any secrets, but Mr. Sansano takes a non-literal stance towards the opera’s score for his new ballet, and he even incorporates music from other Bizet works. One interpolation in particular was truly daring, but I’m not going to spoil the surprise. In terms of relating to the story as told in the Bizet opera, we have dancers representing Carmen, Don Jose, Escamillo, and Micaela as well as smugglers, cigarette girls, and soldiers. But the choreographer makes some stunning re-assignments of music normally associated with one scene in the opera to a different situation in his ballet. For example…no, wait…you’ll have to go and find out for yourself!

    In fact, I should not really say anything more lest I say too much. But I will mention that the black-and-white costumes are inspired by Picasso’s drawings, and that the personifications of the main characters by the marvelous Hispanico dancers transcend steps, acting, and music to create living, breathing men and women who wear their passions proudly. The work is provocative in so many different ways, from the aforementioned musical placements to the characterizations of the major players (they don’t always fit our stereotyped ideas), and even a bit of nudity.

    So, rather than let too many cats out of the proverbial bag at this pre-premiere stage, I’ll share with you some of Nir Arieli’s rehearsal images. I had a terrible time deciding which ones to include, because I wanted to post them all. 

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    Kimberly van Woesik (Carmen)

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    Kimberly van Woesik and Chris Bloom (Don Jose)

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    Mario Ismael Espinoza (Escamillo)

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    Min-Tzu Li (Micaela) and Chris Bloom

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    Min-Tzu Li and Chris Bloom 

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    Melissa Fernandez

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    Jessica Alejandra Wyatt

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    Jamal Rashann Callender

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    Joshua Winzeler, Johan Rivera Mendez, and Lauren Alzamora

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    Christopher Hernandez and Marcos Rodriguez

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    Martina Calcagno

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    Johan Rivera Mendez and Marcos Rodriguez

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    The ensemble

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    Min-Tzu Li and Chris Bloom

    The following images are from a duet for Carmen and her toreador: Kimberly van Woesik and Mario Ismael Espinoza:

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    All photography by Nir Arieli.

  • Ballet Hispanico @ The Joyce 2014

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    Above: from Ballet Hispanico‘s production of UMBRAL, photo by Paula Lobo

    Tuesday April 15th, 2014 – Opening night of Ballet Hispanico‘s two-week season at The Joyce. This fantastic Company have quickly made their way to my top echelon of Gotham dance-world favorites: the dancers are sexy and spectacular, the choreography is invariably exciting, the musical range is broad and seductive…what more could one ask?

    Tonight’s program opened with UMBRAL, choreographed by Edgar Zendajes to an original score by Owen Belton. This ballet honors the traditional Mexican celebration of the Dia de los Muertos (‘Day of the Dead’). Dark and evocative, UMBRAL benefits greatly from Joshua Preston’s lighting and the sleek costuming by Diana Ruettiger which displays the dancers’  lithe figures to maximum effect.

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    Light smoke drifts across the landscape as Mario Ismael Espinoza (above, in a Paula Lobo photo) appears in a sleek blood-red leotard, with his face painted deathly white, lips sewn shut: a living corpse. Mario, one of New York’s most alluring dance personalities, moves thru the community – an unseen spectre. His dancing has a remote beauty and mystique so perfectly suited to this role.

    There is a pas de trois for Mario, Vanessa Valecillos, and Jamal Rashann Callender and then a solo for Mario danced in silence. This is interrupted by the ringing of a telephone – a message from the other side? – which the boys attempt to shush. In a passionate duet, Min-Tzu Li and Christopher Bloom display lyrical physicality. Then the six women appear, topless but discreet, as Mario moves subtly among them. The ballet ends with a stylied ensemble for the entire Company; as the dancers withdraw, Mario stands in a pool of shining light as if ascending to heaven. A brilliant piece, and a real tour de force for Mr. Espinoza.

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    Above, from SOMBRERISIMO, photo by Paula Lobo

    Last season’s hit, SOMBRERISIMO, returned in triumph to The Joyce stage. Choreographer Anabelle Lopez Ochoa, using a collage of music that veers from propulsive to sensuous, evokes Magritte’s bowler-hatted men in this vastly pleasing ballet; and again the costumes (Ms. Ruettiger) and lighting (Mr. Preston) show off both the dancers and the dance to perfection.

    Six men – Christopher Bloom, Jamal Rashann Callender, Alexander Duval, Mario Ismael Espinoza, Johan Rivera Mendez, and Marcos Rodriguez – move with vibrant authority thru the sexy, witty ensembles which include some sleight-of-hand passing of the hat and a bit of bowler-Frisbee. The men are jaunty, playful and ironic. Last year Christopher Bloom looked like a rising star, and now he’s shining brightly in the Big Apple’s firmament of dance: a man who moves with a particular energy that keeps our eye on him whenever he’s onstage. Both here and in EL BESO which followed, Chris served notice that he has arrived.

    Ballet Hispanico in fact have a particularly strong contingent of male dancers and in SOMBRERISIMO each man has a chance to shine; the ballet drew a whooping ovation from the packed house as the boys stepped foward for several bows. And now someone needs to make a new and special piece for Hispanico‘s gorgeous women

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    Above: Ballet Hispanico‘s Kimberly Van Woesik in EL BESO, photo by Paula Lobo

    After watching a studio rehearsal of Gustavo Ramiriez Sansano’s new ballet EL BESO (‘The Kiss’) I was very curious to see how it would look onstage. In contrast to the dazzling colours and stately rhythms of the music (drawn from the enchanting scores of the zarzuela), the setting was much darker than I expected. I had imagined costumes of scarlet and canary yellow, with black lace and golden filagree, but instead designer Angel Sanchez has put the dancers in rather utilitarian outfits of black and dark blue. The stage lighting could be just a notch brighter so that the subtle interplay of the dancers and their many kisses becomes clearer. Some of the intimacy of the work has been lost in the move from studio to stage.

    Once I adjusted to the unexpected black-and-blue setting, there was much to enjoy in this piece, for the choreography has wit and sparkle. EL BESO opens with Johan Rivera Mendez alone onstage, looking a bit shy. He is soon the object of Kimberly Van Woesik’s flirtatious affection. The ballet goes on to explore many variations of relationships and many varieties of kissing, including a passionate smooch for two men (Mssers. Bloom and Callender). A big unison ensemble heralds the finale, but at the last moment everyone rushes away leaving Mr. Mendez alone onstage as at the start.

  • Ballet Hispanico @ The Joyce

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    Above: Min-Tzu Li and Jamal Rashann Callender of Ballet Hispanico in Nacho Duato’s JARDI TANCAT. Photo by Jeaux McCormick.

    Sunday April 21, 2013 matinee – A recent visit to a Ballet Hispanico rehearsal was an ideal introduction for me to this vivid and delightful Company. Today at The Joyce I got to see them in full regalia: lights, costumes, the works. It was an exhilirating afternoon.

    Nacho Duato’s JARDI TANCAT finds its roots in folk tales from Catalonia, transformed into songs sung by Spanish singer Maria del Mar Bonet. The ballet opens in silence with six dancers in a patch of sunlight on a darkened plain; they are simple countryfolk who work the barren land,
    praying to God for the rain that does not come:

    “Water, we have asked for water

    And You, Oh Lord, You gave us wind

    And You turn Your back on us

    As though You will not listen to us”

    As the music begins, the sun brightens further and the choreographer presents us with passages of ensemble work in which the dancers capture the spirit of the land and the longing for relief from the hardships of their lives. Despite the bleakness of their daily labours, they seem to find a quiet joy in their sense of community. 

    In three stunningly beautiful duets, Duato extends the art of partnering in fresh ways and the Ballet Hispanico dancers respond to his vision with clarity and passion. The three couples today were: Melissa Fernandez with Donald Borror, Martina Calcagno with Mario Ismael Espinoza, and Min-Tzu Li with Jamal Rashann Callender. JARDI TANCAT is a spell-binding work, holding the audience in a keenly attentive state. The moment it ended I was ready to watch it again: and how often can we say that of a dancework?

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    Above: from TANGO VITROLA, photo by Paula Lobo. Click on the image to enlarge.

    An old gramophone sits illuminated on a high pedastal at the back of the stage as Donald Borror, his dorsal muscles expressive in the golden light, dances the opening solo of TANGO VITROLA. This magical tango-ballet unfolds against a sonic tapestry of scratchy old 78s; among the songs from the 1920s are “Rosendo”
    and “La Cumparista” by Orquesta Típica Criolla de Vincente Creco; and
    “El Llorón,” “Pena Mulata” and “El Porteñito” by Roberto Firpo.

    Magnificently lit by Joshua Preston, the dancers – the women in slinky black frocks and stiletto heels and the men bare-chested in black trousers and wearing fedoras – weave thru choreographer Alejandro Cervera’s intoxicatingly seductive patterns, periodically retreating to watch the others dance from rows of cafe chairs at either side of the stage. Desire and provocation tingle in the air of this dreamlike nightclub where the sexy atmosphere is over-laid with the almost formal courting rituals of the tango. Attitude is all as the dancers revel in their own attractiveness.

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    Above: from NUBE BLANCO, photo by Rosalie O’Connor

    Theatrical elements come into play for the final NUBE BLANCO; again Mr. Preston’s lighting is a vital factor in this work set by choreographer Annabelle Lopez Ochoa to recordings of Maria Dolores Pradera. The dancers, all in bright red shoes, are called upon to act and vocalize along with executing the earthy moves, hand-clapping and foot-stomping culled from the flamenco vocabulary. Meanwhile an allusion to ballet comes in the fluffy white tutus worn by the women. A particularly riotous male quartet (“uno! dos! tres! cuatro!”) clearly caught the audience’s fancy, as did a charming mimetic vignette by Mario Ismael Espinoza, one of the Gotham dance scene’s sexiest guys. In the end the dancers stagger in, each wearing one shoe with the other foot bare; one of the girls has put on all the white tutus at once, tramsforming herself into a giant animated snowball. Her final arabesque, foot pointing to heaven, gave NUBE BLANCO its concluding mirthful image. As the dancers stepped out for their bows, I found myself whooping and screaming along with the rest of the crowd.

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    Above: Mario Ismael Espinoza in NUBE BLANCO, photo by Rosalie O’Connor

    An absorbing, sexy and vastly pleasing afternoon of dance. Ballet Hispanico continue their season at The Joyce for another week: performance and ticket information here.

    I give Ballet Hispanico six stars out of a possible five: go, and be seduced.