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A Rose is a Rose
REVIEWS | Rebecca Deczynski

A Rose is a Rose

A dancer’s lineage can tell you a lot. The places they’ve trained, the mentors they’ve had, the repertoire they’ve inscribed into their long-term memory all have an impact on the ways that they move, attack a set of steps, strategize a quick petit allegro or a dreamy adagio. So, too, is this true for choreographers.

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Hymn to an Uncommon Man
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

Hymn to an Uncommon Man

OG Anunoby’s fingertip putback of Jalen Brunson’s Hail Mary three-pointer. Jordan Staal’s diving sniper goal. It’s playoff season, a time of year dominated by unbelievable, high-stakes athleticism across several sports (see also the French Open, the FIFA World Cup).

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The Perfect Storm

The Perfect Storm

When is a music video also a dance film? This is a question that I’ve often asked myself as a result of the propensity amongst curators, speakers, museums, arts institutions...

Performance

Gener8ion - Storm directed by Romain Gavras and choreographed by Damian Jalet

Place

Words

Sarah Elgart

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A Thing with Feathers
REVIEWS | Kris Kosaka

A Thing with Feathers

To launch her tenure as artistic director for the National Ballet of Japan, Miyako Yoshida added Sir Peter Wright’s “Swan Lake” (with Galina Samsova) to the repertoire, explaining the choice as a “new step forward” for the company.

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Back to Nature
REVIEWS | Gracia Haby

Back to Nature

In the forest, it is never silent. Everything is in transmission with something else, be it tree roots to soil, plants to animals and insects, or warning cries that ripple through the forest when predators approach.

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Crossing the Line
REVIEWS | Gracia Haby

Crossing the Line

At the vertical and horizontal intersection of two white lines on a darkened stage, performer Layla Meadows and her corresponding organic outline appears. For this restaging of “Glow,” a work choreographed by Gideon Obarzanek for the Melbourne Festival in 2006, it is Meadows’s time to be scanned and surveyed in this duet between a dancer and a machine.

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City of Dance
FEATURES | Victoria Looseleaf

City of Dance

With its “sprawl to the wall” density, the city of Los Angeles seems a good fit for democratizing dance, i.e., presenting site-specific movement in an array of venues—both indoors and out—all free to the public. Indeed, Benjamin Millepied, the founder of L.A. Dance Project, began the series in the French capital with his Paris Dance Project in 2024, then called La Ville Dansée, with the idea of exporting it to his adopted city in a co-production.

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In the Galleries

In the Galleries

In Maia Chao’s “Being Moved,” the audience was ushered up to the 7th floor of the Whitney Museum of American Art in a large, crowded elevator with all sixty or...

Performance

Maia Chao’s “Being Moved” / John Jasperse Projects's “Wandering” / Etay Axelroad's “Heron”

Place

The Whitney Museum of American Art / Marian Goodman Gallery / Carvalho, New York, May 2026

Words

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Stars and Stripes
REVIEWS | Victoria Looseleaf

Stars and Stripes

They’re saucy, sweet and stunning! They’re the ballerinas of American Contemporary Ballet and they’re helping close the company’s 2025-26 season with performances of “Spectacular Balanchine,” a program devoted to the choreography of George Balanchine. 

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Testing Assumptions
REVIEWS | Steve Sucato

Testing Assumptions

The current global zeitgeist of uncertainty and the tendency to jump to judgment inspired veteran dancer-choreographer Beth Corning's latest dance-theater work, “Foolish Assumptions.” 

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Positive Masculinity
REVIEWS | Lorna Irvine

Positive Masculinity

At a time when the roots of toxic masculinity are still being hotly debated within society (I'd argue nature and nurture aren't necessarily mutually exclusive bedfellows) the excellent “Boys Don't Dance” arrives, fully formed  at a festival for children, but with enough layers to appease any audience.

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We're all Mad Here

We're all Mad Here

Just as The Wizard of Oz to the United States or Pinocchio to Italy, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is the coming-of-age novel of English childhood. The reception of Christopher Wheeldon’s...

Performance

La Scala Ballet: “Alice's Adventures in Wonderland” by Christopher Wheeldon

Place

La Scala, Milan, Italy, May 2026

Words

Valentina Bonelli

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Dancing for Chagall
REVIEWS | Kris Kosaka

Dancing for Chagall

Director and choreographer Naoya Homan’s reimagining of “Aleko,” a one-act ballet where art takes center stage, dazzles the eye with a tragic meditation on the limits of freedom.

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A Moving Museum 
REVIEWS | Greta Pieropan

A Moving Museum 

In “Me Time—Danza al Museo” by choreographer Camilla Monga, dance becomes a tool for deeper seeing. Through choreography, the museum becomes a space of cognitive and emotional activation. The result is an encounter that lingers long after the performance ends.  

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The Art of Movement
REVIEWS | Robert Steven Mack

The Art of Movement

In San Diego, a surprisingly robust number of ballet companies compete for a relatively small audience. While two such companies, City Ballet of San Diego and Golden State Ballet, present mixed repertoire programs, San Diego Ballet performs almost exclusively the work of director-choreographer Javier Velasco.

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Wandering
REVIEWS | Cecilia Whalen

Wandering

Julie Mehretu’s current exhibition at the Marian Goodman Gallery is astronomical. Our Days, Like a Shadow (a non-abiding hauntology) is a series of large, new, multicolored paintings that seem to float like planets, inviting viewers to walk around and in between them as if orbiting through a cosmic labyrinth.

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Perpetual Motion

Perpetual Motion

An insistent electronic beat suffuses the dark-wood auditorium while people are milling about and locating their seats.

Performance

An Evening With Aszure Barton

Place

Geffen Stage at Kaufmann Concert Hall, 92NY, New York, NY, May 21, 2026

Words

Rebecca Deczynski

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