Boundless Beauty
As I watch one after another pastel tutu clad ballerina bourrée into the arms of a white-tighted danseur, a melody not credited on the program floats through my brain. You know the one.
PlusWorld-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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As I watch one after another pastel tutu clad ballerina bourrée into the arms of a white-tighted danseur, a melody not credited on the program floats through my brain. You know the one.
PlusMisty Copeland’s upcoming retirement from American Ballet Theatre—where she made history as the first Black female principal dancer and subsequently shot to fame in the ballet world and beyond—means many things.
PlusHaneul Jung oscillates between the definition of the Korean word, man-il meaning “ten thousand days” and “what if.”
PlusMoss Te Ururangi Patterson describes his choreographic process having a conversation with other elements. As he describes pushing himself under the waves, and a feeling of meditative, buoyancy as he floated in space, the impression of light beneath the water was paramount.
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