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Family Feeling

“Dream Team” (“Jardi Tancat”/“The Blue Brides”/“Lickety-Split”/“High Moon”)
Gauthier Dance Juniors
Theaterhaus Stuttgart
Stuttgart, Germany
March 15, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Jardí Tancat” by N.Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.BakIs it the laid-back, feel-good attitude of Eric Gauthier, director and choreographer of Gauthier Dance, that makes his company’s performances feel like family gatherings? A sense of family also unites his junior company, which was founded in 2022 and comprises six dancers (three men and three women) from Australia, Canada, France, Italy, Spain, and Taiwan. Their latest mixed bill, Dream Team, premiered in January. It includes two podcasts that fill the breaks the performers take to change costumes. In them, Gauthier chats with his juniors and the choreographers. When talking about their group spirit, the young dancers call Gauthier their boss whereas Gauthier seems like a proud daddy.

The original title of the program (Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue—quoting a traditional English wedding rhyme that details what a bride should wear for good luck) referred to the selection of pieces.
3. M.Roberge and R.Amoroso, “Jardí Tancat” by N.Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak 2. M.Roberge and R.Amoroso, “Jardí Tancat” by N.Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.BakThe old piece was Nacho Duato’s Jardí Tancat (Catalan for “Closed Garden”), created for Nederlands Dans Theater’s junior company, NDT II, in 1983. High Moon by the Canadian choreographer Virginie Brunelle is a world premiere. The borrowed piece is Alejandro Cerrudo’s Lickety-Split, which premiered with the main company, Gauthier Dance, in 2011. The fourth piece, Barak Marshall’s The Blue Brides (also a world premiere), featured weddings, but the blue (a symbol of purity and fidelity) didn’t bring luck. Each piece employed all six dancers.
4. M.Roberge and R.Chang, “Jardí Tancat” by N.Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak5. J.J.Escobedo, M.Roberge, and R.Chang; “Jardí Tancat” by N.Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.BakIn Jardí Tancat, they knelt in one corner of a barren square as if worshiping the earth, then jumped up, raised their arms, and dropped onto their knees again. When everyone gathered at the wooden stakes that enclosed the square, looking toward the land beyond, Maria del Mar Bonet’s unpretentious Catalan songs (taken from her album Jardí Tancat) broke the silence. The melancholy of her voice expressed the hardship of country life. Doubled over, the women (wearing wide, ankle-length skirts and tops in earth tones) sowed seeds in a line, holding their lower backs as if in pain. Their hands gently tapped the ground or covered their faces when they burst into tears. Deep plies grounded everyone. Although rural life was taxing, all three couples moved with a dynamic flow.
7. R.Amoroso and M.Roberge, “Jardí Tancat” by N.Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak6. R.Amoroso and M.Roberge, “Jardí Tancat” by N.Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.BakOne couple sailed through a fluent pas de deux until the woman got worked up. Her partner calmed her. The relationship of another couple had rough edges, but the woman still sought solace by throwing herself at her partner’s chest. The third couple was the most outgoing, filling the space like birds eager to fly. As the light faded, all dancers hunkered down again, their heads swaying sideways like reptiles.

8. G.Goutard-Dekeyser, M.Roberge, and R.Amoroso; “The Blue Brides” by B.Marshall, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak9. A.Dobbie and M.Roberge, “The Blue Brides” by B.Marshall, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.BakThe three brides waited in vain for their grooms in the opening scene of The Blue Brides. Only the stridulations of crickets accompanied them. When meeting the men in the next scene, their arms cut into the air piecemeal. Dance theater-like lectures, given at bizarre standing desks, subsequently revealed the fate of each bride. One desktop was nailed to Rebecca Amoroso’s red pumps. She lay on her back, her legs stretched up. Another was mounted like a tray onto Mathilde Roberge’s head who sat on a footstool strapped to her bottom. In the first lecture, Atticus Dobbie talked about Julia (Mathilde Roberge) who did everything right but never had any friends and who no one smiled at. During Dobbie’s speech, Julia shot her grooms (like Bluebeard his wives) who miraculously recovered only to be shot again.
11. A.Dobbie, G.Goutard-Dekeyser, M.Roberge, and R.Amoroso; “The Blue Brides” by B.Marshall, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak10. Ensemble, “The Blue Brides” by B.Marshall, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.BakAnnabelle (Garance Goutard-Dekeyser), the second bride, was beautiful and consequently harassed. Perhaps it was due to her mother’s death that everything went awry in the life of Stella (Rebecca Amoroso), the third bride. Regardless, she stuck to her life motto (“It’s ok, the sun will shine”) even as smoke billowed out her wedding dress. Between the lectures, a strong solo testified to the self-reflective character of Julia, bells accompanied the men as they plowed through the darkness, and the couples danced to fast forward, tube-heavy folk music. Despite the women’s aversion, the men carried them off stage on their shoulders like bundles afterward. All the screwed-up wedding plans seemed to be history in the final get-together in which a hip song about Istanbul, New York, and Amsterdam indicated that love matters had turned global.

12. M.Roberge and R.Chang, “Lickety-Split” by A.Cerrudo, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak13. G.Goutard-Dekeyser and A.Dobbie, “Lickety-Split” by A.Cerrudo, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.BakContrary to its title, Lickety-Split wasn’t as fast as lightning but was poetic. It opened with a solemn in-between of taiji and mime at the front stage, followed by an intimate and, later, stormy pas de deux. Clever warm lighting enhanced the choreography’s appeal. Simple costumes (gray strap dresses, gray pants, and dark tops) didn’t cry for attention. Some scenes highlighted togetherness; others focused on individuals. Rong Chang closed his witty solo (which won him extra applause) in an almost knocked-out state, pretending that a gong hit his head. Goutard-Dekeyser looked around for support when faced with the kneeling Dobbie. With no help in sight, she pressed something invisible from her fingers and dropped it into his begging hand.
The warmth, wit, and cheekiness of Lickety-Split were like food for the soul.

15. Ensemble, “High Moon” by V.Brunelle, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak14. Ensemble, “High Moon” by V.Brunelle, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak That couldn’t be said about High Moon. Its dancers assembled into a human statue in the rear of the stage. Above them, a glaring flood light blinded the eyes. As they teetered forward, their hands flicked as if to shake off drops of water. The music’s electronic pulses (composed by Laurier Rajotte) reverberated in the dancers’ bodies and perhaps caused their angst-ridden panting. As an oboe played the signature melody of Ravel’s Boléro, it was clear that Bejárt’s eponymous choreography inspired High Moon. Yet it didn’t play in the same league. Wearing black shorts and gray jackets (alluringly lowered at times to reveal naked shoulders), the dancers resembled a wannabe cool gang that wavered between aggression and feebleness.
16. G.Goutard-Dekeyser and A.Dobbie, “High Moon” by V.Brunelle, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.Bak 17. Ensemble, “High Moon” by V.Brunelle, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025 © J.BakThey scampered like swans but with chicken-like bent arms. Fists pushed vigorously upward, but in no time, the arms faltered and crossed in front of chests like floppy fronds. The seesawing steps characteristic of Boléro turned into a more athletic jogging, hopping, or fidgeting. Languid, lascivious lunges and suggestively swinging hips recalled Boléro’s sensuality, but High Moon had no climactic finale. Instead, the music crescendoed, and the dancers clustered at the front stage like chosen ones, their gazes directed upward.

Links: Website of Gauthier Dance
“Dream Team” – Trailer
Photos: 1. Ensemble, “Jardí Tancat” by Nacho Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
2. Mathilde Roberge and Rebecca Amoroso, “Jardí Tancat” by Nacho Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
3. Mathilde Roberge and Rebecca Amoroso, “Jardí Tancat” by Nacho Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
4. Mathilde Roberge and Rong Chang, “Jardí Tancat” by Nacho Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
5. Joan Jansana Escobedo, Mathilde Roberge, and Rong Chang; “Jardí Tancat” by Nacho Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
6. Rebecca Amoroso and Mathilde Roberge, “Jardí Tancat” by Nacho Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
7. Rebecca Amoroso and Mathilde Roberge, “Jardí Tancat” by Nacho Duato, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
8. Garance Goutard-Dekeyser, Mathilde Roberge, and Rebecca Amoroso; “The Blue Brides” by Barak Marshall, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
9. Atticus Dobbie and Mathilde Roberge, “The Blue Brides” by Barak Marshall, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
10. Ensemble, “The Blue Brides” by Barak Marshall, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
11. Atticus Dobbie, Garance Goutard-Dekeyser, Mathilde Roberge, and Rebecca Amoroso; “The Blue Brides” by Barak Marshall, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
12. Mathilde Roberge and Rong Chang, “Lickety-Split” by Alejandro Cerrudo, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
13. Garance Goutard-Dekeyser and Atticus Dobbie, “Lickety-Split” by Alejandro Cerrudo, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
14. Ensemble, “High Moon” by Virginie Brunelle, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
15. Ensemble, “High Moon” by Virginie Brunelle, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
16. Garance Goutard-Dekeyser and Atticus Dobbie, “High Moon” by Virginie Brunelle, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
17. Ensemble, “High Moon” by Virginie Brunelle, Gauthier Dance Juniors 2025
all photos © Jeanette Bak
Editing: Kayla Kauffman

 

Brimful

“Cipollino”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (New Stage)
Moscow, Russia
March 08, 2025 (matinee and evening performance)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

 1. S.Maymula (Little Radish), I.Sorokin (Cipollino), A.Vinokur (Mother Radish), and E.Besedina (Mother Cipolla), “Cipollino” by G.Mayorov, Bolshoi Ballet 2025 © Bolshoi Theatre/E.FetisovaThe boy Cippolino (Little Onion), the hero of Gianni Rodari’s 1957 children’s book Adventures of Cipollino, enjoyed an international career. He was especially popular in eastern countries and a famous cartoon and film figure in the Soviet Union. A ballet adaption by Genrikh Mayorov (1936-2022) entered the Bolshoi Ballet’s repertory three years after its Kiev premiere. Cipollino was revived at the Bolshoi earlier this season and still attracts crowds. Though a children’s fairy tale, adults can appreciate the production, especially when danced at top quality. I saw a matinee attended primarily by children and their parents as well as a sold-out evening performance.

The young Cipollino and his family are members of jovial townsfolk who are anthropomorphic fruits and vegetables—Cobbler Grape, Professor Pear, Godfather Pumpkin, and the Radish family, whose daughter, Little Radish, becomes Cipollino’s best buddy. They’re ruled by the high-handed, eccentric Prince Lemon whose court includes an acerbic guard, ludicrous knights, and the two overexcited Countesses Cherry. (more…)

Dreams versus Reality

“The Seagull”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (New Stage)
Moscow, Russia
March 06, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. A.Putintsev (Konstantin Treplev), “The Seagull” by Y.Possokhov, Bolshoi Ballet 2025 © Bolshoi Theatre/M.Logvinov Almost four years after its premiere in summer 2021, I finally saw Yuri Possokhov’s The Seagull at the Bolshoi Theatre. It was his sixth creation for the company (his seventh and latest, The Queen of Spades, premiered in 2023), and the fourth time, he teamed up with composer Ilya Demutsky. The artistic team included costume designer Emma Ryott (a longstanding collaborator of choreographer Christian Spuck) and set designer Tom Pye (who also created the designs for Possokhov’s Anna Karenina). David Finn contributed the lighting, Sergei Rylko the video design.

Chekhov’s The Seagull is labeled as a comedy, but its humor is bitter at best. Not a single protagonist leads a fulfilled life. Everybody runs after a dream world or tries to construct their realities. Family relationships are strained, and love is unrequited, quickly exhausted, or phony. Possokhov’s interpretation throws more light on some characters, and less on others, and differs in some respects from the original. Irina Arkadina (Kristina Kretova)—an actress in Chekhov’s version, a renowned ballerina in Possokhov’s—is not merely a fashionable yet greedy diva and dysfunctional mother. She shows her empathetic side when she recalls childhood memories with her elderly brother, Pyotr Sorin (Mikhail Lobukhin), whose unrealized dreams of marriage and artistic career Possokhov omitted. Like in the text, events largely unfolded at Sorin’s country estate. (more…)

Human Striving

“Homage to Uwe Scholz”
Leipzig Ballet
Forum Ludwigsburg
Ludwigsburg, Germany
February 15, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Seventh Symphony” by U.Scholz, Leipzig Ballet 2025 © I.Zenna The Stuttgart-bred Uwe Scholz was in his early thirties when he became the Leipzig Ballet’s artistic director and chief choreographer in 1991. Scholz’s ballets were substantial and had depth, but the extent of his choreographic talent has been undiscovered due to his premature death in 2004. Last weekend, the Leipzig Ballet toured Homage to Uwe Scholz at the Forum Ludwigsburg. The double bill comprised two of Scholz’s symphonic pieces, Seventh Symphony, set to Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 (1811-1812), and Second Symphony, set to Robert Schumann’s Symphony No. 2 (1847).

For the first time, Leipzig Ballet isn’t led by a choreographer, but by artistic director Rémy Fichet. Fichet, who took the reins from Mario Schröder just this season, danced in Leipzig under Scholz and intends to keep his ballets in the repertory. However, he’s realistic. The company’s standard does not yet meet the requirements of every Scholz piece, he admitted, and the dancers will need time to hone their technique. Perhaps, Fichet can prevent Scholz’s work from sinking deeper into oblivion. (more…)

Effervescent

“The Merry Widow”
Hungarian National Ballet
Hungarian State Opera
Budapest, Hungary
February 8-9, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. M.Takamori (Valencienne), M.Bäckström (Camille), and D.Zhukov (Njegus), “The Merry Widow” by R.Hynd, Hungarian National Ballet 2025 © V.Berecz 2. M.Radziush (Count Danilo Danilovitch) and T.Melnyik (Hanna Glawari), “The Merry Widow” by R.Hynd, Hungarian National Ballet 2025 © V.Berecz The brisk beats that opened last Saturday’s revival of The Merry Widow at Budapest’s opera house promised a peppy performance, and the following two and a half hours delivered brio indeed. Franz Lehár composed the music in 1905 for his popular eponymous operetta, and John Launchbery and Allen Abbot were the first to edit it for the dance stage in 1974. Both worked on behalf of the British choreographer Ronald Hynd who in 1975 adapted the comic operetta into a three-act ballet for the Australian Ballet. Since then, many ballet companies have added it to their repertory. The Hungarian National Ballet premiered The Merry Widow in 2014 with new sets and costumes by the Brit Peter Docherty.

Docherty designed a long workbench stuffed with books and champagne (shadowed by a wall-sized replica of the national coat of arms) where the staff of the Pontevedrian embassy in Paris shuffled papers, boozed, and stood at attention as soon as the anthem sounded. The small Balkan state of Pontevedrian was bankrupt, but its geriatric ambassador, Baron Zeta, had a bailout plan. If his first secretary, Count Danilo Danilovitch, married the Pontevedrian millionaire’s widow, Hanna Glawari, her money would refill the state coffers. (more…)

As It Should Be

“Peter and the Wolf”
Jugendkompanie of the Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera
NEST (Künstlerhaus Vienna)
Vienna, Austria
January 26, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. A.Martelli (Peter) and S.E.Schippani (Bird), “Peter and the Wolf” by M.Schläpfer, Jugendkompanie of the Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2025 © M.Furnica2. E.Renahy (Cat), “Peter and the Wolf” by M.Schläpfer, Jugendkompanie of the Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2025 © M.Furnica 3. A.Martelli (Peter), Y.Kato (Grandfather), and S.E.Schippani (Bird); “Peter and the Wolf” by M.Schläpfer, Jugendkompanie of the Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2025 © M.Furnica Last December, the Vienna State Opera opened a new venue for its young audience in a side wing of the Künstlerhaus, around 550 yards from the Vienna State Opera. The venue was previously a home for the city’s independent companies but was rebuilt thanks to private funding and a grant from Austria’s Ministry of Education, Science, and Research. The theater’s steep auditorium ensures visibility of the stage for even the shortest audience members. Although I was told that its name, NEST, is an abbreviation of “New State Opera,” it reminded me of a bird’s nest.

Despite sunny early spring weather, last Sunday’s matinee was well attended by both children and grown-ups to see the premiere of Peter and the Wolf, (more…)

Striking Similarities

“kaiserRequiem”
Vienna State Ballet & Volksoper Wien
Volksoper Wien
Vienna, Austria
January 25, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1.D.Schmutzhard (Emperor Overall) and ensemble, “kaiserRequiem”, directed and choreographed by A.Heise, Vienna State Ballet/Volksoper Wien 2025 © A.Taylor kaiserRequiem, the Volksoper Wien’s latest premiere, is a joint production of the State Ballet Vienna and the singers, choir, and orchestra of the Volksoper. The piece intertwines the sixty-minute chamber opera Der Kaiser von Atlantis (The Emperor of Atlantis), composed by Viktor Ullmann in 1943/44, with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Requiem in D minor (K. 626). Both pieces feature death, which overtook both composers while working on them. Mozart died in December 1791 before finishing Requiem. Requiem had been commissioned, and when Mozart died, his wife, Constanze, assigned its completion to Franz Xaver Süßmayr, her husband’s former pupil. Being of Jewish parentage, Ullmann and his wife were deported to the Nazi concentration camp Theresienstadt (in today’s Czech Republic) in September 1942. It was a showpiece ghetto to promote the allegedly successful resettlement of Jews, so Theresienstadt had a department for so-called “leisure activities,” such as sports, theater, lectures, and reading. Ullmann worked there as a composer, music critic, and musical event organizer. The premiere of his opera The Emperor of Atlantis was scheduled for Theresienstadt’s stage but was canceled after the general rehearsal. Perhaps the piece’s highly political sarcasm, though subtle, did not slip the notice of the ruling powers, but that’s only speculation. (more…)

Aerial Ballet

“Möbius”
Compagnie XY
Forum Ludwigsburg
Ludwigsburg, Germany
January 10, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Möbius”—a collective artwork by Compagnie XY in collaboration with R.Ouramdane, Compagnie XY 2025 © C.R.De LageThe northern French company Compagnie XY is a group of forty acrobats who specialize in lifts. Nineteen of them perform in Möbius, the troupe’s fifth and latest piece created in collaboration with the French choreographer and dancer Rachid Ouramdane. Last weekend, it toured at the Forum Ludwigsburg.
Möbius opened sedately and silently. One by one, the barefooted artists walked on either side of the auditorium toward a stage equipped only with gray-greenish flooring. They stood scattered across it, motionless, gazing sternly at the audience. The first percussive beats set them in motion. They stretched their arms sideways like birds ready for take-off, and a blink of an eye later, the first bodies soared in the air. Pushed by multiple interlocked arms that served as a living trampoline, they flew from one group to the other, often adding extra thrilling saltos and other aerial acrobatics. (more…)

Back in 1892…

“The Nutcracker”
Perm Ballet
Perm Tchaikovsky Opera and Ballet Theatre
Perm, Russia
December 31, 2024 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

Like all Russian ballet companies, Perm Ballet, one of the country’s leading troupes, presented The Nutcracker during the Christmas season. Their version is by Alexey Miroshnichenko, artistic director of the Perm Ballet since 2009, and premiered in December 2017. I watched the live stream of the performance on New Year’s Eve.

Miroshnichenko relocated the fairy tale to the St. Petersburg of 1892 (where Petipa’s The Nutcracker had its world premiere at the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre) where the dusky streets were bustling. Traders with vendors’ trays offered hot drinks and sweets, sleighs crossed pedestrians’ paths, and anticipation put a spring in everyone’s step.

(more…)

The Hub

“The Nutcracker”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
December 31, 2024 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. E.Kokoreva (Marie) and ensemble, “The Nutcracker” by Y.Grigorovich, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Ballet/D.Yusupov2. A.Ovcharenko (Nutcracker Prince), “The Nutcracker” by Y.Grigorovich, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Ballet/D.Yusupov During this year’s Christmas sermon, my pastor asked which moment should best represent Christmas. The Christmas dinner? The lighting of the candles? Or, perhaps, unwrapping the presents? For me, this moment was the moment during the Bolshoi Ballet’s performance of The Nutcracker when the newlywed Marie (Elizaveta Kokoreva) and the Nutcracker Prince (Artem Ovcharenko) were lifted by their court toward the star at the top of the Christmas tree. It was the climax of their spiritual journey and of Yuri Grigorovich’s choreography for which I had been waiting since I last saw his Nutcracker live in Moscow in 2022.

Two live streams on December 30th (evening performance) and December 31st (matinee) enabled a vast audience to follow the heroes’ journey. To meet the demand, the number of cinemas offering live broadcasts grew from one hundred to three hundred in December. Most were located in Russia, but cinemas in Belarus, Armenia, and the United Arab Emirates also participated. I was able to watch the matinee on the Bolshoi’s vk video platform. (more…)

An Endeavor

“La Bayadère”
Ballet Estable del Teatro Colón
Teatro Colón
Buenos Aires, Argentina
December 28, 2024 (stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “La Bayadère” by M.Galizzi after M.Petipa, Ballet Estable des Teatro Colón 2024 © Prensa Teatro Colón/A.Colombaroli The Teatro Colón wrapped up its 2024 season with a stream of La Bayadère, which had been recorded a few days earlier. The choreography is by Mario Galizzi, the company’s artistic director for the past three years. His new version stays faithful to Petipa’s original and, like in Yuri Grigorovich’s rendition for the Bolshoi Ballet, Act III ends with Solor’s breakdown after he recognizes Nikiya among the Shades. Solor’s and Gamzatti’s wedding, the destruction of the temple, and the apotheosis were omitted. (more…)

Lucky He

“A Christmas Carol”
Finnish National Ballet
Opera House
Helsinki, Finland
December 2024 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

1. J.Xia (Fred) and J.Pakkanen (Scrooge), “A Christmas Carol” by D.Bintley, Finnish National Ballet 2023 © R.Oksaharju Last Christmas, I missed the Finnish National Ballet’s new A Christmas Carol on arte.tv. Luckily, the channel rescheduled the recording for this December. David Bintley, the Birmingham Royal Ballet’s former director, choreographed the two-act production and was the first to adapt Charles Dickens’s novella about the chronically ill-tempered miser, Scrooge, for the ballet stage.

In Act I, Bintley introduces the old merchant, Scrooge (Johan Pakkanen), who hates people in general and Christmas in particular, along with his antitheses, Fred (Jun Xia) and Bob Cratchit (Frans Valkama). Both are family men but represent different social classes. Fred, Scrooge’s nephew, is well-off and in the most buoyant of Christmas moods when he invites his uncle for Christmas (he’s, of course, immediately rebuffed). Bob, Scrooge’s conscientious but underpaid clerk, feeds his family of six on a limited budget. He, too, is happy and generous by nature but worries about the serious illness of his youngest son, Tiny Tim (Janne Kouhia). (more…)

A Treat

“Don Quixote” (1973 film)
The Australian Ballet
Melbourne, Australia
December 2024 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

A couple of days ago, medici.tv re-released Rudolf Nureyev’s Don Quixote as part of its Christmas ballet program. Although fifty-two years old, the film is hot. Nureyev adapted it from his 1970 stage production for the Australian Ballet and co-directed it with Robert Helpmann (then artistic director of the Australian Ballet). Both starred in leading roles—Helpmann as the Don, and Nureyev as Basilio—alongside dancers of the Australian Ballet.
Nureyev was a notorious daredevil, but the fireworks that his steps set off from the moment he reached Barcelona’s port (set design by Barry Kay) until he finally married Kitri (Lucette Aldous) were beyond imagination.

(more…)

Comforting

“The Nutcracker”
The Australian Ballet
Sydney Opera House/Joan Sutherland Theatre
Sydney, Australia
December 12, 2024 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

 1. C.Linnane (Drosselmeyer) and ensemble, “The Nutcracker” by P.Wright, The Australian Ballet 2024 © D.Boud This year, getting in a happy Christmas mood isn’t easy in my home country, Germany. We’re in troubled waters, and prospects for the new year are dismal. Even our major ballet stages abandoned a festive program. The State Ballet Berlin scheduled Christian Spuck’s Bovary and Swan Lake for the holiday season; the Bavarian State Ballet is presenting a mixed bill (Duato/Skeels/Eyal) and Cranko’s Romeo and Juliet. At least audiences in Stuttgart, Hamburg, and Dresden can attend performances of The Nutcracker, but Stuttgart’s rendering is screwed up, and Dresden’s is saccharine. The bright spot is Hamburg Ballet, which kept Neumeier’s much-lauded version in its repertory.

The Australian Ballet’s live stream of The Nutcracker was therefore a welcome addition, especially as the company presented Peter Wright’s traditional version, which was staged for the Royal Ballet in 1984 and later adapted for Birmingham Royal Ballet. (more…)

Coming Out

“Oscar©
The Australian Ballet

Sydney Opera House/Joan Sutherland Theatre
Sydney, Australia
November 19, 2024 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

1. C.Linnane (Oscar Wilde), S.Spencer (Constance Wilde), and J.Caley (Robbie Ross), “Oscar©” by C.Wheeldon, The Australian Ballet 2024 © C.Rodgers-Wilson One long year has passed since The Australian Ballet’s last live stream, and it was uncertain if the company would dance again for an online audience. But after moving from Melbourne’s State Theatre (which is closed for major renovations) to their temporary home at the nearby Regent Theatre, they are back online. Christopher Wheeldon’s Oscar© was the first ballet streamed live from the Sydney Opera House. Moreover, it is the first full-length commission by artistic director, David Hallberg, who has been friends with Wheeldon for twenty years. As a choreographer, Wheeldon is “hot property,” Hallberg stated. Oscar© combines biographical aspects of the well-known, yet divisive, Irish author Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) with two pieces of his oeuvre.

As usual, Hallberg and presenter Catherine Murphy co-hosted the live stream, conducting backstage interviews and chatting about the piece. Hallberg quickly made clear that when approaching Wheeldon, he had a bold, unapologetic story in mind that wouldn’t shy away from telling uncomfortable realities, such as Wilde’s homosexuality for which he was persecuted and sentenced to two years in prison. (more…)