Questo sito non supporta completamente il tuo browser. Ti consigliamo di utilizzare Edge, Chrome, Safari o Firefox.

Simply Red

Do ballet trends bubble up cyclically, or did artistic directors collude to engineer this year’s “Firebird” mania? Suddenly this spring, the flaring-eyed creature immortalized in Stravinsky’s 1910 score is headlining programs at American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, and Dance Theatre of Harlem, almost all at once.

Performance

Pacific Northwest Ballet: “Little Mortal Jump” by Alejandro Cerrudo, “Red Angels” by Ulysses Dove, “Firebird” by Kent Stowell

Place

Digital stream of performance in McCaw Hall, Seattle, captured live on March 13, 2026

Words

Rachel Howard

Kuu Sakuragi and Yuki Takahashi in Alejandro Cerrudo’s “Little Mortal Jump.” Photograph by Angela Sterling.

Determined not to let the trend bypass the West Coast, Pacific Northwest Ballet brought “Firebird” back to Seattle’s McCaw Hall in a loving, company-specific way. For its spring repertory program, PNB revived founding artistic director Kent Stowell’s 1989 production, refurbishing the costumes by Tony-winning designer Theoni V. Aldredge, who designed “Annie” and “A Chorus Line.” Of course, like every “Swan Lake,” every “Firebird” comes with its own accent, if not outright twist. DTH’s boasts a brilliant transposition of setting, from Russia to the Caribbean. Alexei Ratmansky’s version at ABT stands out for its dark psycho-sexual drama. (Be sure to read Faye Arthur’s recent review.) Stowell’s take, meanwhile, lies on the other end of the fairy tale spectrum. 

Disney-safe, PNB’s “Firebird” strikes me as an ideal first ballet for children—it would surely fascinate legions of instant seven-year-old balletomanes if presented as a school matinee. The funny thing, then, is that PNB placed it as the finale of a sophisticated, sexy, and very grown-up triple bill. But the real story of this program, viewed by this California fan thanks to PNB’s ongoing digital offerings, was a triple-treat of standout individual performances, in roles ranging from the deeply human to the otherworldly.

That “deeply human” distinction belongs to Dylan Wald. He was the highlight of the opener, Alejandro Cerrudo’s “Little Mortal Jump,” made for Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in 2012 and first danced by PNB four years later. In signature Cerrudo style, the movement is slinky, crouching, and curiously horizontal, full of turned-in lunges and stop-start partnering, the dancers’ heads reminding me of basketballs dribbled across the stage by elastic spines. “Jump” is also full of signature Cerrudo whimsy, though here it has a nostalgic 1920’s tinge, with the men’s trousers held up by suspenders and the women’s costumes, while sleekly contemporary, cast in black lace. 

A dancer runs through the theater aisles, huge black boxes spin like gates to reveal hidden worlds, and in a central duet, Yuki Takahashi and Kuu Sakuragi suddenly float on Velcro panels, unzipping from outer layers to become earthbound again. But despite all this novelty, and an eclectic soundtrack ranging from Philip Glass to Tom Waits, I find the duets in “Jump” repetitive in their relationship dynamics. That changed utterly when Wald approached Elizabeth Murphy. As he touched her hip and arm with hypnotizing softness, his intensely focused tenderness drew this viewer deep into the mystery of his concern for her. 

Amanda Morgan and Christopher D’Ariano in Ulysses Dove’s “Red Angels.” Photograph by Angela Sterling

Amanda Morgan and Christopher D’Ariano in Ulysses Dove’s “Red Angels.” Photograph by Angela Sterling

As the music shifted to Max Richters’ worried, oscillating note patterns, Wald continued to move with a calm dignity that played fascinatingly against Murphy’s sharper energy. In a subtle way, it was as though she drove their partnering, Wald lifting her as the winds dictated. In slow motion, Murphy reached for a sidelight, even opening her face into a scream, yet somehow Wald’s steadiness commanded all the drama. It’s a performance I’ll be thinking on for weeks to come.

Ulysses Dove’s “Red Angels,” from 1994, is a tightly riveting showcase for just two pairs of couples to an ingenious score for electric violin by Richard Einhorn. (Michael Jinsoo Lim was the rock-star worthy live violin soloist.) Christopher D’Ariano and Amanda Morgan were both superb, Morgan’s face holding a serene quality as her strikingly proportioned limbs shot into vectors and D’Ariano reached and withdrew like a magician directing the burblings of a volcano. But it was Clara Ruf Maldonado, paired with Lucien Postlewaite, who fully possessed the stage as an otherworldly creature—or rather, a demon, her eyes wide, her head sharp as a whip, her spine melting as she jutted her exquisite foot forward and her butt back. In the quartet portion’s series of solos, when Maldonado squatted like the goddess Kali, then drew her hands in front of her face and waggled her fingers, her appendages really did seem to emit sizzling sparks.

Angelica Generosa in Kent Stowell's “Firebird.” Photograph by Angela Sterling

Angelica Generosa in Kent Stowell's “Firebird.” Photograph by Angela Sterling

The Firebird may be a magical forest creature from Russian lore, but as danced by Angelica Generosa, she seemed goddess-like, too. A program note from PNB’s former education director Jeanie Thomas opines that while most versions of “Firebird” weaken as soon as the main character leaves the stage, Stowell’s treatment lets us follow the relationship between the huntsman Ivan and the princess he falls in love with, held hostage by the evil sorcerer Katschei. Between the Ivan/Firebird story and the Ivan/Princess story, Thomas writes, “the balance has been righted.”

Respectfully, as a new viewer of this production, I disagree. This is still the Firebird’s show, even if it’s the relatively dopey Ivan’s story. (Not that Jonathan Batista, portraying Ivan, was dopey in his performance—I appreciated how unabashedly he portrayed the startled hunter’s wide-eyed awe.) Stowell’s choreography gives the scarlet-plumed title star lots of struts and forced arch plies on pointe in fourth, her twitchy direction changes reminiscent of Balanchine’s version. Generosa’s strength and attack were as impressive as her uninhibited acting.

One irony about Aldredge’s newly restored costumes is that the Firebird’s togs aren’t by her—evidently Aldredge’s design was so heavy that it didn’t work well for movement, and so the current powderpuff tutu costume is a replacement made by a longtime PNB costume shop employee. (Did Aldredge’s vision of the Firebird hearken back to the historic photos we have of Tamara Karsavina with the Ballets Russes, I wonder?) The bodysuits for Katschei’s host of monsters, however, are by Aldredge, and they look very much of the era that brought us “Cats.” Thick tails shoot from the dancers’ rear ends, and elaborate monster heads sit atop their hooded faces. Stowell’s choreography keeps the action simple enough that a child could really gawk at them. 

Speaking as someone who fell in love with ballet thanks to kid-friendly choreography to rich Russian music (Prokofiev’s “Peter and the Wolf”), I think PNB should take this “Firebird” to as many school age audiences as possible. It’s the ultimate in future audience recruitment.

Rachel Howard


Rachel Howard is the former lead dance critic of the San Francisco Chronicle. Her dance writing has also appeared in the New York Times, the Hudson Review, Ballet Review, San Francisco Magazine and Dance Magazine.

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

comments

Ricorda che i commenti devono essere approvati prima di essere pubblicati

Featured

Meryl Tankard, Staying Connected
INTERVIEWS | Eoin Fenton

Meryl Tankard, Staying Connected

Meryl Tankard is somewhat of an Aussie dance legend. A choreographer of international renown, her works have been mounted and premiered on prestigious companies ranging from Royal Ballet of Flanders and NDT III in Europe, to the Australian Ballet and Sydney Dance Company in her homeland.

Continua a leggere
Moondance
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

Moondance

The Mark Morris Dance Group, now celebrating its 45th anniversary, visited the Brooklyn Academy of Music for a quick late-March run with two topical dances that were new to New York: one heavy and one light.

Continua a leggere
Simply Red
REVIEWS | Rachel Howard

Simply Red

Do ballet trends bubble up cyclically, or did artistic directors collude to engineer this year’s “Firebird” mania? Suddenly this spring, the flaring-eyed creature immortalized in Stravinsky’s 1910 score is headlining programs at American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, and Dance Theatre of Harlem, almost all at once.

Continua a leggere
Good Subscription Agency