Twenty Years of Los Angeles Ballet
The ballet community in Los Angeles, quite large and scattered, is fond of opining that they live in a “tough town for ballet.”
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
While the ghosts of, among others, Judy Garland, Jack Benny and the cast of “All in the Family” might be haunting Television City’s soundstage 33 in Los Angeles, the dancers of American Contemporary Ballet (ACB), took metaphoric flight on Thursday when they performed the world premiere of, “The Euterpides.” Running through June 28, the work, commissioned by ACB director and choreographer Lincoln Jones, featured Alma Deutscher’s gorgeous score, (her first ballet), and was performed live by 17 musicians.
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The ballet community in Los Angeles, quite large and scattered, is fond of opining that they live in a “tough town for ballet.”
Continue ReadingDance artists and scholars have long asked the same question: how do we document an art form that, by nature, exists in one moment and is gone the next?
Continue ReadingIn a week of humanitarian crisis, of bodies mobilised and menaced, what a privilege it’s been to take refuge in art that radiates integrity, conviction and splendour.
Continue ReadingGeorge Balanchine famously said, “ballet is woman.” But unusually, in “Kammermusik No. 2,” he featured an all-male corps de ballet. I can think of one other men-only Balanchine dance, and it happens to be running the same week this winter season: “Prodigal Son.”
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