Stuccio danced with the ballet from 1986 to 1995 where he met his wife, former ballerina Anne White. With such a strong connection to the ballet, they attended the Academy Gala looking as glam and fringed as the rest of the guests and patrons. Former dancers Jennifer Smith-Borish, Alexie Borovik, Jonathan Stiles and wife Martha Chamberlain, to name a few, all looked svelte for this reunion. I didn’t spy former ballet master, Jeffrey Gribler, but recall his leap onto the stage at age 17 in 1975 drew gasps and giggles from the girls in the audience and he became the ballet’s instant heart throb.
For this Gala, Corella chose a broad spectrum of audience favorite excerpts, brilliantly performed by stars of the company. I originally saw Christopher Wheeldon’s “After the Rain” a year after its company premiere, the duet to Arvo Pärt’s “Spiegel im Spiegel,” with Julie Diana and Zachary Hench. To me, it’s one of the greatest duets of the twenty-first century. Its textures reflect Pärt’s chromatic music, and its choreographic contours frame it. Here, principal dancers Oksana Maslova and Sterling Baca curled their torsos and limbs between them like endless mobius strips with no beginning and no end. Maslova’s ability to articulate every inch of her small body, her fingers, her spine, her feet into unearthly curves astonishes me each time I see her dance. Her full backbend at the final phrases was liquid and high enough to let Baca slip under her feet first, his torso to the floor, hers to the flys above. An excerpt from “Le Corsaire” began had Nayara Lopes, as Medora, Jack Thomas as Conrad, and Ashton Roxander as Ali, performing the pas de trois. Excellent in the role, Roxander imbued his dance with the passion it requires.
The performances had begun and ended with Balanchine works. The rousing “Stars and Stripes” pas de deux danced by Jacqueline Callahan and Sterling Baca and a part of “Ballet Imperial” with its circular and diagonal lines intersecting about 30 of the company’s roster. Dayesi Torriente, Lucia Erickson and Pau Pujol took the principal dances, with Pujol’s crisply landed jetés and tours brought the audience out of their seats like champagne uncorked. Confetti showered the entire company along with conductor Beatrice Jona Affron, and piano soloists, Martha Koeneman and Alexander Timofiev, board members, and awardees.
Post show, Yudenich and Sandonato spoke with me briefly. A Balanchine die-hard, Sandonato said Balanchine considered her as artistic director when the ballet’s founder, Barbara Weisberger left. “But,” she said, “I had children to raise, and I didn’t think I could do it.” She wished Corella a long term as artistic director and congratulated him for “Keeping the Balanchine works and bringing the dancers to this level of versatility. They can do anything.” For that evening, it was the best of times.
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