February 2, 2012

Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo Returns to the U.S. (Dance Magazine)

Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo, one of France’s best-kept secrets, will be performing in New York and Costa Mesa (California) later this month, and my preview of the company and the repertoire for the tour is in the February issue of Dance Magazine – with added insight from the lovely Noelani Pantastico, who made the move from Seattle to the Riviera a few seasons ago and whom I interviewed for Pointe Magazine back in 2009.

Cover of the February 2012 issue © Dance Magazine

Cover of the February 2012 issue © Dance Magazine

Jean-Christophe Maillot is a lucky man. In 1993, Monte Carlo handed him a gift most choreographers can only dream of: a full company of classically trained dancers, with the freedom to shape it as he wished. Two decades and 30 creations on, Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo is bringing his unique brand of neoclassical choreography to the U.S. this February.

Les Ballets hasn’t been to New York since 2003, but with about 60 performances abroad and only 20 or so in Monte Carlo every season, the company is used to being on the road. Its 48 dancers are an international group, with one former Pacific Northwest Ballet principal among them: Noelani Pantastico, who fell in love with Maillot’s choreography when PNB performed his Roméo et Juliette. She joined in 2008 and relishes the pace. “The atmosphere is very relaxed,” she says. “Jean-Christophe is constantly refreshing the pieces we dance. It’s never the same.”

Pantastico has also had time to absorb the Frenchman’s sleek, visually inventive style, a blend of ballet technique and contemporary inspiration. “He’s very particular,” she says. “I had to stop performing so much to the audience and be really thoughtful about the intention behind every step.” The company dances works by other choreographers, including Balanchine and Forsythe, but Maillot creates at least one new piece every season. His stylish, cohesive ensemble is a testament to the benefits of working closely with one choreographer, and Pantastico now blends in beautifully with the group. (…)

» Read the full article in Dance Magazine: “A Winning Hand,” February 2012

Jean-Christophe Maillot's Altro Canto Part I © Christian Ganet

Jean-Christophe Maillot's Altro Canto Part I © Christian Ganet





January 23, 2012

Book review: The Private Life of Snowflakes

Where Snowflakes Dance and Swear: Inside the Land of Ballet
Stephen Manes

Ever dreamed of being a fly on the wall (or the mirror) while a ballet company goes about its daily business? Stephen Manes did it. Where Snowflakes Dance and Swear, his behind-the-scenes account of Pacific Northwest Ballet’s 2007-2008 season, is a very impressive volume, a guide to the industry that goes beyond the stage to include students, orchestra and crew in the discussion. Many of us know the Seattle-based PNB only from reviews and bits of information gathered online, but by the last page, the company feels like an old friend.

Snowflakes lets us in on aspects of the art form few audience members even know of, no matter how seasoned the balletomane: technical issues and talks of tennis or card games over the crew’s headsets during the performances, board meetings and their jargon, casting negociations, the constant money worries and the petty cost-cutting measures that go with them. Manes is refreshingly matter-of-fact throughout, even comparing ballet and baseball, and he captures PNB’s contradictions with quiet affection, from union conundrums to the chaotic nature of the rehearsals leading up, more often than not, to successful opening nights. The company’s director, former New York City Ballet star Peter Boal, was then in his third season in Seattle, and we see the New York-style culture he brought with him (more new ballets, less rehearsal time) collide with old ways and strong characters.

 Peter Boal rehearses Jerome Robbins' Fancy Free with Josh Spell, Casey Herd, and Jonathan Porretta © Angela Sterling

Peter Boal rehearses Jerome Robbins' "Fancy Free" with Josh Spell, Casey Herd, and Jonathan Porretta © Angela Sterling

The season Manes followed was a momentous one for PNB, with modern premieres and a Laugh out Loud! festival in addition to well-reviewed American classics. The most fascinating production chronicled in the book is Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Roméo et Juliette, a company and US premiere meant to replace the version staged by the company’s former directors. The drama surrounding the rehearsal process (not enough time, one of only two Juliets injured less than two weeks before opening night, dancers ready to defect to Maillot’s Monte-Carlo company) makes for compelling reading: you root for Noelani Pantastico, who is forced to play Juliet in all 9 performances, and the lengthy descriptions and interviews highlight wonderful facets of the ballet.

Maillot himself is one of many engrossing characters in Snowflakes (others include Pantastico, Stewart Kershaw, the company’s music director and conductor, and Bruce Wells, a former NYCB soloist who went on to choreograph and is now a teacher with PNB’s school). Like Twyla Tharp, also featured, the French choreographer shows little interest in restaging his past works, but his input when he makes it to Seattle, a few days before the premiere of Roméo et Juliette, seems to be a game changer for the dancers. Stagers recreating a work (and using wildly different methods to do so in the book) are the norm nowadays in ballet, not choreographers, and who is teaching behind the scenes clearly influences the way each work looks on stage, for better or worse, but to an extent the audience will hardly ever know about.

Jean-Christophe Maillot rehearses his "Roméo et Juliette" with Noelani Pantastico and Lucien Postlewaite © Angela Sterling

Jean-Christophe Maillot rehearses his "Roméo et Juliette" with Noelani Pantastico and Lucien Postlewaite © Angela Sterling

The rest of Boal’s programming at PNB, a diet more daring than what the company was previously used to, also raises interesting questions. With modern choreographers coming in, from David Parsons to Sara Pearson, the dancers are repeatedly asked to be less balletic, less controlled. Some embrace it, others aren’t so pleased with the style or the hierarchy issues that arise, and most choreographers and stagers are aghast at the strict union rules and various other PNB quirks. And yet Boal seems to foster creativity – a Choreographers’ Showcase brings new works by company members, and Principal Olivier Wevers has since created his own Seattle-based dance company, Whim W’him. The dilemmas today’s ballet companies face are evident throughout: is moving forward becoming synonymous with regularly “untraining” dancers and annexing modern dance pieces worked out for very different bodies? Is is the best choice for a large company, is there an alternative?

 Noelani Pantastico in David Parsons' "Caught" © Angela Sterling

Noelani Pantastico in David Parsons' "Caught" © Angela Sterling

Snowflakes touches on too many other issues to list, but I was fascinated by the glimpse we get of the complex relationship between director and dancers. For the Principals former artistic directors Francia Russell and Kent Stowell handpicked over the years, Boal’s regime is a seismic change, a fast-paced environment devoid of parent figures, and some feel sidelined or resent the arrival of dancer Carla Körbes, who was very close to Boal in New York and has taken center stage in Seattle. Whether they are sensitive about the number of performances they get or feel they are cast below their rank, issues often seem to arise because Boal is not dictatorial enough, a rare occurrence in the ballet world according to Maillot:

“It’s interesting, because with Peter, we are a little bit similar. We are, the both of us, I believe, a little bit weak with dancers. We don’t see our job like other directors see it.” Typically, “in the ballet world, it’s very much you make the dancers children. You don’t want the dancer to be an adult. You keep them as children. And it’s so much more comfortable.” (p. 450)

(New York City Ballet almost serves as counterpoint in the book: a number of company members have danced there, and the picture that emerges from their profiles is troubling)

With so much information at every turn, When Snowflakes Dance and Swear is on the heavy side (860 pages!), and its structure isn’t always ideal, with abrupt transitions from one topic to another within many chapters. In terms of research, however, it is a colossal undertaking, unbelievably thorough and thought-provoking, a wealth of quotes and details offered without prejudice or judgement. It is left to the reader to form an opinion on what Manes calls the Land of Ballet, and while the Epilogue is pessimistic in some ways (the recession has hit PNB hard in the last few seasons), he obviously doesn’t agree with Jennifer Homans, who concluded in Apollo’s Angels that the art form is dying. In Seattle anyway, the actors of the ballet world seem to have a great deal more to say.

» Learn more: Stephen Manes’ Where Snowflakes Dance and Swear (out in hardback and ebook format)
» Read the Prologue on the Snowflakes website

 Pacific Northwest Ballet "Nutcracker" rehearsal: Choreographer Kent Stowell addresses the troops © Angela Sterling

Pacific Northwest Ballet "Nutcracker" rehearsal: Choreographer Kent Stowell addresses the troops © Angela Sterling





September 17, 2010

Review: New-Old Classicism and Modern Dance in Lyon

Two reviews in one from the Lyon Biennale in today’s Financial Times!

Le Sacre du Printemps / Altro Canto Part I
Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo
Maison de la Danse de Lyon
September 10, 2010

You Can See Us / Foray Forêt / L’amour au théâtre / Opal Loop
Trisha Brown Dance Company

Le Transbordeur, Villeurbanne
September 14, 2010

Every other year, Lyon, a city hardly renowned for its dance history, awakens to devote a full month to the art form. The Biennale de la Danse, as the festival is known, has grown since 1984 into a much-loved event, and in spite of a strong contemporary streak, opened last week with a double bill by Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo. In keeping with the recent centenary of the Ballets Russes, the company brought Millicent Hodson and Kenneth Archer’s reconstruction of The Rite of Spring, whose choreography caused riots in Paris in 1913.Re-staging this historical work is a worthy undertaking, and yet its Roerich sets and hand-painted tribal costumes now seem tinged with period naïveté. Reconstructions may be all the rage in ballet at the moment, but a work as intrinsically modern as The Rite loses much of its appeal when so many choreographers have come after Nijinsky and spoken to our collective subconscious through Stravinsky’s pulsing score.

The dancers themselves, out of sorts in a Rite sadly performed to taped music, came back transformed for Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Altro Canto Part I. Monaco has given Maillot an opportunity most classical choreographers can only dream of nowadays: to choose his own dancers and tailor creations to them year after year, with few or no financial worries. Altro Canto, premiered in 2006, proves that he has made the most of it. Mostly set to Monteverdi, this neoclassical jewel responds to the baroque spirituality of the score with delicate musicality. Maillot weaves the Christian imagery so familiar to western culture into his classical vocabulary. (…)

» Read the full article in the Financial Times

Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo - Bernice Coppieters in Altro Canto Part I © Christian Ganet

Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo - Bernice Coppieters in Altro Canto Part I © Christian Ganet

Trisha Brown Dance Company - L'amour au théâtre © Michel Cavalca

Trisha Brown Dance Company - L'amour au théâtre © Michel Cavalca





September 14, 2010

Live Festival – Biennale de la Danse de Lyon

I am currently attending this year’s Biennale de la Danse in Lyon – one of France’s mighty dance festivals, with no less than 57 works being performed in the city until October 10. Created in 1984, the Biennale has always leaned strongly towards contemporary dance, but it knows how to juggle between old masters and young creators – bringing the likes of Pina Bausch to the Lyon Opera House and featuring up-and-coming French choreographers in an array of smaller venues scattered around the city. This edition is also the last for long-time artistic director Guy Darmet, and he chose to go out on a jolly note with the following title, printed in bright pink everywhere: “Encore!” (More!) But how cheerful should we be about the program?

I’ll be tweeting live from a number of shows and press conferences at @bellafigural – look out for the #BiennaleLyon tag!

IMG00069-20100912-1548

A snapshot from the festival's Défilé (scroll down for more)

Bella Figura’s early picks

Neo-Classical Riots

  • Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo: Rite of Spring / Altro Canto Part I, Maison de la Danse, until September 14
    The landmark Hodson/Archer reconstruction of the 1910 Rite of Spring, rarely seen in France, combined with a neo-classical masterpiece: artistic director Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Altro Canto Part I, choreographed in 2006, a stunning, androgynous take on Monteverdi featuring Maillot’s sculptural muse, Bernice Coppieters.
  • Lyon Opera Ballet: Forsythe evening: Quintett/Workwithinwork, Lyon Opera, September 24-28
    The only other classically-trained company to take part in the festival, the Lyon Opera Ballet, is a Forsythe believer. The two works in this bill, both company premieres, are seldom performed in France, and should serve the company’s modern edge well.
Ballets de Monte-Carlo - Altro Canto Part I © Christian Ganet

Ballets de Monte-Carlo - Altro Canto Part I © Christian Ganet

Modern Dance History Lesson

  • Trisha Brown Dance Company: You Can See Us/Foray Forêt/Opal Loop – Cloud Installation #72503/L’amour au théâtre, Le Transbordeur (Villeurbanne), September 14-15
    The American choreographer is celebrating the 40th anniversary of her company, and the works shown in Lyon offers a glimpse of her range and evolution. A complete “Parcours Trisha Brown” is even in place, with an exhibition at macLYON and a selection of Early Works shown outdoors, at the Parc de la Tête d’Or.
  • Pina Bausch/Tanztheater Wuppertal: Nelken, Lyon Opera, September 15-20
    Now is the time to celebrate the legendary Pina Bausch, who passed away just a year ago, amid concerns about the long-term survival of her historical company. Dominique Mercy sensitively discussed the “mourning” state of the Tanztheater Wuppertal during the press conference, and the company is to continue exploring Pina Bausch’s large repertoire.
    » Watch: A trailer for Nelken
Tanztheater Wuppertal - Nelken © Ulli Weiss

Tanztheater Wuppertal - Nelken © Ulli Weiss

American Success Stories

  • Ailey II: Ailey Highlights / Splendid Isolation II / The Hunt / Revelations / Echoes, Théâtre des Célestins, September 15-26
    Alvin Ailey’s school is now a landmark in the American dance world, and the young Ailey II company, comprised of advanced students, is an eager advocate of the choreographer’s wide repertoire. With a series of Ailey highlights and Revelations, they are taking historical North American works to France. 3 recent creations by Jessica Lang, Robert Battle and Thang Dao complete what is set to be 2 beautiful mixed bills.
  • Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company: Fondly Do We Hope… Fervently Do We Pray, Maison de la Danse, September 18-22
    Wondering about the current political and racial turmoil in the USA? Bill T. Jones, one of America’s most cherished Black choreographers, comes to Lyon with a full-length dance work about Abraham Lincoln, the White president who ended the Civil War, and seems bound to provide us with much food for thought.
    » Watch: Bill T. Jones discussing Fondly do we Hope… Fervently do we Pray
Ailey II in The Hunt © Eduardo Patino

Ailey II in The Hunt © Eduardo Patino

Local Talents

  • Compagnie Käfig/CCN de Créteil: Boxe Boxe, Maison de la Danse, September 25-October 9
    A hip-hop company from Lyon recently offered the direction of one of France’s CCN (regional Choreographic Centers), Käfig produces eclectic works with a clear urban feel.
  • Compagnie Maguy Marin/CCN de Rilleux-la-Pape: Salves, Petit Théâtre du TNP, September 13-19
    Maguy Marin’s highly theatrical and sometimes practically dance-less works have found their audience in Lyon ever since she became director of the local CCN. Her strange sense of poetry can be compelling, and this small-scale new work will hopefully be a worthwhile addition to the company’s repertoire.
Maguy Marin's Salves © Christian Ganet

Maguy Marin's Salves © Christian Ganet

Special Mention: Unlikely Collaboration of the Year

  • Ballet Preljocaj/Bolshoi Ballet: And then, a thousand years’ peace, Maison de la Danse, September 24-27
    Angelin Preljocaj and the Bolshoi: these are two names I never thought I would combine in the same sentence. And yet here they are, suddenly brought together for the France-Russia Year. Lyon’s Maison de la Danse is the first touring venue for this work, to be created in Moscow on September 14, and with half the dancers from Ballet Preljocaj and half from the Bolshoi, it could turn out to be weird, compelling, or anything in between. If anyone can rekindle Preljocaj’s dwindling creativity, however, it may just be today’s Bolshoi.
Ballet Preljocaj/Bolshoi Ballet - Rehearsal image © JC Carbonne

Ballet Preljocaj/Bolshoi Ballet - Rehearsal image © JC Carbonne

Outsiders: Nasser Martin-Gousset, Olivier Dubois, Catherine Diverrès and Michel Kelemenis in the “French choreographers” category; Les Indes dansantes, a Baroque dance performance; local ventures such as Compagnie Propos and Compagnie Acte; flamenco dancers Andrés Marin and Angeles Gabaldon; Balé de Rua, Deborah Colker and Focus Cia de Dança for some South American energy.

And it all started with a Parade…

Let’s finish off with a few snapshots of the traditional Défilé (Parade) in the streets of Lyon, aptly titled “La Vie en Rose” (Life in Pink). Hundreds of amateur dancers gathered for a display of crazy costumes and silly group dances watched by around 300 000 people last Sunday, according to the Biennale – a bit of dance in the sunshine while companies prepared in dark theatres.

Biennale 1

A new genre of tutu?

Majestic float

A majestic float...

Hip hop parade

Hip hop parade

Lonely pink tutu with bubbles

Lonely pink tutu with bubbles





July 21, 2010

Review: Modern Echoes of the Ballets Russes in Monte-Carlo

A late link, but I was in Monaco in early July for the last part of Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo’s season-long homage to the Ballets Russes – and my review of Maillot’s Schéhérazade and Shen Wei’s 7 to 8 and, a world premiere, appeared in the Financial Times on July 14.

Schéhérazade / 7 to 8 and
Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo
Salle Garnier
8 July 2010

With the centenary of the Ballets Russes, Monte-Carlo has an excuse to celebrate its own illustrious dance heritage. Diaghilev’s ensemble found a home in the city in the 1910s and 1920s; after it disbanded, other impresarios took over and set up a new Russian troupe in Monte-Carlo, which performed under various guises until 1963. The company was reborn in 1985 as Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo, and director and choreographer Jean-Christophe Maillot has since shaped it into a sleek, innovative neo-classical ensemble.

Its summer season is a clever mix of re-creations of Ballets Russes works and world premieres. The Schéhérazade Fokine created in 1910, for instance, was a landmark event for the young company, but Ida Rubinstein and Nijinsky’s startling eroticism, as the Sultan’s favourite Zobeide and the Golden Slave, has too often given way to Orientalist cliché in subsequent renditions. Maillot has gone back to the ballet’s roots, Rimsky-Korsakov’s sumptuous 1888 score, to choreograph a new version. The music’s sheer texture is hard to equal, but Maillot’s musicality sets his attempt apart. He adds nuances where they had disappeared over time, and his patterns and tableaux for the ensemble are endlessly inventive. (…)

» Read the full review in the Financial Times





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