Numbers Game
Almost mirroring the geopolitical situation, contemporary dance in the West—already in the USA and soon in Europe—is showing signs of wear and tear, if not decline.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
American Ballet Theatre typically holds court in NYC twice a year. Their Summer Season at the Metropolitan Opera House features classical narrative full-lengths, and the Fall Season at the Koch Theater showcases edgier, short-form works. This year, the troupe added a brief Spring Season at the Koch, bridging the repertory gap in the process. For this inaugural March run, they included some narrative dance, but in newer and abbreviated forms. Lar Lubovitch’s full-length “Othello” is from the turn of the twenty-first century rather than the nineteenth. The “Firebird” is perhaps ballet’s most famous novella. And Petipa’s bulky old “Raymonda” was excerpted. Neoclassical pieces by George Balanchine, Jiří Kylián, and Alexei Ratmansky rounded out the programming. I made it to an excellent triple bill featuring Balanchine’s final work, “Mozartiana,” and two by Ratmansky: the devilishly hard pas de deux “Neo” and the acid-toned “Firebird,” from 2012.
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Almost mirroring the geopolitical situation, contemporary dance in the West—already in the USA and soon in Europe—is showing signs of wear and tear, if not decline.
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