The biggest news of the night, however, was principal dancer Tiler Peck’s excellent sophomore choreographic effort for her home troupe. The grandiose “Symphonie Espagnole” (titled after its score like her first work, 2024’s “Concerto for Two Pianos”) utilized forty dancers over five movements, in the episodic vein of Balanchine’s “Symphony in C.” “Go big or go home” Tiler Peck told Margaret Fuhrer in the playbill interview. Between these epic gala ballets, the star-studded Host Committee (which included Stephen Colbert, Claire Danes, and Jennifer Garner), and the season’s triple blockbuster opening night, this seems to be the NYCB’s motto this spring too.
Peck easily handled her ambitious scale, and she did it the same way she dances: with a combination of precision and suavity. She can be both lightning fast and uber smooth onstage, a hummingbird or a panther (often within the same phrase), and “Espagnole” operated with the same compelling duality. Emma Von Enck, leading the first movement allegro in a flouncy red tutu (the varied costumes were by Robert Perdziola), perkily hopped on pointe then let her arms melt alongside her body in a swivel drag—a very Tiler Peck move. Kloe Walker, in a long red gown with a purple band, also embodied some tricky Peckisms in her star-making turn as the lead of the second movement scherzando. She hovered on pointe while switching positions and whipped off silky turns before stopping on a dime.
“Sym in C” was Peck’s lodestar, and finding her Bizet Easter eggs was a fun game. The most obvious was perhaps when Von Enck and Joseph Gordon split ways and grand-jetéd offstage as in the Bizet third movement. But Peck pulled from numerous Balanchine works. Mira Nadon ducked under Ryan Tomash’s arm while staying on pointe as in “Chaconne.” And Walker practically auditioned for “Errante” with her heel pivots, peg-leg drags, and sinuous port de bras over wide, forced-arch stances. She also stroked the back of her head and neck with her other arm extended—the famous, decadent “Diamonds” port de bras that we’d see again later in the show. Another Balanchine ballet that came to mind often was “Bourée Fantasque,” due to the circular finale configurations and the mélange of characters and tutu lengths.
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