Lord of the Dance
The Spring is Blooming festival, by Dance Reflections by Van Cleef & Arpels, now in its fifth year, has become a highlight of the spring dance circuit.
Continua a leggere
World-class review of ballet and dance.
The legacy of George Balanchine will be forever entwined with the enduring fiefdoms he established, the School of American Ballet and the New York City Ballet. Yet, as the dance critic and historian Elizabeth Kendall reminds us in Balanchine Finds his America: A Tale of Love Lost and Ballet Reborn, Balanchine, the man, is hardly synonymous with the New York City Ballet. Kendall previously wrote a book about Balanchine’s early years in Imperial Russia and how conditions during the Bolshevik Revolution shaped his life, work, and sexuality. In her follow-up, Balanchine Finds his America, Kendall shines light on Balanchine as a young man, just off the boat from Europe, as he roams from fledgling ballet companies to Broadway and Hollywood and back and on his protracted romantic entanglement with the ballerina-turned-Hollywood starlet Vera Zorina.
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The Spring is Blooming festival, by Dance Reflections by Van Cleef & Arpels, now in its fifth year, has become a highlight of the spring dance circuit.
Continua a leggereIf there’s anything Shu Kinouchi can’t do—dance-wise, that is—nobody’s told him yet. Indeed, this endlessly fascinating artist who was with Houston Ballet and Tulsa Ballet before joining L.A. Dance Project in 2020, again proved a compelling presence in the first of four solo performances seen at LADP’s black box space last weekend.
Continua a leggereIt’s been 25 years since William Trevitt and Michael Nunn swapped the Royal Ballet for the contemporary scene, building an imaginative portfolio across the stage and screen in step with choreographers like Russell Maliphant, William Forsythe and Christopher Wheeldon.
Continua a leggereDance on film is undoubtedly an integral element of the dance ecosystem, legendary works like Trisha Brown’s Watermotor or Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker’s Fase still capture the consciousness of contemporary dance fanatics and arty Instagram pages.
Continua a leggere
This is an interesting review of what sounds like an interesting book; however, I am forced to comment on part of the description of “The Four Temperaments.” We all see ballet in our own way, of course. That ballet is one of my favorites and I would guess, without exaggeration, that I have probably seen it at least 50–and perhaps more–times.
I have never seen "squads of women making swastikas with their arms, figures as if in wartime being shot and collapsing, armies advancing, planes revving up, helicopter blades turning, an atomic bomb cloud billowing, a new world being born in the tantrums of Choleric.”