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Dior at Rome Opera Ballet
REVIEWS | Par Valentina Bonelli

Dior at Rome Opera Ballet

Since Eleonora Abbagnato has been Ballet director at Opera in Rome, glamour as well has entered the theatre. A popular figure in Italy for her features on TV, married to an ex-football player, with her beauty and elegance the former Paris Opera étoile has found a way to attract a new audience to ballet thanks to collaborations with a top fashion brand: Dior. Always a muse for Italian fashion designers, Abbagnato has found in Maria Grazia Chiuri her ideal designer as they share a similar history as Italian women, who both worked very hard to reach their goals, remaining rooted...

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Fall Fling
REVIEWS | Par Faye Arthurs

Fall Fling

It’s late September: the air is crisp, the kids are back at school, and the Fall for Dance festival is ensconced at City Center for two weeks of grab-bag programming at bargain-bin prices. I chose to attend Program 3 of this year’s fest because it featured the live premiere of Jamar Roberts’s “Morani/Mungu (Black Warrior/Black God),” which premiered virtually during the Covid-adapted FFDF of 2020. Arriving 5 months after George Floyd’s death and overtly tackling the struggle to simply exist as a Black person in America, I found this solo incredibly moving at the time. I’ve wanted to see it...

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Welcome Guests
REVIEWS | Par Marina Harss

Welcome Guests

New York has always been a hub for dance from all over the world, but the last few years, because of the pandemic, have created a sense of isolation. We began to forget how exciting visits by far-off companies can be, how they quicken the senses and renew our admiration for a particular artist, or introduce us to something completely new.

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A Kaleidoscope of Wonder
REVIEWS | Par Madelyn Coupe

A Kaleidoscope of Wonder

The term “wayfinder” has two definitions. The first refers to a sign or landmark that helps navigate people to a specific location; a physical marker guiding people home. The second points toward a traveller; someone who is in search of a particular place. Despite being either subject or object, the two definitions share a commonality—there is an inherent and active search going on. People searching for signs, for each other, and for meaning. The audience, too, walked into this performance searching for their own answers, as individual as they may be. And what they found was the kaleidoscopic brilliance that...

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Stories from the Island Children
REVIEWS | Par Claudia Lawson

Stories from the Island Children

In their brand new facility in Sydney’s Walsh Bay, Bangarra Dance Theatre have once again produced an awe-inspiring work, but this time, it might also be their sweetest; their first offering for children: “Waru—Journey of the Small Turtle.”

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Beau Dean Riley Smith, Stories to Tell
TALKING POINTES | Claudia Lawson

Beau Dean Riley Smith, Stories to Tell

Today I’m speaking with Beau Dean Riley Smith. Beau was born on Wiradjuri Country in Dubbo, Western NSW. But as a little kid the family moved to Culburra on the NSW South Coast where Beau spent his childhood surrounded by siblings, love and chaos while growing up at the beach. Beau didn’t learn to dance as a kid, instead he studied drama in high school, before being accepted into the performance program at WAPPA—the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts in Perth.

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Portraits of a Lady
REVIEWS | Par Faye Arthurs

Portraits of a Lady

The New York City Ballet opened its Fall Season with a bill of three Balanchine ballets which premiered in a relative cluster: “Divertimento No. 15” (1956), “Scotch Symphony” (1952) and “La Sonnambula” (1960). The first and last of these were reworkings. “Divert” was an update of “Caracole,” a ballet made in 1952 to the same Mozart score, which Balanchine and the dancers had simply forgotten when they tried to revive it four years later. “La Sonnambula,” titled “Night Shadow” until 1961, was originally created for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo in 1946. When taking the first drafts into consideration,...

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Forged in Dance
REVIEWS | Par Gracia Haby

Forged in Dance

Miles underground, in the Earth’s mantle, Obsidian rock and Wayne McGregor’s “Obsidian Tear” begins. Originally commissioned by the Royal Ballet and Boston Ballet, premiering at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in 2016, it is now time for the volcano to erupt for its Australian premiere season at the State Theatre in Melbourne. Six years deep, all that heat and pressure, it has melted to form magma. Slowly rising from the cracks underground in the Earth’s crust, it collects in a holding chamber, but it can only do so for so long.

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Searching for Mr. B
BOOKSHELF | INTERVIEWS | Par Martha Anne Toll

Searching for Mr. B

Jennifer Homans, The New Yorker’s dance critic, has written a must-read biography, Mr. B: George Balanchine’s 20th Century. While plenty of ink has been spilled about the iconic choreographer, what makes Homans’s work distinct is her ability to get inside his head and capture his spiritual and personal life in graceful, poetic prose. Reading this monumental work felt like a full-bodied experience.

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Twists and Turns
REVIEWS | Par Rachel Howard

Twists and Turns

Smuin is an unusual company. It was founded by former San Francisco Ballet co-director Michael Smuin in 1994, about a decade after San Francisco Ballet’s board declined to name him the company’s next director. For its first fifteen years, the new eponymous troupe mainly danced Smuin’s over-the-top theatrical spectacles, like “Zorro!” and “Carmina Burana.” When Smuin died suddenly in 2007, his longtime muse Celia Fushille became artistic director. She has continued to feed the audience the hammier Smuin spectacles they love, but she has also considerably stretched the repertory with the addition of works by Trey McIntyre, Stanton Welch, and...

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Rhythm is a Dancer
REVIEWS | Par Cecilia Whalen

Rhythm is a Dancer

If you were to watch Leonardo Sandoval dance from just the ankles up, you might suppose he's skating. He travels so effortlessly across the stage, gently twisting and turning as though gliding on a sheet of ice and guided by the wind. But Sandoval's not an ice skater—he's a tap dancer. Guiding him through space is not a chilly winter breeze but an even, complex, syncopated sense of rhythm.

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Harmonic Obsession
REVIEWS | Par Karen Greenspan

Harmonic Obsession

The 85th birthday of Philip Glass was feted to perfection amid the verdant rolling meadows at Kaatsbaan Cultural Park in New York State’s Hudson River Valley. Nature conspired in staging an awe-provoking event with the Catskill Mountains as majestic backdrop, surrounding trees as arcaded entranceway for the performers, and clouds arriving on cue to mute the sun’s intensity.

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