Tragic Beauty
Where language falls silent, dance speaks. That is the case for balletic interpretations of Shakespeare’s great works—particularly Lar Lubovitch’s three-act “Othello,” choreographed for American Ballet Theatre in 1997.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
The first moments of Risa show the petite Risa Steinberg seated at a sleek desktop in her New York apartment. To her right is an abstract sculpture posed atop a column. Behind, a framed mirror is mounted on the wall. Wearing a crisp white shirt with sleeves rolled to the elbows, Steinberg begins to move, brandishing a shock of brilliant silver hair. She recites the movement instructions as if just learning the sequence. But really, it’s a way to show us, the audience, a little of the dance’s underpinning. “Around the world,” means that she sweeps an arm across the full expanse of the desk. “Circle into oy vey” is head thrown back, torso arched. “Slice, metronome, soothe, soothe.” She flops her hands palm up, palm down, on the desktop, then leans forward until she’s nearly facedown. “Look under your arm as much as possible.” At “leg side, parallel, circle rond de jambe to the back,” she reveals a well-muscled bare leg, beautifully accomplishing the task.
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Where language falls silent, dance speaks. That is the case for balletic interpretations of Shakespeare’s great works—particularly Lar Lubovitch’s three-act “Othello,” choreographed for American Ballet Theatre in 1997.
Continue ReadingLike 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.
Continue ReadingShakespearean purists, leave your expectations at the door. With his rendition of Sergei Prokofiev’s “Romeo and Juliet,” first staged in 2009 to mark the 10th anniversary of K-Ballet Tokyo, Tetsuya Kumakawa plays freely with details from Shakespeare’s tragedy to create a psychological, theatrical study of doomed love.
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