A Balletic Ode to Queer Love
Two years ago Jonathan Watkins, choreographer and former dancer with the Royal Ballet, founded a new venture: Ballet Queer.
PlusWorld-class review of ballet and dance.
I never set out particularly to be a creator of solos,” says Lar Lubovitch. “But after 60 years in the dance world and 120 dances, I will have made a number of solos.” On Sunday, September 7, Works & Process hosts Lar Lubovitch: Art of the Solo at Guggenheim New York, where the choreographer will show five examples that span his career: the earliest, “Scriabin Dances” made in 1972 for Martine van Hamel of American Ballet Theatre to music of Alexander Scriabin; the most recent, “Desire” made last year for Adrian Danchig-Waring of New York City Ballet as a video project. Danchig-Waring will perform on Sunday, as will Jacquelin Harris, Ashley Green, and Jesse Obremski of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, and Craig D. Black Jr. of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago.
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Two years ago Jonathan Watkins, choreographer and former dancer with the Royal Ballet, founded a new venture: Ballet Queer.
PlusIt was a picture-perfect evening at the Hollywood Bowl for music and dance under the stars. The last concert of the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s classical series, it was to have featured conductor and former Dudamel Fellow, Jonathan Heyward, but the Franco-British maestra, Stephanie Childress, led the ensemble instead.
PlusThe lobby of the Ace Hotel Boerum Hill is an excellent place to work, particularly in the room with the long table and library lamps.
PlusThe life of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky does not lack melodramatic potential. The composer of ballet classics such as “Swan Lake,” “Sleeping Beauty” and “The Nutcracker” was celebrated by Imperial Russia for his compositions yet simultaneously forced to hide his homosexuality.
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