January 12, 2012

Review: Napoli, The Triple Bill

Napoli
Royal Danish Ballet
Palais Garnier, Paris
January 6 & 7, 2012

Where ballet is concerned, things haven’t exactly been rosy in the state of Denmark recently. So it seemed at least in Paris, where the Royal Danish Ballet showed its latest production of August Bournonville’s 1842 work Napoli amid rumours of looming budget cuts and lay-offs. Its unique calling card has always been the Bournonville repertoire, but director Nikolaj Hübbe, who spent most of his dancing career with New York City Ballet before returning to head his alma mater in 2008, made the choice to rejuvenate it completely, with muddled results.

It’s not a bad idea per se: the ballet world loves modernity breathing new life into its warhorses, and while Napoli’s beloved Act III is a national treasure in Denmark, the rest of the ballet has always been problematic. In the process, however, Hübbe has turned Napoli into a triple bill of sorts, where every act comes with its own wildly different period setting and aesthetics.

Act I has been updated to accommodate a Fellinian cinematic vision of 1950s Italy, complete with streetwise young people, cigarette-puffing prostitutes and a good deal of mimed swearing. It works surprisingly well for some scenes and shows how ballet mime can be adapted beyond its usual contexts, but no sooner have we adjusted than Act II introduces a different kind of modernity altogether: a new score by Louise Alenius (whereas Act I and III retain the usual music) and new choreography by Hübbe. (…)

» Read the full review in the Financial Times

Amy Watson & Jean-Lucien Massot in Napoli © Laurent Philippe

Amy Watson & Jean-Lucien Massot in Napoli (Act II) © Laurent Philippe






April 5, 2011

A Noble Radiance: Johan Kobborg Interview (Pointe Magazine)

Laura @ 17:58 —
Filed under: English,Interviews — Tags: , , , ,

The Royal Ballet’s Johan Kobborg needs no introduction – his legendary partnership with Alina Cojocaru, his dramatic flair, the productions he has staged around the world speak for themselves.  For Pointe Magazine’s Reverence column, he talked to me about Bournonville, shopping, singing and more:

Cover of the April/May 2011 issue © Pointe Magazine

Cover of the April/May 2011 issue © Pointe Magazine

In reaching the top, how much is talent and how much is sweat?
For me, it was definitely more determination than talent. I know principals all over the world who are actually not naturally talented, but have worked very hard.

What are you most proud of?
My productions of La Sylphide. Staging it at the Bolshoi was an enormous personal achievement, because they’d just done a different production of La Sylphide, and I was able to change the dancers’ opinions of the ballet.

You were trained in Bournonville technique. What do you love most about it?
For a dancer it’s an amazing technical base. Maybe especially for boys, because for all the jumps you’re not using your arms to get you in the air. It comes from the stomach. That core strength makes everything else easier.

What’s your biggest indulgence?
I’m a shopaholic. If you let me loose in Dolce & Gabbana and I see something, I just think, ‘I work so hard, I should have it.’ It’s not good. I’m also a bit of a sparkler—I always wear gold sneakers. I have lots of pairs. (…)

» Read the full interview in Pointe Magazine: “A Noble Radiance,” April/May 2011

Alina Cojocaru and Johan Kobborg in rehearsal for La Sylphide © Johan Persson

Alina Cojocaru and Johan Kobborg in rehearsal for La Sylphide © Johan Persson





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





Powered by WordPress - © L./Bella Figura - Licence Creative Commons.