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Golden Hour

The close-knit ballet scene in San Diego was dealt a blow when California Ballet, the company Maxine Mahon founded in 1968, folded in 2020. Insiders tell me the pandemic wasn’t entirely to blame, but since then, Golden State Ballet, still wet behind the ears, has risen in its place. Led by founding artistic director Raul Salamanca, Golden State is primarily a mixed repertoire company.

Performance

Golden State Ballet: “The Four Seasons” by Houston Thomas / “A Midsummer Night's Dream” by Raul Salamanca

Place

Balboa Theatre, San Diego, California, June 7, 2026

Words

Robert Steven Mack

Samantha Schmidt and Timothy Ruelas in Houston Thomas’s “The Four Seasons.” Photograph by Sam Zauscher, courtesy of Golden State Ballet

Salamanca made news this past April, when, in response to the proposed arts funding cuts in San Diego, Salamanca appeared before city council to protest, as cameras rolled. Like much of San Diego’s dance scene, Golden State has recently weathered its share of financial troubles, despite which the company works to build a roster of new dancers and closed its 2025-2026 season in early June with Salamanca’s "A Midsummer Night’s Dream” along with “The Four Seasons,” a world premiere by Houston Thomas, at the historic Balboa Theatre in the Gaslamp district of downtown San Diego. 

Thomas is a former soloist with the Dresden Semperopera and his name is beginning to pop up as an emerging choreographer after having won the 2025 Princess Grace Award. On the June 7th performance, Thomas’ abstract construction of Vivaldi’s “The Four Season” seemingly justifies the hype. Composed of six movements, Thomas’ exercise in contemporary ballet vocabulary was kinetically architectural in its structure and musicality. Dancers moved in and out of the onstage tableaux with kaleidoscopic impressions by young dancers capable of both line and movement. This was a deconstructed baroque offering—dancers wore only tights and leotards complemented by pastel lighting. The falling snow projections during the Winter section, however, seemed a tad on the nose, given the broader abstract nature of the work. 

The principals of the first two movements, Savannah Colby and Preston Swovelin, proved capable of multi-dimensional attack. The third movement, the last of “La Primavera,” contained a pas de deux by Corah Abbott and Daniel Kubr. Abbott is a tall, leggy recent graduate of the Juilliard School and who moves in and out of hyper-mobile extensions and fluid torso movements. Golden State understands the necessity of spotlighting emerging talent. Apart from these artists however, some of the other dancers cast as principals appeared lacking in the same confidence, their eyes more focused on the floor rather than projecting outward into the theatre. This was especially true in the second part of the evening. 

Emiliano Dael as Puck in Raul Salamanca’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Photograph by Sam Zauscher, courtesy of Golden State Ballet

Emiliano Dael as Puck in Raul Salamanca’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Photograph by Sam Zauscher, courtesy of Golden State Ballet

After the very promising first piece, “A Midsummer Night's Dream,” Salamanca’s choreography proved relatively mundane. While the costumes and sets from Ballet West were quite lovely in conveying a setting for the woodland exploits, they took up precious inches on the already small stage.  

While the well-named Harrison Pickering and Sophia Dimmick make a good Demetrius and Helena, other leads seem out of their depth dramatically. Puck, danced on June 7 by Emiliano Dale, struck nice lines, but needed to mine deeper the impish knavery the character requires. Oberon, danced by Reece Taylor, was barely given any dancing, not even a pas de deux with Hayley Maldin as Titania. The music for the reunion pas de deux between Titania and Oberon in Ashton’s “The Dream” is here the pas de deux between Bottom and Titania. The romantic sweeps in the music, accompanied by Bottom’s comedic nibbling out of Titania’s hand, seemed mismatched, landing somewhere between funny and ironic, but achieving neither.

Here and in much of the ballet, Salamanca leans heavily on pantomime, most successfully in the screwball scenes involving the couples. He is a very charismatic spokesman for his company, but when it comes to choreography, he will want to continue to look to the Houston Thomas’s of the world . . . or simply remount Ashton. 

Nonetheless, despite the relative youth of the dancers, Golden State Ballet has the momentum to grow. Walking into the delightfully historic Spanish revival Balboa Theatre, I was greeted by friendly volunteers and handed a well-produced physical program to peruse. In an industry where basic courtesy and professionalism is unfortunately a rarity at small companies, Salamanca clearly wants to cross his t’s and dot his i’s. 

Robert Steven Mack


Robert Steven Mack has danced with Indianapolis Ballet and City Ballet of San Diego and is an award-winning filmmaker. His writing has appeared in The New Criterion, Law and Liberty, American Purpose, and Arts Fuse. Robert received his Master of Public Affairs from Indiana University, Bloomington, from which he also holds a BA in History and a BS in Ballet Performance from the Jacobs School of Music.

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