A San Francisco Ballet Season
San Francisco Ballet delivers one of the most intense home seasons in the dance world, a scheduling crucible that artistic director Tamara Rojo, in her four years of leadership, has tried to change without success.
Plus
World-class review of ballet and dance.
Nine hundred years ago in China, a renowned poet-artist named Su Dongpo (1037-1101) lived in Meishan, a city in Sichuan Province. He lived during the Song Dynasty, a prosperous period known for the proliferation of poetry and sophistication in visual arts underpinned by classical Chinese philosophy. Today, everyone in China knows Su Dongpo’s poems—children memorize them in school and sing them as songs. In the poet’s hometown, now a modern day city of about 3 million people, a dance company formed in 2020 called Meishan Song and Dance Theatre. As inheritors of the Dongpo legacy, the company wanted to create a work around their cultural icon, but they had no one equipped for the epic challenge. So they approached the Beijing national arts team at China Oriental Performing Arts Group Co., Ltd., known for their large-scale productions using an artistic paradigm to promote cultural learning and exchange. The Beijing group recommended famed Chinese choreographer and visual artist Shen Wei from their experience working with him on the opening ceremony of the 2008 Olympics held in Beijing. In 2021, they began work on “Dongpo: Life in Poems,” and the production premiered in Shanghai in 2023. With additional support from the American Dance Festival, the show recently premiered in North America at Washington, D.C.’s Kennedy Center and then in New York at Lincoln Center.
Performance
Place
Words
“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”
Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.
Already a paid subscriber? Login
San Francisco Ballet delivers one of the most intense home seasons in the dance world, a scheduling crucible that artistic director Tamara Rojo, in her four years of leadership, has tried to change without success.
PlusCleveland Ballet's new “Cinderella,” choreographed by artistic director Timour Bourtasenkov, was the culmination of the company's steady growth in size, quality, and stature since its founding in 2014.
PlusAt the memorial for Joan Acocella, held at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, in the fall of 2025, I was drawn to the only red chair in the auditorium.
Plus“Hamlet” for many brings about fear. Not for its ghosts or its bloody end, but rather nightmarish memories of English classes where Shakespeare’s longest play was the source of ire for students across the English-speaking world.
Plus
comments