Fated Love
San Francisco Ballet artistic director Tamara Rojo has often said she believes ballet should operate more like Broadway, where shows have previews and work through revisions before the real premiere.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
Marie Antoinette is not an entirely sympathetic character. Her penchant for luxury and extravagance—and the degree to which she was out of touch with the lives of the majority— made her a symbol of the wealth disparity that prompted the French Revolution. At the same time, her desire to flaunt the trappings of wealth in pursuit of an idealized version of femininity is, to me, sympathetic in its frustrating similarities to the pressures still plaguing women today. And the clear incompatibility in her marriage, and the loneliness it must have created, is a human issue that feels timeless in the way it tugs at the heart.
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San Francisco Ballet artistic director Tamara Rojo has often said she believes ballet should operate more like Broadway, where shows have previews and work through revisions before the real premiere.
Continue ReadingIn general, one knows exactly what to expect of a Pam Tanowitz piece. There will be deconstructed ballet and modern steps.
Continue ReadingWhen I think of the desert, the first impression that comes to mind is of unrelenting heat, stark shadows, the solitude of vast space, occasional winds, and slowness.
FREE ARTICLETwo works, separated by a turn of the century. One, the final collaboration between Bill T. Jones and Arnie Zane; the other, made 25 years after Zane’s death.
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