School Report
One 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.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
Like most new adaptations of existing story ballet classics, the world premiere of artistic director James Sofranko’s “Swan Lake” for Grand Rapids Ballet retained the bones of the original it was based on. Sofranko’s redux stayed faithful to the storyline of Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov’s 1895 production, based on Russian and German folk tales, which told of Prince Siegfried, who fell in love with Princess Odette, a woman cursed to be a swan by day and to take human form only at night. It also retained a good measure of their original choreography. Into that, Sofranko seamlessly created and integrated his own choreography for portions of acts one, three, and four of the four-act production, which ran a tidy two hours.
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One 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.
Continue ReadingFittingly, I caught Kaori Ito’s charming production “An Upside Down World” on Children’s Day, a national holiday in Japan.
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