New Wave
What distinguishes a dancer from a choreographer? This is, in the end, an empirical question, one that can only be answered in the theatre.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
On a bright spring afternoon, as Paris basked in long-awaited sunlight and the city frantically moved in the heat, the Opéra Garnier opened a portal to another world—a realm of eternal forms, ethereal beauty, and blue distances: those trembling horizons where the sea dissolves into sky, and the eye reaches toward the infinite. The Paris Opera Ballet School unveiled a triptych of choreographic visions, each an inquiry into the ideal—a glimpse into a distant, immaterial dimension: essential, incorporeal, and immune to time. In this spirit, the afternoon’s programme unfolded: beginning with Antony Tudor’s “Continuo” (1971), an Anglo-American neoclassical gem; flowing into the effervescent brilliance of August Bournonville, with excerpts from “Flower Festival in Genzano” (1858) and “Napoli” (1842); and culminating in the archetypal Greece of Maurice Béjart’s “Seven Greek Dances” (1983). Challenged by formidable technical and interpretative demands, the young dancers responded with lucid precision, musical elegance, and a refined expressivity. These are the hallmarks of the School—a three-hundred-year legacy nurtured with continued care and vision by the former étoile Élisabeth Platel. Only days earlier, at the première of the Spectacle de l’École de Danse on 24th April, she had been awarded the insignia of Commandeur de l’Ordre National du Mérite by Brigitte Lefèvre—a richly deserved honour on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of her directorship.
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What distinguishes a dancer from a choreographer? This is, in the end, an empirical question, one that can only be answered in the theatre.
Continue ReadingThere is something charmingly didactic and intellectually generous about American dance companies touring Europe. At the start of a performance, it is not unusual for a director to step forward and offer a brief introduction, explaining the reasons for the tour and sketching the wider context of the programme. Paris audiences experienced this with the Martha Graham Dance Company last autumn, and now again with Dance Theatre of Harlem. Robert Garland, at the helm of the ensemble, took a moment to anchor the performance in lineage, recalling the company’s origins and its illustrious founder, Arthur Mitchell. As Garland recounted, Mitchell...
Continue ReadingHubbard Street Dance Chicago’s Winter Series takes its audience on a journey back through time.
Continue ReadingWhat are you looking for in a night out in the theatre? Do you seek beauty? The ethereal? That may be the case for most at a ballet, but CCN Ballet de Lorraine’s double bill at the Southbank Centre wants to bring us on a whole trip.
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