Feminine Mystique
Dresses, domestic chores, grief. A community of women more feral than feminine. Five performers wear a changing selection of 40 dresses that serve as both costume and prop.
Continua a leggere
World-class review of ballet and dance.
Beneath a tree also over a century old is where I meet dancer and artist Eileen Kramer, and where the 60-minute loop will end. And it feels fitting, on the heels of her recent death on November 15, 2024, at 110-years-of-age, to start here, at effectively the end of Sue Healey’s screening of On View: Icons. Showing at Dancehouse’s Sylvia Staehli Theatre, from 4pm in the afternoons onwards, as part of the launch of Dance (Lens) Mini the audience is invited to duck into the cool, dark reprieve of the theatre at any time and immerse themselves in a three-channel, cine-portrait of six Australian dance legends.[1] As timing has it, this is where I am to begin. As the familiar strains of the “Blue Danube” waltz lilt “let us dance,” Kramer imparts, “it’s been a long journey, but I don’t care about age, that means nothing to me; I’m more concerned about spirit, and the spirit has no age.”
Performance
Place
Words
Dresses, domestic chores, grief. A community of women more feral than feminine. Five performers wear a changing selection of 40 dresses that serve as both costume and prop.
Continua a leggerePossibly one of Los Angeles’ best kept terpsichorean secrets, artistic director, choreographer, and teacher Josie Walsh has decidedly forged a path unlike any other.
Continua a leggereThe 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.
Continua a leggereOf the many stylish touches in Scottish Ballet’s “Mary, Queen of Scots,” the titular Tudor’s black pointe shoes are my favourite.
Continua a leggere
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