January 26, 2011

Review: Three Boléros in Lyon

3xBoléro: Walking Mad / OleroB / Episode 17
Choreography: Johan Inger, Kenneth Kvarnström, Alexander Ekman
Göteborg Ballet
Maison de la Danse, Lyon
January 21, 2010

Given its rise to global fame, it is easy to forget that Ravel’s Boléro was born as a dance score. Commissioned by Ballets Russes dancer Ida Rubinstein, it has been choreographed again and again since 1928, with mixed results. Its structure is daunting – repetitive and supposedly unsubtle, yet building up the tension to an explosive, almost diabolical finale. The Göteborg Ballet, the latest company to experiment with the 18-minute score, brought in no fewer than three Scandinavian choreographers to help. 3xBoléro or not, however, the programme they performed in Lyon provided precious little insight into Ravel’s enduring creation.

There was no need at least to fear a Boléro overkill, for only one of the three works, Johan Inger’s Walking Mad, used the score in its entirety. Created for the Nederlands Dans Theater in 2001, it is mostly derivative of the Dutch company’s style, with a smooth classical base and modern dance-inspired weight placement. A foldable wooden wall provides doors, fences and metaphorical barriers to nine restless characters, and from playful chase to angst-ridden pas de deux, Walking Mad covers impressive emotional ground with acute timing. It fails, however, to go beyond the surface rhythm of Boléro, and the addition of Arvo Pärt’s Für Alina to the score is unfortunate; currently the default soundtrack for sentimental pas de deux across the world, it is as spare as Boléro is bombastic and cheapens Inger’s overall concept. (…)

» Read the full review in the Financial Times

The Göteborg Ballet in Kenneth Kvarnström's OreloB © Ingmar Jernberg

The Göteborg Ballet in Kenneth Kvarnström's OreloB © Ingmar Jernberg

The Göteborg Ballet in Alexander Ekman's Episode 17 © Ingmar Jernberg

The Göteborg Ballet in Alexander Ekman's Episode 17 © Ingmar Jernberg





January 22, 2011

Review: Two pastiches and a hieratic Carmen (Mariinsky tour to Baden-Baden)

Carmen-Suite / Scotch Symphony / Etudes
Fernando Alonso, George Balanchine, Harald Lander
Mariinsky Ballet
Festspielhaus Baden-Baden
December 28, 2010

Few would picture Ulyana Lopatkina, the Maryinsky’s hieratic queen, as Carmen, and yet her turn in Fernando Alonso’s Carmen-Suite was the one fully realized performance of the Gala that closed the Maryinsky’s traditional Christmas tour to Baden-Baden. Her defiant lines when the curtain rose on her still body set the tone for an unusual corrida, a game of bullfighting with passion at stake. In place of lust, Lopatkina’s is a deliberate, merciless sensuality, shrewdly tailored to her style. Both torero and prey, her Carmen has learned to use her arresting legs for power or pleasure, and she is caught in her own game.

Alonso’s 1967 ballet seemed better for her rich portrayal, and the simplicity of most variations and pas de deux is a welcome change from today’s trends. Complex lifts are few and far between, and what the production lacks in fluidity it makes up for in metaphors, from Carmen’s expressive feet, flexing and stabbing into the floor, to the arena delineated by the sets. Danila Korsuntsev’s José may not look Spanish, but all the soloists did justice to this underrated work. (…)

» Read the full review in Dance Magazine

And a few photos of this very welcome triple bill:

Ulyana Lopatkina in Carmen-Suite © Natasha Razina

Ulyana Lopatkina in Carmen-Suite © Natasha Razina

Anastasia Matvienko in Scotch Symphony © Natasha Razina

Anastasia Matvienko and corps de ballet in Scotch Symphony © Natasha Razina

Viktoria Tereshkina & Vladimir Shklyarov in Etudes © Natasha Razina

Viktoria Tereshkina & Vladimir Shklyarov in Etudes © Natasha Razina





Review: A cathartic Rite at the Paris Opera Ballet

Apollo / O zlozony/O composite / The Rite of Spring
Choreography: George Balanchine, Trisha Brown, Pina Bausch
Paris Opera Ballet
Palais Garnier
December 17, 2010

Would any other ballet company dare to present Nureyev’s Swan Lake and Pina Bausch’s Rite of Spring at the same time, in two different opera houses? The Paris Opéra Ballet prides itself on the extremes it covers in terms of repertoire, but their Christmas contemporary mixed bill was a hit-and-miss flirt with foreign styles.

Apollo has been seen more often than any other Balanchine ballet in Paris in recent years, most likely because of the limited number of dancers required. The company’s placid classicism and cool demeanor make for polished performances, but sadly evacuate what in the choreography is space for subversiveness—the muses in particular are so polite that Balanchine’s metaphorical ballet looks at times uncannily like a misogynistic ode to a man arranging his obedient harem. (…)

» Read the full review in Dance Magazine





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