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In Pieces
REVIEWS | Gracia Haby

In Pieces

Piece by piece, spanning two decades, Lucy Guerin Inc’s “Pieces” continues to grow. An invitation extended to a selection of choreographers to give shape to adventurous ideas and create a new choreographic work within a supportive framework has expanded from a five- to ten-minute work presented in the Lucy Guerin Inc studios to a twenty-minute piece on the University of Melbourne Art and Culture (UMAC) stage.

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The Music Within
REVIEWS | Steve Sucato

The Music Within

Cleveland native Dianne McIntrye received a hometown hero's welcome during her curtain speech prior to her eponymous dance group thrilling the audience in her latest work, “In the Same Tongue.”

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Flights of Fancy
REVIEWS | Rebecca Deczynski

Flights of Fancy

A man, much to his wife’s chagrin, has a nasty little habit: at night, he turns into a bat and flies out of their marital bed to partake in all kinds of infidelities.

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Wish Come True
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

Wish Come True

The Japan Society continued its Yukio Mishima Centennial Series with a newly commissioned dance work titled “The Seven Bridges (Hashi-zukushi)” based on Yukio Mishima’s short story by that name originally published in 1956.

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Heralding the Bright Days Ahead

Heralding the Bright Days Ahead

London is a changed city this week. The cold front has come, and daylight hours have plummeted. The city is rammed with tourists, buskers, and shoppers.

Performance

London City Ballet: Ratmansky Ashley Page’s “Larina Waltz” / Jerome Robbins’s “Quiet City” / Tasha Chu's “Soon” / Alexei Ratmansky's “Pictures at an Exhibition” 

Place

Linbury Theatre, Royal Opera House, London, November 19, 2025

Words

Eoin Fenton

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No Words, No Refrains
REVIEWS | Sara Veale

No Words, No Refrains

The Royal Ballet’s new restaging of “Everywhere We Go”—the Sufjan Stevens-scored ballet that secured Justin Peck his appointment as resident choreographer at New York City Ballet in 2014—challenges the company’s dancers to adopt a specifically American brand of pizzazz.

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Our Generation
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

Our Generation

Quadrophenia is about young men . . . and I do weep for young men still, because we are still struggling,” Pete Townshend—80 years old—playfully told Stephen Colbert while promoting the latest incarnation of the Who’s 1973 rock opera and 1979 film: “Quadrophenia: A Rock Ballet,” which ran last weekend at City Center.

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Dreamscape
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

Dreamscape

The surge protectors needed replacement after the Hofesh Shechter Company’s concluded four nights performing “Theatre of Dreams” at the Powerhouse: International festival in Gowanus, Brooklyn.

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Monkey Business
REVIEWS | Garth Grimball

Monkey Business

In the 1996 comedy Multiplicity, Michael Keaton plays a man who decides to clone himself several times over in order to meet the demands of work and family. Chaos ensues. On November 14, San Francisco Opera premiered “The Monkey King” by Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang. While the narrative features chaos, the line drawn between the 30-year-old film and this new opera is that the titular Monkey King is played by three performers; or one singer, one dancer, and a puppet; or, six performers total, because the puppet Monkey King requires three puppeteers. The Monkey King is an agent...

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Martha Graham in Paris

Martha Graham in Paris

If classical ballet training—from Vaganova to Cecchetti—idealises effortlessness, silence, and a body almost freed from its own weight, modern dance insists on the opposite: the blunt truth that we are...

Performance

Martha Graham Dance Company

Place

Théâtre du Châtelet, Paris , November 4 & 12, 2025

Words

Elsa Giovanna Simonetti

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Moon Dance
REVIEWS | Steve Sucato

Moon Dance

Tides and the gravitational pull of the moon informed the latest work of Denison University of Ohio dance faculty members Marion Ramirez and Ojeya Cruz Banks. 

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Mother of Creation
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

Mother of Creation

What drives the creative force in the universe? What impels motherhood? These are some of the questions that provoked the bold and colorful work that unfolded onstage as Gallim premiered “Mother” at the Joyce the first week of November.

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Birds of a Feather
REVIEWS | Victoria Looseleaf

Birds of a Feather

Bird-themed dances are nothing new. In addition to the likes of “Swan Lake” (in its numerous iterations, Hello, Matthew Bourne!), “The Firebird” and “The Dying Swan,” there was also Merce Cunningham’s 1991 “Beach Birds.”

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Wild Child

Wild Child

Juliana F. May’s “Optimistic Voices,” which premiered last week at BAM Fisher, was pitched as an exploration of the “tangled contradictions of family, eroticism, and motherhood.”

Performance

Juliana F. May: “Optimistic Voices”

Place

BAM Fisher, Brookly, NY, November 5, 2025

Words

Faye Arthurs

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Pulling Back the Curtain
BOOKSHELF | Louise Greer

Pulling Back the Curtain

In the summer of 2007, writer Stephen Manes, known for his best-selling Bill Gates biography, over thirty books for young adults and children, and for his work as a technology columnist, proposed a new endeavor. He wished to spend an entire season at Pacific Northwest Ballet to observe like a fly on the wall and capture in written word a world of which most people will never catch a glimpse.

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The Game is On
REVIEWS | Steve Sucato

The Game is On

Move over, Matthew Bourne, there is a new voice in theatrical dance plays. Choreographer Penny Saunders' bespoke production of “Sherlock,” performed by Grand Rapids Ballet, was not only a triumph in bringing literature’s favorite super sleuth to the stage in dance form, but is an early contender as one of the 2025-26 dance season’s very best.

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Matters of the Heart
REVIEWS | Róisín O'Brien

Matters of the Heart

On the night of Halloween in South Bend, Indiana, I weave through costumed partygoers as I make my way to a special double bill at the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center.

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To the Beat of the Drum
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

To the Beat of the Drum

This fall, Japan Society is celebrating the centenary of legendary Japanese post-war author Yukio Mishima (1925-1970) with a series of works in theater, film, and dance inspired by his oeuvre.

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Home Lands

Home Lands

Powerhouse: International, the newly launched arts festival in Gowanus, Brooklyn, continued its fall offerings with the multidisciplinary work “Fampitaha, fampita, fampitàna,” co-presented with L’Alliance New York’s Crossing the Line Festival.

Performance

“Fampitaha, fampita, fampitàna” by Soa Ratsifandrihana

Place

Powerhouse: International, L’Alliance New York’s Crossing the Line Festival,

Words

Karen Greenspan

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