Dancing a Legacy
A celebrated performer, educator and arts leader, Christopher Charles McDaniel, who was born in 1992 in East Harlem, New York, fell in love with ballet at age seven and has never looked back.
Continua a leggere
World-class review of ballet and dance.
At the vertical and horizontal intersection of two white lines on a darkened stage, performer Layla Meadows and her corresponding organic outline appears. For this restaging of “Glow,” a work choreographed by Gideon Obarzanek for the Melbourne Festival in 2006, it is Meadows’s time to be scanned and surveyed in this duet between a dancer and a machine. For the 20th anniversary season of “Glow,” presented as part of the inaugural Australian Dance Biennial during the 2026 Rising festival, she is being joined by original cast member Sara Black and Melissa Pham. Rolled forward, making a snail shell of her back and tail, Meadows scuttles, propelled by her feet, her head and shoulders anchored to the ground.[1] She interrupts the vertical and horizontal lines with her presence, ensuring they cannot meet. Rather, the straight lines have to go around her, they have to bend. The snail, or is she perhaps more of a hermit crab beneath a shell, is disrupting the meeting point.
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A celebrated performer, educator and arts leader, Christopher Charles McDaniel, who was born in 1992 in East Harlem, New York, fell in love with ballet at age seven and has never looked back.
Continua a leggereA nearly 200-year-old story is having a moment. “Eugene Onegin,” the novel in verse by Alexander Pushkin, which published in 1833, has made its way to countless stages in ballet and opera adaptations in the past few months—the most recent being American Ballet Theatre’s production of “Onegin,” the John Cranko ballet, which was originally created for the Stuttgart Ballet in 1965.
Continua a leggereIn early June, the Scottish Ballet came to Koch Theater at Lincoln Center, New York, with “Mary, Queen of Scots” for a run of five performances.
Continua a leggereTwenty years on from its beginnings, Croí Glan, meaning “clear heart” in Irish, has been a leading voice in integrated dance in Ireland.
Continua a leggere
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