The Music Within
Cleveland native Dianne McIntrye received a hometown hero's welcome during her curtain speech prior to her eponymous dance group thrilling the audience in her latest work, “In the Same Tongue.”
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
This year marked the 60th anniversary of the School of American Ballet’s annual Workshop Performances. The programming was unusually democratic this year. Three of the four pieces on the evening of June 7th had no soloists, and Balanchine’s “Raymonda Variations” was adapted to spread the spotlight wealth: a principal solo was reassigned so that one more dancer in the ensemble could have a variation. And though it is already an ensemble effort, the Akhnaten movement of Jerome Robbins’s “Glass Pieces” was similarly rejiggered so that there were no meager run-on roles.
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Cleveland native Dianne McIntrye received a hometown hero's welcome during her curtain speech prior to her eponymous dance group thrilling the audience in her latest work, “In the Same Tongue.”
PlusA man, much to his wife’s chagrin, has a nasty little habit: at night, he turns into a bat and flies out of their marital bed to partake in all kinds of infidelities.
PlusThe Japan Society continued its Yukio Mishima Centennial Series with a newly commissioned dance work titled “The Seven Bridges (Hashi-zukushi)” based on Yukio Mishima’s short story by that name originally published in 1956.
PlusLondon is a changed city this week. The cold front has come, and daylight hours have plummeted. The city is rammed with tourists, buskers, and shoppers.
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