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A Rose is a Rose

A dancer’s lineage can tell you a lot. The places they’ve trained, the mentors they’ve had, the repertoire they’ve inscribed into their long-term memory all have an impact on the ways that they move, attack a set of steps, strategize a quick petit allegro or a dreamy adagio. So, too, is this true for choreographers.

Performance

Ballet Rose “Made in Miami” with choreography by Ariel Rose

Place

Florence Gould Theater, New York, NY, June 13, 2026

Words

Rebecca Deczynski

Ballet Rose in “Fontainebleau Fantasia” by Ariel Rose. Photograph by Varner Creative

Ariel Rose, who until last year was a soloist with Miami City Ballet, presented a full evening of his own choreographic works in Manhattan: five pieces which echo his balletic upbringing yet define his own unique style which, at the start of the program, he says is about musicality above all. 

Even before Rose took the stage to welcome the audience, the first piece of the night—an amuse-bouche of sorts—lays out that foundation. “Duo Tasso,” performed by Miami City Ballet dancers Satoki Habuchi and Ethan Rodrigues, is a lighting-fast duet, set to a live cello score by Giovanni Sollima. The two dancers start by marching, exaggeratedly, in their own square formation, before progressing into a layered, staccato passage with sharp dégagés and lively emboîté en tournant. At times they literally dance circles around each other, one of them just a beat behind; there are echoes, here, of Balanchine’s “Kammermusik No. 2.”

Rose, whose training brought him from New York City’s Ballet Academy East, to ABT’s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School, the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School, and the Boston Ballet School, has a strong neoclassical background, especially after spending more than a decade at the Balanchine-oriented Miami City Ballet.

Like Balanchine, Rose has a taste for myth, which is particularly visible in “The Fallen,” with its strong echoes of “Apollo.” Renan Cerdeiro, a former principal at Miami City Ballet, is spellbinding in the lead role, even as the stage alights on his body, bent in an angular repose, on the floor. His agony is visible in small details: clenched fists, forward-pressing wrists.

Three female dancers—Adrienne Carter, Macarena Gimenez, and Taylor Naturkas—join him in time. Dressed in black, they seem to both comfort and haunt as they bourée around him and place his arms over their shoulders in support. Cerdeiro, even in his apparent strife, makes a good partner; most striking are the moments when a dancer, in arabesque, holds his torso from behind, and he steps outward, pulling her forward into a glide. 

Gestures—such as the women holding their arms above their heads, one hand gripping an elbow while the other splays palm-out—gives the work a sense of narrative context and emotional stakes without falling into pantomime. Cerdeiro, placing an invisible crown on his head as he converts from fallen angel to dark prince, is a compelling character as well as an electrifying dancer. It’s clear that what Rose has to offer, in his own style, is a strong sense of emotion.

Adrienne Carter, Macarena Gimenez, and Taylor Naturkas in “The Fallen” by Ariel Rose. Photograph by Varner Creative

Adrienne Carter, Macarena Gimenez, and Taylor Naturkas in “The Fallen” by Ariel Rose. Photograph by Varner Creative

Still, he’s careful not to get boxed into one kind of work. “Glazunov Pas de Deux,” performed by New York City Ballet’s effervescent Mira Nadon and elegant Owen Flacke, offers more truly classical fare, though with plenty of drama, especially when they enter, Nadon held above Flacke’s head, one leg shooting skyward. 

Flacke continually presents the ballerina in sweeping lifts and graceful promenades, but he is not a background character as a courtier. In their solo variations, both dancers are sprightly, with a light jump, and in the final part of the pas de deux, they swim through a waltz. It’s a delicacy of a piece, but with substance as well as style.

“Dyad” offers a decidedly different tone, especially with a dramatic opening image: two male dancers holding Lucy Nevin aloft while a third, on his knees, holds his arms out. The stage is washed in red. It’s hard not to see the religious iconography. 

The men—Lorenzo Dunton, Ethan Rodrigues, and Chase Swatosh—often partner Nevin in pairs, carrying her in a stag jump on their shoulders, or lifting her in a kind of crucifixion. The choreography is far from static; the dancers pump their arms with closed fists, but also shift into breezy footwork and floating jumps in second. Outside of partnering passages, Nevin often does the same steps as the men. 

Rose’s emphasis on musicality is apparent, and not just in the fast-moving or physically demanding moments of the piece. One of the most memorable moments of “Dyad” is its simplest, as one of the dancers seemingly carves the air around Nevin’s silhouette, as the score switches from William Byrd to Johann Sebastian Bach.

Lucy Nevin, Lorenzo Dunton, Ethan Rodrigues, and Chase Swatosh in “Dyad” by Ariel Rose. Photograph by Varner Creative

Lucy Nevin, Lorenzo Dunton, Ethan Rodrigues, and Chase Swatosh in “Dyad” by Ariel Rose. Photograph by Varner Creative

The final piece of the night is dedicated to Rose’s first ballet teacher, the late Francis Patrelle. A six-part 1950s-inspired ensemble piece, “Fontainebleau Fantasia” is all about character, with the dancers dressed like teenagers from Bye Bye Birdie. It has a musical theater feel—the balletic version of a sock hop, with many a kick-ball-change. At times, when one dancer has a solo, the background dancing of the others can feel a touch stilted, but their energy grows through the progression of the piece. Some numbers, like “Norma, la de Guadalajara,” are almost entirely focused on acting, with Macarena Gimenez—the sole female dancer dressed as an adult in a little black dress—struts around the stage, followed by small armies of fans. When Gimenez and Chase Swatosh unite in a passionate a pas de deux to “The World We Knew,” Twyla Tharp’s “Sinatra Suite” comes to mind.  

A standout is “Wild One,” featuring Mayumi Enokibara, Lorenzo Dunton, and Satoki Habuchi—a rock-and-roll style trio packed with pirouette sequences and double tours for all three dancers.

“High School Confidential,” the full ensemble number which closes the show, has the feel of a big musical number, with the dancers jumping in unison and swishing their hips to and fro. Choreographically, it’s not the most difficult or the most complex work of the evening, but it does reflect something important: Rose, and this talented cast of dancers, are having plenty of fun.

Rebecca Deczynski


Rebecca Deczynski is a New York City-based writer and editor publishes the newsletter Mezzanine Society. Her work has appeared in publications including Inc., Domino, NYLON, and InStyle. She graduated from Barnard College cum laude with a degree in English and a minor in dance.

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