Some Enchanted Evening
The Philadelphia Ballet just premiered its current choreographer-in-residence, Juliano Nunes’s “Romeo and Juliet.”
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
There is probably no more beloved ballet, by audiences and dancers alike, than “Romeo and Juliet.” The tale, which Shakespeare borrowed from a sixteenth-century novella by the prolific storyteller Matteo Bandello, contains so many of the elements people love in ballet: a desperate love story, several gushing pas de deux for the young protagonists, a headstrong heroine, a colorful setting (Renaissance Verona). And, in Prokofiev’s 1935 score, a musical backdrop of cinematic sweep, with swelling melodies that beg for voluptuous, windswept dancing.
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The Philadelphia Ballet just premiered its current choreographer-in-residence, Juliano Nunes’s “Romeo and Juliet.”
Continue ReadingOne of San Francisco Ballet’s greatest assets is its home venue, the Beaux-Arts style War Memorial Opera House, with four rings of seating that require performers to project their energies practically to the exosphere.
Continue ReadingMisery, grief, sorrow. However you want to cut it or label it, the depths of emotion are too irresistible a thing for artists to not attempt to emulate or articulate.
Continue Reading“La Dame aux camélias” conveys the pain of the tragic love story between the celebrated, generous and doomed courtesan Marguerite Gautier and the passionate, idealistic and tormented Armand Duval.
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