January 3, 2012

A Year in Ballet: 2011

2011 may feel like a blur already, but looking back – what a rollercoaster it has been for ballet. From the Black Swan controversies to Natalia Osipova and Ivan Vasiliev’s “defection” to the Mikhailovsky on the eve of the reopening of the Bolshoi’s historical stage, the ballet world has had its fair share of drama over the past 12 months, but the live action was even better. From Petipa to Forsythe, Balanchine to Ratmansky, it’s been a year of superlative performances, and I was lucky to see very different dancers and companies at the top of their game or on the way up in Paris, London, Milan, Amsterdam or Moscow. My best of 2011 in 8 ballet moments:

 

  • Miami City Ballet’s Paris tour (July)

A year ago, few in Paris had even heard of Miami City Ballet. And yet last summer they took the capital by storm, a company refreshingly vibrant, youthful and musical, performing American masterpieces every night at the Théâtre du Châtelet. The sheer vitality of Balanchine’s Western Symphony, the dancers’ accents in The Four Temperaments, their way of showing us the music in Square Dance, their unfailing enthusiasm: I kept going back for more, and by the end of the three-week run the house was nearly sold-out every night. Among the Principals, the Delgado sisters particularly stood out: Jeanette’s Square Dance, Patricia’s third pas de deux in In The Night were world-class performances. Here’s hoping they’ll be back in 2014 as promised.

» My review for the Financial Times
» Behind-the-scenes blog: MCB corps member Rebecca King (Tendus Under A Palm Tree) on the tour

Jeanette Delgado & Renan Cerdeiro in Square Dance © Kyle Froman

Jeanette Delgado & Renan Cerdeiro in Square Dance © Kyle Froman

  • Vikharev’s Raymonda reconstruction for La Scala Ballet (October)

Reconstructions have their detractors, but Sergei Vikharev’s staging of Petipa’s Raymonda for La Scala Ballet this year was one of the most successful attempts at recreating a period “ballet experience” yet. The sheer scale and grandeur of the production, which I saw in Milan in late October, are something to behold, and the different pace allows the characters to breathe: the story may be thin, but the ballet fully succeeds in creating an entire world on stage, where harmony is metaphorically threatened then restored.  This Raymonda also helped La Scala Ballet, a usually problematic company, pull together, and it is up to them now to build on this success.

» Vikharev’s Raymonda on Bella Figura (review, photos and additional comments)
» The full ballet (Italian TV broadcast) on Youtube

Olesya Novikova and Friedemann Vogel in Raymonda © Marco Brescia & Rudy Amisano

Olesya Novikova and Friedemann Vogel in Raymonda © Marco Brescia & Rudy Amisano

  • Forsythe’s Impressing the Czar (December)

At a time when contemporary ballet often seems stuck trying to deconstruct what has already been deconstructed, William Forsythe’s 1988 Impressing the Czar remains one of the masterpieces of the genre. Has anyone tackled ballet history quite so brilliantly in performance since? From the classical and modern worlds colliding in Potemkin’s Signature to Bongo Bongo Nageela, where an ensemble dressed as schoolgirls seems to mock yet bow to the sheer power of corps de ballet work, it’s an evening of dazzlingly clever invention.  The Royal Ballet of Flanders gave it their all in Paris, and as in Artifact the week before, their sharpness highlighted the high-definition extremes Forsythe took the ballet vocabulary to. The first cast gave a particularly electric account of the work’s centerpiece, In the Middle, Somewhat Elevated, with the diminutive Aki Saito literally slicing through the air in the final pas de deux. The most exhilarating performance of 2011.

» Promotional video for the Royal Ballet of Flanders, with footage from Artifact and Impressing the Czar (from 4:15)

Aki Saito & Wim Wanlessen in Impressing the Czar © Royal Ballet of Flanders

Aki Saito & Wim Wanlessen in Impressing the Czar © Royal Ballet of Flanders

  • Ulyana Lopatkina in London (August)

If the ballet world had a queen, it would be the Mariinsky’s Ulyana Lopatkina. At 38, she seems to be dancing better than ever, imbuing the smallest steps with meaning, and she was a glorious presence in London last summer. The level of detail and emotion she brought to Ratmansky’s Anna Karenina redeemed the ballet, and her Nikiya in La Bayadère, a portrayal of exquisite musicality and spirituality, is a memory I cherish. If you have the opportunity to see her in 2012, take it.

» Video: Ulyana Lopatkina and Sergei Berezhnoi in Anna Karenina (Youtube)

Ulyana Lopatkina & Yuri Smekalov in Anna Karenina © Natasha Razina

Ulyana Lopatkina & Yuri Smekalov in Anna Karenina © Natasha Razina

  • The Bolshoi Ballet’s tour to Paris (May)

Last spring was a simpler time for the Bolshoi Ballet. Months before the Bolshoi’s historical stage reopened and the Osipova/Vasiliev duo stunned the ballet world by leaving for the Mikhailovsky Ballet, the company triumphed in Paris with two fiery ballets, Don Quixote and Flames of Paris. The supersonic Osipova and Vasiliev had the Palais Garnier screaming at their every turn, but the rest of the company matched them in style, with extraordinary performances from the larger-than-life Maria Alexandrova, newcomer Vladislav Lantratov and Nina Kaptsova, not to mention a Don Quixote matinée for the ages led by Ekaterina Krysanova and Viacheslav Lopatin.

 » Video: Ekaterina Krysanova and Viacheslav Lopatin’s Don Quixote Grand Pas on May 14 (Youtube)

 

  • Aurélie Dupont & Evan McKie in Onegin (December)

Partnerships are a tricky business, and one the Paris Opera Ballet hasn’t really excelled at in recent years. Aurélie Dupont had made only a modest impression in John Cranko’s Onegin when the ballet entered the company’s repertoire two years ago, but when Nicolas Le Riche, her original partner, injured himself two weeks before opening night this season, an unexpected guest changed everything. Her performances with Stuttgart Ballet Principal Evan McKie had the ballet world abuzz with excitement, and rightly so – their instant chemistry made for a heartrending reading of the ballet.

» My review for the Financial Times + photos
» Video: Act III pas de deux (Youtube)

Aurélie Dupont and Evan McKie in Onegin © Michel Lidvac

Aurélie Dupont and Evan McKie in Onegin © Michel Lidvac

  • Jean-Guillaume Bart’s La Source for the Paris Opera Ballet (October)

No review as I attended a number of rehearsals for research purposes, but former POB Principal Jean-Guillaume Bart has done a tremendous job for his first full-length creation. The rich, musical classical choreography he devised is a departure from the current Paris Opera repertoire, and the ballet is likely to become one of the company’s hits once the dancers settle into it.

» Video: La Source on the Paris Opera Ballet’s website

 

  • Ratmansky’s On the Dnieper and Psyché (February/September)

His full-length Lost Illusions for the Bolshoi Ballet and Anna Karenina (Mariinsky London tour) may not have lived up to his usual standards, but Alexei Ratmansky still provided some of the choreographic highlights of 2011. The Dutch National Ballet acquired his On the Dnieper, a stunningly rich narrative work, in February, and he collaborated with the Paris Opera Ballet for the first time in September. Psyché wasn’t universally loved, but I fell for its fluid, quietly beautiful first scene, quirky ensembles and ambitious soloist work. Dorothée Gilbert and Matthieu Ganio shone as Psyché and Eros.

» My review of On the Dnieper (Dutch National Ballet, A la russe triple bill)
» Video: Trailor for Dutch National Ballet’s A la russe triple bill
» Video: Aurélie Dupont & Stéphane Bullion in Psyché on the Paris Opera Ballet’s website

Anna Tsygankova & Casey Herd in On the Dnieper (Dutch National Ballet) © Angela Sterling

Anna Tsygankova & Casey Herd in On the Dnieper (Dutch National Ballet) © Angela Sterling

 

Runners-up include Evgenia Obraztsova’s debut in Swan Lake and Svetlana Lunkina & Vladislav Lantratov in Lost Illusions in Moscow last April. Bring on 2012 now… Happy New Year everyone!





December 15, 2011

Review: Last-Minute Fire in Onegin

Onegin
Choreography: John Cranko
Paris Opera Ballet
Palais Garnier, Paris
December 11, 2011

It was meant to be an uneventful revival of John Cranko’s Onegin in Paris. But when the dancer scheduled to dance the title role on opening night sustained an injury two weeks ago, the Paris Opera Ballet found itself scrambling for a last-minute replacement. It finally enlisted Evan McKie, a principal in Stuttgart, where the ballet was created in 1967 – and, one dazzling premiere later, what was an emergency fix has turned into the sensation of the season.

The Canadian-born dancer comes close to an ideal reading of Pushkin’s hero. Onegin’s selfishness and lack of empathy can read as near-macho brutality in the wrong hands, but McKie shows us the Byronic dandy from St Petersburg, driven to extremes by sheer boredom. The slightly affected elegance of his lines contrasts from the start with the rural society and folk dances of Act I. Blasé, arrogant, dismissive of anything and anyone unrefined, this Onegin is an example of Romanticism gone terribly wrong, and all the more fascinating for his change of heart in the last act.

McKie takes his Tatiana, Aurélie Dupont, along for the ride, and the chemistry is obvious. Dupont is the POB’s supreme classicist, a guarded vision of poise and femininity; few partners have brought out so fully the emotional fire beneath the ice. The mature Tatiana of Act III fits her like a glove, and her last pas de deux with Onegin was a blaze of defiance and abandon unlike anything seen in Paris recently, with both dancers utterly lost in the roles and in each other. (…)

» Read the full review in the Financial Times

Aurélie Dupont and Evan McKie in Onegin © Michel Lidvac

Aurélie Dupont and Evan McKie in Onegin © Michel Lidvac






December 2, 2011

Review: Cinderella Goes to Hollywood

Cinderella
Choreography: Rudolf Nureyev
Paris Opera Ballet
Opéra Bastille, Paris
November 27, 2011

Cinderella goes to Disney’s Hollywood Studios: that’s the gimmicky concept behind Rudolf Nureyev’s version of the fairytale, revived by the Paris Opera Ballet in time for the holiday season.

The ballet was created in 1986 for a young Sylvie Guillem, and Nureyev, who made her a star during his time as director in Paris, cast himself as her producer and guardian angel, a character originally named “Pygmalion Diaghilev”. Guillem left the company soon afterwards, and while the production celebrates its 100th performance this season, this Cinderella feels like an increasingly empty shell.

Nureyev the choreographer never trusted in fairytales, but the 1920s Hollywood setting makes for a decidedly unmagical story. The producer conveniently crashes his plane on Cinderella’s doorstep and whisks her off to a cinema set for tryouts. She finds a hysterical crew and extras mainly preoccupied with their scheduled breaks, and Nureyev has her sign a contract before she is allowed to dance her final pas de deux with the Star Actor. Of course, this modern dream scenario comes with small print: if she doesn’t look good on camera, she will be back to her sweeping routine in no time. (…)

» Read the full review in the Financial Times

Agnès Letestu & Stéphane Bullion in Nureyev's Cinderella © Sébastien Mathé

Agnès Letestu & Stéphane Bullion in Nureyev's Cinderella © Sébastien Mathé





November 8, 2011

L’aventure de La Source

La Source était l’un des évènements majeurs de la saison 2011-2012 de l’Opéra de Paris, et cette réinvention signée Jean-Guillaume Bart d’un ballet du XIXe siècle a su pour l’instant rencontrer son public. J’ai eu l’occasion de contribuer au programme du spectacle via une interview de Brigitte Lefèvre, directrice de la danse – du couturier Christian Lacroix à deux membres de la Comédie-Française, Eric Ruf et Clément Hervieu-Léger, cette Source s’est en effet construite autour de collaborations qu’elle a orchestrées. Petit aperçu de son regard sur le projet :

     Couverture du programme de La Source (saison 2011-2012) © Opéra National de Paris

Couverture du programme de La Source (saison 2011-2012) © Opéra National de Paris

Pourquoi réinventer La Source ?
J’ai été très touchée par le projet de Jean-Guillaume Bart, d’abord parce que c’est lui : c’est une personnalité empreinte de ferveur, de rigueur, d’amour de son art. Dans le studio, avec les danseurs de l’Opéra, ces valeurs respirent et contribuent à créer un moment particulièrement privilégié. Le fait que son choix se porte sur un ballet oublié de notre répertoire m’a également paru important. La Source était véritablement enfouie, souterraine dans les mémoires. Seule sa musique nous avait été transmise à travers Soir de fête de Léo Staats, un ballet ayant joué un rôle primordial dans l’histoire de la compagnie.

Jean-Guillaume Bart nourrit ce projet depuis longtemps…
Il est venu me parler de La Source dès 1997 et m’a montré le livret d’origine. L’idée de se lancer dans une reconstruction l’effleurait alors, mais le livret était complexe. Il avait quelque chose de décalé et représentait une difficulté trop importante. J’ai suggéré à Jean-Guillaume de s’orienter vers une nouvelle création. La mise en place du projet a demandé plusieurs années, mais le temps nous a finalement donné une chance supplémentaire, car Jean-Guillaume a pu apporter une autre maturité à son travail. (…)

« L’aventure de La Source », Programme de l’Opéra National de Paris, saison 2011-2012, p. 68-69.

La suite dans le programme en vente au Palais Garnier ou à l’Opéra Bastille – les représentations se poursuivent jusqu’au 12 novembre.

» La Source sur le site de l’Opéra de Paris (distributions, diaporama, vidéos de présentation…)





July 8, 2011

Review: Les Enfants du paradis, from screen to stage

Les Enfants du paradis
Choreography: José Martinez
Paris Opera Ballet
Palais Garnier, Paris
June 30, 2011

Have ballet’s superproductions lost the plot? Like Christopher Wheeldon’s Alice in Wonderland, which had its world premiere at Covent Garden in February, the Paris Opera Ballet’s Les enfants du paradis is a balletic reinvention of a work of art made for another medium. The appeal is obvious: the audience knows the story and, where ballet is concerned, familiarity breeds contentment, particularly at the box-office. Squeezed between lavish designs, a commissioned score and convoluted storytelling, however, neither work has much time for its raison d’être: choreography.

Les Enfants du paradis, choreographed by étoile José Martinez in 2008 and now revived for the first time, follows nearly every twist and turn of Marcel Carné’s much-loved 1945 film. Similar black and white cinema sets attempt to recreate the atmosphere of the bustling theatre life of 19th-century Paris, where the heroine, Garance, is pursued by a mime, Baptiste, and by star actor Frédérick Lemaître. From the outré crowd scenes to the mix of period costumes and stunningly original tutus (designed by another étoile, Agnès Letestu), the idea of life as theatre and theatre as life is clearly developed, and Martinez makes clever use of the Palais Garnier with an abundance of metatheatrical devices – such as the Pierrot who welcomes the audience on the majestic staircase before the performance. (…)

» Read the full review in the Financial Times

Agnès Letestu in Les Enfants du paradis © Julien Benhamou

Agnès Letestu in Les Enfants du paradis © Julien Benhamou





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