Moving Stories
The first moments of Risa show the petite Risa Steinberg seated at a sleek desktop in her New York apartment.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
There is probably no more beloved ballet, by audiences and dancers alike, than “Romeo and Juliet.” The tale, which Shakespeare borrowed from a sixteenth-century novella by the prolific storyteller Matteo Bandello, contains so many of the elements people love in ballet: a desperate love story, several gushing pas de deux for the young protagonists, a headstrong heroine, a colorful setting (Renaissance Verona). And, in Prokofiev’s 1935 score, a musical backdrop of cinematic sweep, with swelling melodies that beg for voluptuous, windswept dancing.
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The first moments of Risa show the petite Risa Steinberg seated at a sleek desktop in her New York apartment.
PlusThe ballet community in Los Angeles, quite large and scattered, is fond of opining that they live in a “tough town for ballet.”
PlusDance artists and scholars have long asked the same question: how do we document an art form that, by nature, exists in one moment and is gone the next?
PlusIn a week of humanitarian crisis, of bodies mobilised and menaced, what a privilege it’s been to take refuge in art that radiates integrity, conviction and splendour.
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