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 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 and accompanied by Bottom’s comedic nibbling out of Titania’s hand seemed mismatched, landing somewhere between funny and ironic.
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.
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