Biasucci is in the prime of her career, having joined PNB from Oregon Ballet Theatre in 2011, and though I don’t know the company as deeply as local observers, she seems to be the troupe’s leading Balanchine-style dancer. That said, she’s not at all who you’d typecast for the grand Tchaikovsky fantasia of “Diamonds”—she’s a tiny bumblebee whereas Suzanne Farrell was a long gazelle, and naturally warm in temperament where Farrell was icy. Postlewaite, meanwhile, is a prince of a company MVP who’s at the end of his career—he joined PNB straight from its school in 2003, and will take his final bows at the end of this season. Together their chemistry made a whole fresh story out of “Diamonds.”
The ballerina of “Diamonds,” walking slowly on the downstage diagonal to meet her consort, is famously self-possessed and seemingly self-sufficient, top ruler of the “Jewels” universe. Biasucci embodied every inch of that serious regality despite her smaller stature. (She’s always had the gift, like former San Francisco Ballet principal Tina LeBlanc, of filling the whole stage with the vectors of her lines.) But she also allowed for spontaneous moments of connection and tenderness with Postlewaite, and real love radiated from her face as he took her hand and walked a slow circle around her. How could she resist a gentle smile, as Postlewaite beamed adoration?
The attention to gestural implications in the partnering was exquisite—every offering of the hand, every acceptance, was its own small story of relationship. And the technical moments were a wonder of crisp precision. We tend to remember “Diamonds” for the sweeping partnering of the adagio, not the fast footwork of the variations. But Biasucci took a passage I’ve seen a dozen ballerinas muddle—that tricky bit of jumping out to a leg extended in second position, then pulling up into the pirouette, repeated in the round—and restored clarity and excitement to it. Meanwhile, Postlewaite was not showing his age, engaging in some music-teasing fun with his beaten assemblés and a time-freezing arabesque balance, his plié still juicy as a teenager’s.
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