October 4, 2011

Returning To Its Roots: Dutch National Ballet (Pointe Magazine)

While in Amsterdam for the European premiere of Alexei Ratmansky’s On The Dnieper last February, I took the opportunity to interview Ted Brandsen, the artistic director of Dutch National Ballet, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary in style this season. The resulting “Director’s Notes” are in the latest issue of Pointe Magazine (with Pacific Northwest Ballet’s Lindsi Dec on the cover), and you can read the article online:

Cover of the October/November 2011 issue © Pointe Magazine

Cover of the October/November 2011 issue © Pointe Magazine

Onstage, Dutch National Ballet dancers have a no-nonsense energy and an intoxicating confidence—and for good reason: The company has been on the rise since Ted Brandsen took the reins in 2003. The dancer-turned-choreographer has hired a host of up-and-coming young soloists, and produced an enviable string of premieres: Alexei Ratmansky and John Neumeier have set some of their best ballets on the troupe, and ambitious new works by Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui and others have entered the repertoire. After a long period of uncertainty over its mission, DNB is returning to its creative roots.

Founded in 1961, Dutch National Ballet started out as a classical company with an emphasis on new work, galvanized by Dutch choreographers like Hans van Manen and Rudi van Dantzig. However, that focus began to fade in the 1990s. And while Wayne Eagling introduced leading American choreographers like Jerome Robbins during his directorship from 1991 to 2003, “there was a bit of confusion in the Netherlands about the identity of the company,” Brandsen says. The board returned the company to its Dutch foundation by tapping Brandsen, who was born near Amsterdam and danced with the company before directing the West Australian Ballet.

Brandsen’s most pressing task has been learning to juggle the “three pillars” of a very large repertoire: Dutch choreography, 19th-century classics and international 20th-century masterpieces. No fewer than three resident choreographers (van Manen, former company member Krzysztof Pastor and Brandsen himself) are upholding the Dutch connection at the moment. With traditional versions of Sleeping Beauty and Swan Lake, not to mention the largest Balanchine repertoire outside of New York City Ballet, the company also serves as the Netherlands’ only “museum of dance,” as Brandsen dryly puts it, with a clean, unfussy approach to every style. “We still need to reaffirm that this wide focus is essential to our identity,” he explains. (…)

» Read the full interview in Pointe Magazine: “Returning To Its Roots,” October/November 2011

Ted Brandsen with ballet mistress Rachel Beaujean © Angela Sterling

Ted Brandsen with ballet mistress Rachel Beaujean © Angela Sterling





February 16, 2011

Review: Russo-American treasures in Amsterdam

A la russe: Serenade / Dumbarton Dances / Tchaikovsky pas de deux / On the Dnieper
Choreography: George Balanchine, Krzysztof Pastor, Alexei Ratmansky
Dutch National Ballet
Het Muziektheater, Amsterdam
February 11 & 13, 2011

Strangely enough, Amsterdam is shaping up to be the place to see the very best of Russo-American ballet in western Europe. The Dutch National Ballet’s latest mixed bill, A la russe, celebrates the company’s rather unexpected connection with two great choreographers who left Russia for New York: George Balanchine and Alexei Ratmansky. Only Krzysztof Pastor’s Dumbarton Dances, a witty but one-dimensional showcase for eight men set to Stravinsky, fell flat, but who wouldn’t in such good company?

The Dutch have long boasted one of the largest collections of Balanchine works outside New York City Ballet, and they dance them fearlessly, with tremendous attack in the legs. The lyrical Serenade was given uplifting performances last weekend by the company’s women, led with spirited musicality on different evenings by Anna Tsygankova and Nadia Yanowsky as the Russian Girl. In Tchaikovsky pas de deux, similarly, both Cédric Ygnace and Matthew Golding tackled the virtuoso variation and coda with glee, unruffled by their technical shortcomings, while Jurgita Dronina charmed with artful ease. (…)

» Read the full review in the Financial Times

Anna Tsygankova & corps de ballet in Serenade © Angela Sterling

Anna Tsygankova & corps de ballet in Serenade © Angela Sterling





October 9, 2009

Critique : Le Scottish Ballet fête son 40e anniversaire

Scottish Ballet
Rubis / Workwithinwork / In Light and Shadow
George Balanchine / William Forsythe / Krzysztof Pastor
3 octobre 2009
Sadler’s Wells, Londres

Le Scottish Ballet a quarante ans et il affichait son bonheur lors d’une inévitable tournée londonienne, en ce début de mois d’octobre, à Sadler’s Wells. A l’heure où le Royal Ballet a perdu sa réputation d’antan et où d’autres troupes se taillent la part du lion au Royaume-Uni, l’Ecosse peut en effet rappeler qu’elle possède depuis longtemps sa propre troupe nationale, qui a consolidé son statut depuis l’arrivée à la direction artistique du chorégraphe Ashley Page, en 2002. A l’heure du bilan, la compagnie associe Balanchine, Forsythe et Krzysztof Pastor, présentant ainsi à la fois le répertoire néo-classique historique de la compagnie et l’une de ses créations les plus populaires, In Light and Shadow.

Le joyau le plus sanguin de Balanchine connaît un destin étrange chez certaines troupes de pedigree classique, que ce puzzle new-yorkais tour à tour divertissant et légèrement dangereux semble laisser de marbre. Le Scottish Ballet ne rencontre pas ce problème – le style résolument moderne de la compagnie lui permet de saisir l’esprit de ces Rubis, mais ceux-ci manquent à l’inverse de la précision académique qui imbue toute l’oeuvre de Balanchine. Les ports de bras des uns et des autres, en particulier, se perdent dans un flou artistique qui n’a plus grand-chose à voir avec les accents néo-classiques de la chorégraphie. Les effets géométriques implacables de cette dernière en pâtissent ; le Scottish Ballet attaque pourtant l’oeuvre avec une attitude si affirmée qu’il est difficile de leur tenir longtemps rigueur des défauts techniques. Les rôles principaux respirent la liberté et l’énergie, et même si Vassilissa Levtonova, jeune coryphée russe, n’a pas les armes pour relever les défis posés par le rôle de la grande soliste, tours ou équilibres, son expression de prédatrice et la fierté de sa cambrure n’en laissent rien transparaître. (…)

» La critique complète sur Dansomanie

Sophie Martin and Adam Blyde in George Balanchine’s Rubies, © Andrew Ross/Scottish Ballet

Sophie Martin and Adam Blyde dans Rubis (George Balanchine), © Andrew Ross/Scottish Ballet





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