Royal Rivalry
In 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.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
In the forest, it is never silent. Everything is in transmission with something else, be it tree roots to soil, plants to animals and insects, or warning cries that ripple through the forest when predators approach. In the forest Lucy Guerin has summoned, upon first glance, there are blood-sucking vampires and hallucinatory masked ravers, but this surface impression is but a red herring to catch the novice hiker. The forest of Guerin’s “The Forest,” presented at the Union Theatre, as part of the 2026 Rising festival, is under the surface. Deep, deep under. It is akin to burrowing under the earth and seeing the structure of mycelial highways illuminated as messages are relayed at impossible speed. It is like seeing tree rings grow from within the tree herself. Or seeing not just the animal tracks left on the forest floor, but the memory of the animal who created them, step by step. Seeing every quiver of an individual leaf as it falls. And in the layering upon layering, a world is drawn that is rich, varied, loud, entangled, and interdependent. Guerin’s “The Forest” is the influence of microclimates, of energy passing from source to source. Or, at least, that’s how the cluster of ravers read to me. Not people ‘in the landscape’ but the embodiment of how rhizomorphs transport oxygen through moist soil.
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In 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.
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