June 1, 2011

Work in Progress – Eric Underwood on Tryst (Pointe Magazine)

Cover of the June/July 2011 issue © Pointe Magazine

Cover of the June/July 2011 issue © Pointe Magazine

One of several Americans with The Royal Ballet, soloist Eric Underwood has become an audience favorite in London, particularly in neo-classical and contemporary repertoire. In May 2010, he and soloist Melissa Hamilton made their joint debuts in Christopher Wheeldon’s 2002 Tryst. He discussed the rehearsal process with me at the time for Pointe Magazine:

Eric Underwood: Tryst’s structure is quite unique. I had to get my head around the idea that the lead couple does not interact with the corps de ballet. The main pas de deux was created on Darcey Bussell and Jonathan Cope, and Jonathan coached us for the revival. Wheeldon came in to work with us after we learned the roles. It wasn’t easy trying to capture the feeling that was there originally.

There is an energy more than a specific character—Wheeldon would speak of otherwordly gods that are drawn to each other, of their magnetic relationship. The music, by composer James MacMillan, is inspired by a Scottish poem, and Wheeldon was looking for the kind of very full movement that you find in nature, like grass in the wind. (…)

» Read the full article in Pointe Magazine: “A Rendezvous with Tryst“, June/July 2011

 

Melissa Hamilton & Eric Underwood in Tryst © Bill Cooper

Melissa Hamilton & Eric Underwood in Tryst © Bill Cooper





May 22, 2010

The Muse, the Composer and the Choreographer

The recent Chroma / Tryst / Symphony in C Insight Evening at the Royal Ballet brought together quite a triumvirate of artists – Balanchine ballerina Patricia Neary, choreographer Christopher Wheeldon and composer James MacMillan – and I wrote a blog post about the evening for the Royal Opera House:

There is a very specific thrill to an Insight Evening – the emotion to see dancers up close, to learn how they rehearse, to see them take risks a few feet from you. Extra treats, however, were in store on 14 May to introduce the last triple bill of The Royal Ballet’s season, comprised of Chroma, Tryst and Symphony in C. One of the great Balanchine ballerinas of her time, Patricia Neary, was there to introduce the Balanchine masterpiece Symphony in C, and her presence in the studio seemed to energize dancers and audience alike. Tryst was then rehearsed by choreographer Christopher Wheeldon himself, later joined by Scottish composer James MacMillan for a discussion of the work’s score. An embarrassment of riches, and the rare opportunity to see ballets being passed on by a muse and a choreographer in the same evening.

Patricia Neary launched the evening with a delightful bit of history. Symphony in C was originally choreographed for the Paris Opera Ballet in 1947 as Le Palais de Cristal – instead of the white tutus and plain backdrop we know today, Balanchine had the four movements dressed in different colours. The ballet then entered the repertoire of the New York City Ballet the following year under the name Symphony in C, after the Bizet symphony it is set to, and Balanchine’s dancers always thought the two ballets were identical. When Patricia Neary was called to the Paris Opera Ballet to rehearse Le Palais de Cristal in the 1990s, however, she quickly realised they weren’t – Balanchine had apparently forgotten a good deal of the choreography he had created the year before, and he started from scratch when it came to New York, creating what Patricia Neary deems the better version of one of his most famous “tutu” ballets. (…)

» Read the full post on the Royal Opera House’s blog





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