January 11, 2010

Review : Robbins, Balanchine and more in Baden-Baden – Mariinsky Gala 2009

Mariinsky Gala
Divertissement / In the Night / Theme & Variations
Festspielhaus Baden-Baden
28 December 2009

Careful with galas: their fragile mish-mash of styles and performers shouldn’t be upset by too many novelties, and yet they have to be varied enough from year to year to keep the audience coming. The Mariinsky has found a formula in Baden-Baden, and it’s sticking to it: two one-act ballets, a divertissement full of sure hits, and the same array of star dancers on stage, from Ulyana Lopatkina to the company’s latest recruit, Denis Matvienko. Jerome Robbins’s In the Night and Balanchine’s Theme and Variations provided the needed contrast this Christmas, while the mandatory string of pas de deux, brightened up by humorous touches, opened the performance.

Starting an evening off with Auber’s Grand Pas in front of a cold audience certainly is a thankless task. Evgenia Obraztsova (replacing Alina Somova) and Maxim Zyuzin presented us with a rarity – a classically pure Grand Pas Classique. Obraztsova is a strange choice for this piece, all softness and refinement when the Mariinsky Orchestra’s take on Rossini seemed to call for whiz-bang technique and conquering demeanor. She has developed the authority to pull it through, with extremely assured fouettés in the coda, but the many details of her dancing seem lost in this pure gala piece. She and Zyuzin, who handled the virtuoso parts well, still brought welcome harmony to this Grand Pas Classique, their extensions mercifully in line, confident and beautifully Russian. (…)

» Read the full review in Ballet.co Magazine

» Ballet.co Gallery of the Gala (photos © Natasha Razina & Marcus Gernsbeck)



Program

I – Divertissement
Grand Pas Classique - Evgenia Obraztsova, Maxim Zyuzin
La Vivandière (Markitenka) pas de six - Elena Evseeva, Filip Stepin + Evgenia Dolmatova, Anna Lavrinenko, Yulianna Chereshkevitch, Oxsana Skoryk
Scheherazade Adagio – Ekaterina Kondaurova, Yevgeny Ivanchenko
Tarantella (Balanchine) – Nadezhda Gonchar, Leonid Sarafanov
Spuck’s Grand Pas de Deux – Ulyana Lopatkina, Danila Korsuntsev
Don Quixote pas de deux – Anastasia & Denis Matvienko + Variation: Yana Selina

II – In The Night (Jerome Robbins)
Anastasia & Denis Matvienko
Ekaterina Kondaurova, Yevgeny Ivanchenko
Ulyana Lopatkina, Danila Korsuntsev

III – Theme & Variations (Balanchine)
Viktoria Tereshkina, Vladimir Shklyarov
Yana Selina, Anna Lavrinenko, Valerya Martinyuk, Maria Shirinkina
Konstantin Zverev, Fyodor Murashov, Alexei Nedviga, Alexei Timofeyev


Ulyana Lopatkina & Danila Korsuntsev in Spuck's Grand Pas de Deux © Marcus Gernsbeck

Ulyana Lopatkina & Danila Korsuntsev in Spuck's Grand Pas de Deux © Marcus Gernsbeck





January 5, 2010

Review : La Sylphide, a Danish stranger from Petersburg in Baden-Baden

La Sylphide
Mariinsky Ballet
Festspielhaus Baden-Baden
27 December 2009

One of the true delights of the Mariinsky Ballet’s annual tours to Baden-Baden lies in the repertoire they bring, which, apart from the mandatory Swan Lakes and Nutcrackers, regularly includes ballets never seen on tour. A Mariinsky La Sylphide is a curiosity, a confidential pleasure confined to Saint-Petersburg and usually performed at home while most of the company is on tour – this reversal of the situation, along with the luxury casting of Evgenia Obraztsova and Leonid Sarafanov, generated an excitement that has been missing from seasons plagued by safe programming.

Mind you, the Mariinsky Ballet has never been the finest exponent of Bournonville, and it showed again in a few awkward scenes. Vyacheslav Okunev’s designs make the first act look outdated – the bleak mansion and ill-assorted costumes might well be one of the reasons James so longs to go and live in a pretty forest full of elegant Sylphs. The corps de ballet and the demi-soloists also showed some uneasiness, including Xenia Romashova as Effie’s friend, slightly cramped in her character solo, and Soslan Kulaev, much too tall and properly over-the-top as Gurn (ah, his “I-saw-it-with-the-ping-pong-balls-I-call-my-eyes” mime). The Mariinsky’s acting style and expansive dancing simply don’t fit into this first act, but their hybrid encounter with a master, whether it be Balanchine or Bournonville, is a fascinating sight in its own right.

» Read the full review in Ballet.co Magazine

Evgenia Obraztsova and Leonid Sarafanov in La Sylphide © Natascha Rezina

Evgenia Obraztsova and Leonid Sarafanov in La Sylphide © Natascha Rezina





December 25, 2009

A Mariinsky Christmas!

The Mariinsky Ballet is already in Baden-Baden for their traditional Christmas tour at the Festspielhaus, and here are a few official photos from the scheduled La Sylphide and Gala as seasonal greetings. Merry Christmas everyone!

Joyeux Noël à tous – une fin d’année célébrée par le Mariinsky, comme le veut la tradition, par une tournée à Baden-Baden. Photos de La Sylphide et du Gala à venir en guise de calendrier de l’Avent tardif!

Evgenia Obraztsova and Leonid Sarafanov in La Sylphide © Natasha Razina

Evgenia Obraztsova and Leonid Sarafanov in La Sylphide © Natasha Razina

Evgenia Obraztsova and Leonid Sarafanov in La Sylphide © Natasha Razina

Evgenia Obraztsova and Leonid Sarafanov in La Sylphide © Natasha Razina

Leonid Sarafanov and the Mariinsky Ballet in La Sylphide © Natasha Razina

Leonid Sarafanov and the Mariinsky Ballet in La Sylphide © Natasha Razina

Ekaterina Kondaurova and Evgeny Ivanchenko in Robbins' In The Night © Natasha Razina

Ekaterina Kondaurova and Evgeny Ivanchenko in Robbins' In The Night © Natasha Razina

Elena Evseyeva and Filipp Stepin in Markitanka © Natasha Razina

Elena Evseyeva and Filipp Stepin in Markitanka © Natasha Razina

Anastasia & Denis Matvienko in Don Quixote © Natasha Razina

Anastasia & Denis Matvienko in Don Quixote © Natasha Razina

Viktoria Tereshkina and Vladimir Shklyarov in Theme & Variations © Natasha Razina

Viktoria Tereshkina and Vladimir Shklyarov in Theme & Variations © Natasha Razina

Many thanks to the Festspielhaus Baden-Baden.





November 8, 2009

Review : Evgenia Obraztsova and the English Beauty

Royal Ballet
Royal Opera House, London
31 October 2009 (matinée)

Russia is hardly a land of fair princesses these days. Tall, powerful figures dominate a ballet world where Odette/Odile is the ultimate role, the crowning of any ballerina – their dancing is the steel to past stars’ silk, and few of them are a natural fit for the delicate Princess Aurora. The petite Evgenia Obraztsova, guesting with the Royal Ballet this month, is really a wonderful incongruity, almost an antidote to the trend – and her soft, beautiful first Sleeping Beauty was a glimpse into the original harmony of Vaganova training.

Her approach is without question not what one would expect from a Royal Ballet dancer, but there are reasons to that. The Mariinsky production puts no emphasis on the actual narrative. It treats the ballet almost as an essay in classicism, a display of the most refined dancing you could imagine, and the fact that the princess doesn’t look at her suitors when they partner her is of little relevance. On the contrary, the Royal Ballet’s finest Auroras, most notably Alina Cojocaru, have worked out every tiny detail of their relationship to the other characters, and strive to make them crystal-clear. The splendor of the ballet accommodates even the Russian distanciation, but it takes some getting used to.

That caveat aside, this princess is a classical jewel. Her main goal is not to give an original reading of the part, I believe, but a completely natural one – she is a heiress to a long tradition, and the harmony of the choreography flows through her, whereas many dancers set out to look as individual as possible. Her affinity with the part allows her to look composed in the difficult first act, and her entrance was pure joy – instinctively phrased where this production’s choreography often looks awkward. Despite some nervousness during the very last balances, she acquitted herself well of a trick that is not performed in the Kirov-Mariinsky version. So few dancers know how to suggest the arc of a phrase, as she so often does in her variations – letting the music flow before emphasizing the last note of a passage, her arms never still, light and fluttering.

She was at her best in the Vision Scene. The softness Obraztsova brings to any choreography is quite rare – she doesn’t punch or freeze the accents, but rather let them visually expand and disappear, the contours as smooth as those of a dream. She literally immersed herself in the added choreography by Sir Frederick Ashton, the melting arabesques plié, the menés on pointe – she even found quiet pauses in the turns of the coda, her arms delicately framing her face in relevé for a second. Blending into this foreign take on Tchaikovsky’s music and into the company as a whole, she was speaking a unified language.

David Makhateli, a Georgian-born Principal, was her Prince Florimund. His lines are quite stunning – elongated, lyrical – and he is completely at home in this very classical part. Obraztsova wakes up to his kiss with the right sense of shyness and restraint; it is not until seeing her parents that she feels allowed to express any feelings for him. The royal wedding makes more sense this way, and although the Grand Pas de Deux that ensues was not without a few partnering glitches, their pairing is extremely engaging. Makhateli is an obvious future king, and while Alina Cojocaru and Johan Kobborg opted for a very romantic reading, Evgenia Obraztsova brings a good dose of Russian authority to the stage – one wouldn’t have expected it from the Mariinsky’s favourite Juliet, but she combined her usual delicacy with an elegant confidence and decisive phrasing. Love comes when she lowers to the floor in a swan-like position, expressively bowing to Makhateli, and her sweetness shone through in the variation – a delightful reading that kept the Russian attitudes with épaulement at the beginning, a signature moment for her. She would have everything to gain in dancing regularly with the Royal Ballet, as their dramatic repertoire might just be what she needs for the future.

Others were not so on top of the choreography, with junior dancers cast in important parts for this matinée. Laura McCulloch is not quite up to the challenges of the Lilac Fairy. She is a fun presence, with bits of delightful mime, but she struggles with the Prologue variation – and simply doesn’t possess the grand classical manner one expects in this all-important role. Kristen McNally, on the other hand, made a striking debut as Carabosse. Much younger than most interpreters of the role, she brings to it a glamorous thirst for power that gives edge to her confrontations with the fairies.

The fairies themselves were uneven and, for some of them, miscast, but Takane Akada, an apprentice with the company, made a lovely and secure attempt at the first variation, and later on at one of Florestan’s sisters. Yuhui Choe, the other sister, was her wonderful, poetic self, a true Aurora waiting in the wings, and Kenta Kura offered a vivacious and beautifully realized Bluebird. Let us overlook, on the other hand, the clumsy performance of the corps de ballet, who looked completely ill-at-ease in the Vision Scene. It was a matinée, but the children in the audience still deserve magic.

Evgenia Obraztsova in the Kirov-Mariinsky reconstruction of the 1890 Sleeping Beauty © Neff/Gaynor Minden

Evgenia Obraztsova in the Kirov-Mariinsky reconstruction of the 1890 Sleeping Beauty © Neff/Gaynor Minden





October 16, 2009

Russian Guests

Paris et Londres s’apprêtent à accueillir plusieurs danseurs venus du Mariinsky et du Bolshoi cet automne, et cette célébration imprévue et involontaire du centenaire des Ballets Russes a de quoi réjouir dans les deux villes – et rendre uniques quelques représentations de La Belle au bois dormant et de Casse-Noisette.

Le Royal Ballet, dont ce début de saison est marqué par une cascade de blessures et d’indisponibilités, a fait le choix du remplacement haut de gamme en invitant Evgenia Obraztsova, première soliste au Mariinsky. L’absence annoncée de Lauren Cuthbertson jusqu’en 2010 est à l’origine de cette venue ; la troupe anglaise avait déjà invité la saison passée Ekaterina Osmolkina à venir combler les rangs de ses Odette/Odile. Evgenia Obraztsova, qui a dansé la première de ce même ballet avec le Ballet du Mariinsky cet été à Covent Garden, se produira aux côtés de David Makhateli. Filmée dans Les Poupées Russes (Cédric Klapisch) et Ballerina (Bertrand Normand), elle a notamment dansé la première cette année de la reconstruction de Shurale, sans compter ses apparitions dans les rôles de Juliette, Giselle, la Sylphide ou Aurore.

A Paris, c’est Natalia Osipova, l’envers fougueux de la Russie, qui va danser pour la première sur la scène de l’Opéra Bastille avec Nikolaï Tsiskaridze, déjà apparu avec l’Opéra de Paris dans La Bayadère. Prévus dans une série où les étoiles se faisaient rare dans les rôles-titres, les deux solistes du Bolshoi aborderont le Casse-Noisette de Rudolf Noureev, version inédite dans leur répertoire. Natalia Osipova n’a d’ailleurs jamais dansé le rôle de Clara à Moscou – sa présence devrait ajouter d’autant plus de piquant à un ballet déjà présenté par l’Opéra il y a deux ans, et qui n’est pas sans défauts. La troupe parisienne, de son côté, poursuit sur sa longue lignée d’invités russes, qui inclue ces dernières saisons Svetlana Zakharova, Diana Vishneva et Svetlana Lunkina.

L’Europe de Londres et de Paris se tourne donc à nouveau vers la Russie – l’histoire se répète, comme on dit.

Evgenia Obraztsova dansera le rôle de la Princesse Aurore avec le Royal Ballet les 31 octobre (matinée) et 14 novembre. Les dates des représentations de Natalia Osipova et Nikolaï Tsiskaridze restent à préciser – merci à Dansomanie pour l’annonce de leur venue.





August 28, 2009

Looking back : reviews / critiques

A quick list of recent reviews written for websites.

En français

In English





Interview : Olesya Novikova

Laura @ 20:58 —
Filed under: English, Interviews — Tags: ,

Another Russian interview for Ballet.co, with Olesya Novikova, who was dancing Apollo and Don Quixote in Baden-Baden last December. A First Soloist with the Kirov-Mariinsky Ballet, she discussed her rise through the ranks, a few months before her first maternity leave.

When Olesya Novikova appears at the stage door, in regular clothes, looking very reserved, it is hard to believe you are meeting a first soloist with the Mariinsky Ballet. Aurora, Raymonda, Gamzatti, Giselle, much of the Balanchine and Forsythe repertoire – her repertoire may already span as many leading roles as that of seasoned principals and the rehearsal schedule hung by list her as Kitri or Terpsichore, but the young dancer still looks like a fragile young fawn. Demure throughout our conversation sitting in the orchestra stalls of the Festspielhaus Baden-Baden, she gazes at the stage being set up from time to time for answers – as if, even on tour, the mother ship was never very far away. (…)

Olesya Novikova shares one thing with Asylmuratova, who became head of the Vaganova Academy two years before Novikova’s own graduation, in 2002 – she is taught in the company by Olga Moiseyeva, who celebrated her eightieth birthday in 2008. The dancer lights up when discussing her coach. “I absolutely wanted her to be my teacher, I absolutely wanted to work with her”, she says quickly. She mentions her strictness, her strong character, and laughs softly : “We share the same Zodiac sign, and people say it is hard when two people of the same sign meet, but we understand each other very well.” She points out with genuine pride one of Moiseyeva’s star students, Svetlana Zakharova, and her work growing several generations of Mariinsky Ballerinas. Novikova’s own trust in her teacher appears touchingly limitless. I asked what she thinks Moiseyeva saw in her; “no idea” is the short reply – but that Moiseyeva “knows her dancers. She knows how they should be.” (…)

» Full interview in Ballet.co Magazine, August 2009 issue





Interview : Ekaterina Chtchelkanova

Les Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montréal have their own Russian ballet mistress, one who seems to have done it all, journeying from the Kirov Ballet to Broadway via American Ballet Theatre. I met her during the company’s tour to Paris in the summer of 2008, and a long interview for Ballet.co ensued :

(…) How did you decide to move to the USA?

I actually didn’t decide to move. I didn’t plan anything. I was on tour with the Kirov in the States, and I realized that for personal and professional reasons it would be better for me to try to find something else, elsewhere. I am very grateful to Mikhail Baryshnikov. I don’t think that without him I would have had enough courage to even pick up the phone and call American Ballet Theatre to audition. He came up to me in the hallway of David Howard’s dance studio after seeing me in class. He motivated me, he told me : you’re a good dancer, you should, you must dance ! I didn’t dance for two years between the Kirov and ABT. I had no papers, I didn’t speak English. I had nothing. I was even unable to pay for ballet classes. With his blessing, I entered American Ballet Theatre.

How important is musicality for you?

To me musicality is everything. I still cannot understand movement without music or any rhythm. I played the violin for almost 5 years before entering the Vaganova school, where we all had 8 years of piano. It allows us to be familiar with music terms, to read scores and to feel comfortable working with conductors, pianists and any other musicians. It is a necessary part of dance education, as much as the history of art, music and ballet or literature…

During my time with ABT, I would often choose which class to take by the pianist who was playing. I have to admit that classes were a very weak element in that company, unless such people as Vladilen Semeonov, Gradimir Pankov, Sergei Berejnoy or Mr. Carreño, Jose Carreño’s uncle, came to teach. I see with great sadness the loss of musicality in almost every company and school around the world. It is all nowadays about pirouettes and extension, rearely about soul, mind and body becoming one, lost in musical harmony and phrasing. I always remember how my teacher, Ludmila Safronova, who was Agrippina Vaganova’s very last protégée, chose music for every exam and even every class, especially when it came to adagio. I’ll never forget my graduation. For the grand adagio she picked Rachmaninov’s elegia. When I think about this music, even now, I have goosebumps. Every note would resonate in the tips of my fingers and toes. I felt it in my eyelashes, my spine was like an electric cord but the whole body, me – a wild, strong but meek and sad animal. That’s the musicality she was teaching us. Technique is powerful but it is still just a tool that helps building a way to the real freedom every dancer, every performer, every true artist needs. Dance is music or, I would say, music is dance. To me, music is life. I can’t imagine my existence without it. (…)

»  Full interview in Ballet.co Magazine, December 2009 issue

© Anatoly Bisinbayev

© Anatoly Bisinbayev





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