The Two of Us
When I think of the desert, the first impression that comes to mind if of unrelenting heat, stark shadows, the solitude of vast space, occasional winds, and slowness.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
A lone musician stands at the corner of the darkened stage. His shakuhachi (bamboo flute) echoes, melancholy, as the sound of an ominous wind rises. Shoya Ishibashi, a K-Ballet Tokyo principal dancer, marches into centerstage as the wind shifts into the clatter of a propeller, the hum of an engine. His body becomes a fighter plane: take off, flight maneuvers, a holding pattern—and then the fiery crash of a World War II kamikaze pilot into a roiling red sea.
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When I think of the desert, the first impression that comes to mind if of unrelenting heat, stark shadows, the solitude of vast space, occasional winds, and slowness.
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