December 3, 2010

2010 Standout: Marianela Nuñez (Pointe Magazine, December ’10/January 2011)

Laura @ 21:22 —
Filed under: English,Other — Tags: , , ,

It’s December already, and Pointe Magazine is playing the traditional “Best of” game in its latest issue, with a list of Standout Performances from all over the world. My pick was Marianela Nuñez in MacMillan’s Concerto, last March in London.

Cover of the December 10/January 2011 issue © Pointe Magazine

Cover of the December '10/January 2011 issue © Pointe Magazine

Dancer: Marianela Nuñez
Company: The Royal Ballet
Performance: Kenneth MacMillan’s Concerto

Marianela Nuñez has always been cast in the sunniest roles of The Royal Ballet’s repertoire. Promoted to principal in 2002 at barely 20, she’s a natural in Ashton’s La Fille Mal Gardée or as Coppélia’s carefree Swanilda. Her instinctive musicality and extraordinary control, however, have long hinted that there was more. Last March, Nuñez finally came into her own dancing the second movement pas de deux of Kenneth MacMillan’s plotless Concerto, in a performance filmed for DVD release. Her trademark smile gave way to a reflective gaze. Her creamy, full-bodied phrasing blossomed in the central adagio; the simplicity of the choreography allowed Nuñez to seemingly expand in the arms of her partner Rupert Pennefather, every movement radiating from deep in her back, her limbs serenely articulating Shostakovitch’s soulful score. By the end, the eager young dancer was forgotten, and a consummate ballerina was born.

If you missed it, Opus Arte has just released a DVD of the Royal Ballet’s Concerto/The Judas Tree/Elite Syncopations mixed bill. A fine opportunity to brush up on your MacMillan and to see Marianela Nuñez shine in this role, alongside a glittering list of Royal Ballet Principals and Soloists!

» Watch: Marianela Nuñez and Rupert Pennefather in the adagio from Concerto (Youtube)

» Read the full list of 2010 Standout Performances on Pointe Magazine’s website

Marianela Nuñez and Rupert Pennefather in MacMillan's Concerto © Johan Persson

Marianela Nuñez and Rupert Pennefather in MacMillan's Concerto © Johan Persson





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





March 24, 2010

From Ragtime to Judas – An Insight into Kenneth MacMillan’s Work

I recently had the pleasure to write a blog post for the Royal Opera House about the MacMillan Insight Evening which took place on 11 March – composer Brian Elias, répétiteurs Irek Mukhamedov and Julie Lincoln, Mara Galeazzi, Thiago Soares & others were all there to discuss and demonstrate The Judas Tree and Elite Syncopations, both part of The Royal Ballet’s latest triple bill, and a fascinating evening it turned out to be…

The 80th anniversary of Kenneth MacMillan’s birth has been an opportunity to re-discover the breadth of his creativity and the Insight Evening for The Royal Ballet’s upcoming MacMillan triple bill followed in this path last week. The event brought together artists who got to know Kenneth MacMillan intimately, from composer Brian Elias to former Royal Ballet dancers Irek Mukhamedov and Julie Lincoln, and all spoke with singular warmth of different facets of the British choreographer best known for his Romeo and Juliet or Manon. The one-act ballets introduced that evening demonstrated the scope of his inspiration, from The Judas Tree, an extreme tale of betrayal and guilt, to Elite Syncopations, a light-hearted romp to ragtime tunes – what emerged in the end was a unique vision of a choreographer fascinated with human nature and its contradictions, who pushed the boundaries of ballet far beyond expectations.

The evening started with a discussion around the music for The Judas Tree, commissioned in 1992 from Brian Elias. Barry Wordsworth, The Royal Ballet’s Music Director, led the conversation, explaining that he and Elias attended the Royal College of Music around the same time. The Judas Tree was the composer’s first ballet score, brought about by Deborah MacMillan, Kenneth’s wife, who arranged the collaboration after going to one of Elias’s concerts. MacMillan was actually very nervous about commissioning music, the audience learnt, as it used to be impossible to have a clear idea of what a score would sound like until the last rehearsals – and it became clear over the course of the evening that MacMillan knew what he wanted and kept close control over his creations. (…)

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





February 16, 2010

Interview : Yuhui Choe

(scroll down for the English version)

Interview de la délicieuse Yuhui Choe pour Dansomanie, en traduction française :

Yuhui Choe © The Royal Ballet

Yuhui Choe © The Royal Ballet

A l’heure où Miyako Yoshida s’apprête à tirer sa révérence au Royal Ballet après une longue carrière, une autre danseuse venue du Japon s’impose lentement mais sûrement sur la scène londonienne : Yuhui Choe, qui est née à Fukuoka mais a fait ses classes à Paris avec Daini Kudo et Dominique Khalfouni. Après une médaille d’argent au Concours International de Paris en 2000, le Prix de Lausanne lui a permis, deux ans plus tard, de laisser de côté ses rêves français pour intégrer le Royal Ballet. Un choix qui s’est révélé fructueux – distribuée dans le pas de deux de l’Oiseau bleu dès sa titularisation, en 2004, elle devient Première Soliste en 2008 sans même être passée par l’échelon de Soliste, et fait ses débuts dans La Bayadère aux côtés de Sergueï Polunin. Distribuée dans Petipa comme dans Balanchine, elle participe également aux créations de Wayne McGregor et Jonathan Watkins. La pureté cristalline de sa danse et la délicatesse de ses ports de bras en font surtout l’une des héritières naturelles du répertoire de Frederick Ashton, et 2010 devrait lui appartenir avec deux nouveaux rôles de premier plan – La Fille mal gardée et Cendrillon.

Comment avez-vous commencé la danse au Japon?
Quand j’ai eu 5 ans, ma mère m’a poussé à apprendre quelque chose, le piano ou la danse – quelque chose d’artistique. De manière complètement spontanée, j’ai choisi la danse, mais je n’y avais jamais vraiment songé auparavant. Ma mère m’a emmenée à des cours de danse classique aux alentours de Fukuoka, où nous habitions, et j’ai encore le souvenir de mon tout premier cours : l’image est gravée dans ma mémoire, je me souviens de tout, j’étais tellement enthousiaste.

Quels ont été les professeurs qui vous ont le plus influencée?
Daini Kudo en fait partie. Il est installé en France, et je l’ai rencontré à l’âge de quatorze ans – il était alors sur le point d’ouvrir une école de danse pour étudiants japonais à Paris. J’avais toujours voulu aller à l’Ecole de danse de l’Opéra de Paris, et c’est pour cette raison que je suis partie pour la France. Elisabeth Platel était une véritable source d’inspiration pour moi à l’époque – je voulais aller là-bas, étudier son élégance, être comme elle. (…)

» Lire l’interview dans son intégralité sur Dansomanie


And meet The Royal Ballet’s First Soloist in English:

Miyako Yoshida may be about to take her last steps on the stage of the Royal Opera House, but another dancer from Japan has been quietly making her mark at Covent Garden : Yuhui Choe, who was born in Fukuoka. She spent her teenage years training in France with Daini Kudo and Dominique Khalfouni and won a Silver Medal at the last Paris International Dance Competition. She had hoped to stay and work in France, but when a Prix de Lausanne Prize awarded her the opportunity to join the Royal Ballet in 2002, she decided to give it a try.

And London has proved to be an outstanding fit for the lyrical, innately musical Choe. Cast as Princess Florine in The Sleeping Beauty during her second year with the company, she jumped a rank to become a First Soloist in 2008, and went on to dance her first full-length ballet, La Bayadère. She has created works for Wayne McGregor or Jonathan Watkins, but her classical purity and cristalline phrasing also single her out as a natural heiress to the Ashton repertoire – and with debuts in La Fille mal gardée and Cinderella already scheduled for April, 2010 may well be her year.

How did you start dancing in Japan?
When I was 5, my mother wanted me to learn something, and she suggested I learned piano or dance – something artistic. From out of nowhere I said dance, but I had never really thought about it before. My mom took me to ballet classes around Fukuoka, where we lived, and I recall the first time I went to a ballet class: it’s a clear picture in my mind, I remember everything, I was so enthusiastic.

Who were the most influential teachers in your training?
Daini Kudo is one. He is based in France, and I met him when I was 14 – he was then about to open a ballet school for Japanese students in Paris. I had always wanted to go to the Paris Opera Ballet School, and that’s why I went to France. Elisabeth Platel was such an inspiration at the time – I wanted to go there and study her elegance, to be like her. (…)

» Read the interview in full on Dansomanie

Yuhui Choe in La Bayadère © Bill Cooper

Yuhui Choe in La Bayadère © Bill Cooper

Yuhui Choe will appear at the Royal Opera House in Jonathan Watkins’s As One in February-March, in La Fille mal gardée on 5 April and in Cinderella on 17 April.





December 19, 2009

Critique : Facettes hivernales d’Ashton

Laura @ 18:41 —
Filed under: Français,Reviews/critiques — Tags: , , , ,

Les Patineurs / Tales of Beatrix Potter
Chorégraphie : Sir Frederick Ashton
Royal Ballet
Royal Opera House, Londres
14 décembre 2009


Toutes les alternatives à Casse-Noisette sont presque les bienvenues au mois de décembre, et le Royal Ballet reprenait cette année une soirée mixte à la popularité éprouvée. Sur le papier, la présence de Frederick Ashton et les thèmes respectifs des Patineurs et de Tales of Beatrix Potter donnent par ailleurs une identité typiquement anglaise à l’ensemble, loin des grands ballets hybrides auxquels chaque culture cherche à apporter sa marque – mais si la première partie est un délice hivernal qui se suffit à lui-même, Beatrix Potter marque une forme de retour en enfance dont on se passerait volontiers.

Un charme à la fois suranné et amusé émane des Patineurs, l’une des oeuvres de jeunesse d’Ashton, chorégraphiée en 1937. Les protagonistes, élégamment vêtus, se succèdent sur une « glace » entourée de légers portiques blancs, sous des lampions d’hiver multicolores. Créé si peu de temps avant la Seconde Guerre Mondiale, Les Patineurs célèbre une certaine carte du Tendre, à la légèreté éphémère, déjà nostalgique – fourrures et socquettes ont quelque chose d’adorablement décalé, et le tout ressemble à un calendrier de l’Avent enneigé, dont la nature n’est pas de durer.

La chorégraphie n’est pas en reste, musicale, légère, parsemée de touches d’humour que les danseurs soulignent à plaisir. Ainsi de l’entrée entre patinage et ski de fond des deux Filles en Bleu, avec leur sourire en coin, ou des sorties « chassées » et des chutes mises en scène des uns et des autres, délicieusement ridicules. Même l’unique couple de l’oeuvre, en blanc, joue une partition aux dissonances pleines de grâce – Sarah Lamb, éblouissante en blanc, possède le glamour d’une star de cinéma de l’entre-deux-guerres, tandis que Rupert Pennefather adopte le rôle de son fidèle miroir. Le duo de demoiselles en bleu est quant à lui dansé avec un esprit tout anglais par Yuhui Choe (sourire malicieux et fouettés d’acier) et Laura Morera, pour qui les difficultés techniques sont une promenade au parc d’à côté. (…)

» Lire la critique complète sur Dansomanie

Steven McRae in Les Patineurs © Tristram Kenton

Steven McRae in Les Patineurs © Tristram Kenton





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