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La Scala Theatre’s ballet season featured a programme offering a snapshot of European choreography from 25 years ago. A snapshot, not exhaustive but representative, certainly interesting, although at the same time the Paris Opera was staging an evening with solely new works, including the “hit boy” Marcos Morau among the choreographers. No new creations for La Scala Ballet this season, but it should also be noted that the current director, Frédéric Olivieri, took over mid-season from his predecessor (Manuel Legris).

Performance

La Scala Ballet: “Chroma” by Wayne McGregor / “Dov’è la luna?” by Jean-Christophe Maillot / “Minus 16” by Ohad Naharin

Place

Teatro alla Scala, Milan, Italy, March 18, 2026

Words

Valentina Bonelli

Nicoletta Manni Timofej Andrijashenko in Wayne McGregor's “Chroma.” Photograph by Brescia e Amisano | Teatro alla Scala

While nothing was new for dance goers, all the eight performances, plus a charity one, were sold out, with an audience proved enthusiastic about works that opened their eyes to contemporary dance, engaging them as well in a way that rarely happens in a traditional opera house. 

The director selected three choreographers, partly based on their biographical trajectories: very different choreographers who have certainly left their mark on the style of recent years, in one way or another; it is interesting to understand how. 

“Chroma” has revived the link between La Scala and Wayne McGregor, who the first time appeared here as an almost unknown choreographer and director of Purcell’s opera “Dido and Aeneas.” A revelation, as we well remember, for its sharp style and luminous aesthetic: a novelty in 2006, with ideal performers of that time such as guest Robert Tewsley and La Scala’s principal Sabrina Brazzo. Years later il was the turn of “Woolf Works” and “After Rite/Lore” (both with Alessandra Ferri as guest artist): examples of the choreographer’s evolution as he has changed significantly over time, exploring countless directions, not always maintaining the brilliance of the early works but tireless in his research and collaborations, so much to gain, among other things, the role of resident choreographer at the Royal Ballet and artistic director of Venice Biennale Danza. “Chroma” remains the epitome of his finest hour, when the boundless extension of the dancing body, the plasticity of the arms, the lashing precision of the legs—all within an austere and elegant dynamic—inspired an entire generation. It is upon this vocabulary that the language of most of today’s European choreographers has been built, someone taking it to far more extreme limits. Yet it still works in its original form, as do the sets and costumes—both luminous and yet sharp—driven by Joby Talbot’s original score. Merit for this enduring success also goes to today’s La Scala dancers: Nicoletta Manni and Timofej Andrijashenko, so beautiful, embody the ideal image of McGregor’s dancers, Claudio Coviello and Agnese Di Clemente play his dynamic languor, Mattia Semperboni and Gioacchino Starace his raw sensuality.

Said Ramos Ponce, Gabriele Corrado, and Agnese Di Clemente in “Dov’è la luna?” by Jean-Christophe Maillot. Photograph by Brescia e Amisano | Teatro alla Scala

Said Ramos Ponce, Gabriele Corrado, and Agnese Di Clemente in “Dov’è la luna?” by Jean-Christophe Maillot. Photograph by Brescia e Amisano | Teatro alla Scala

“Dov’è la luna?” (Where is the moon?), the title in Italian, is a now a classic among the abstract works in Jean-Christophe Maillot’s repertoire, created at the beginning of his assignment as a director of the Ballets de Monte-Carlo in 1994. Nothing particularly original, nor by any means a turning point: rather, a well-composed and evocative piece, focused on the physical beauty, the fluid movement and the poetic lyricism of the dancers. Among them, at La Scala, Roberto Bolle stands out, yet humble in a role on a par with the others: paternal in the male duet with the young Domenico Di Cristo, careful in the pas de deux with the soloist Maria Celeste Losa on pointe. She is a dancer with long, contemporary lines, very much resembling Maillot’s muse (and wife) Bernice Coppieters, now a maître de ballet who also restaged this ballet at La Scala. The point was to interpret the symbolic vein of the choreography, modelled on lunar shapes and shadows, and all the dancers succeeded. The choreographer’s statement about his inspiration from a painful family mourning followed by a found female friendship, alongside Scryabin’s music performed live on the piano and the lunar costumes by the fashionable Jérôme Kaplan, contributes to the ballet’s “humanism.” 

La Scala Ballet in “Minus 16” by Ohad Naharin. Photograph by Brescia e Amisano |Teatro alla Scala

La Scala Ballet in “Minus 16” by Ohad Naharin. Photograph by Brescia e Amisano |Teatro alla Scala

With “Minus 16,” Ohad Naharin also made his debut on the stage of La Scala. In a fine interview conducted online by Marinella Guatterini for the theatre’s booklet, the Israeli choreographer (forced to remain in his country due to the ongoing conflict) expressed his agreement for the choice of this title, decided by La Scala’s director. It is certainly not new, already performed by many companies, including junior ensembles, following its 1999 debut with his Batsheva Dance Company, shortly afterwards with the Nederland Dans Theater II. But, as Naharin explained, it is a well-suited work to getting to know any company he works with for the first time. As the choreographic modules, the dancers vary in number: at La Scala they were 22, chosen from the new, most young generation, such as the recent graduate Francesco Della Valle—a name we will be hearing more of—who performed the opening solo while the lights are still on. All the performers were excellent at dancing, singing and acting with the creative energy that Naharin demands from anyone, professional or amateur, who approaches his Gaga method, at La Scala contractually required for at least three weekly lessons and taught by his assistants. Even more enthusiastic was the audience, which here no one would have imagined so eager to be drawn on stage by the dancers to dance alongside them, on tangos music, pop hits or Hebrew songs. Until, at the end, a female of the audience remained dancing alone: at La Scala—it emerged later—also a judge at the Court of Milan and a well-known music critic. And so, the “fourth wall” between stage and audience was unexpectedly broken down, allowing everyone to have fun and perhaps feel moved, just as Naharin aimed.

Valentina Bonelli


Valentina Bonelli is a dance journalist and critic based in Milan, and a longtime contributor to Vogue Italia and Amadeus. She is a correspondent from Italy for international dance magazines such as Dance Europe and Dance Magazine Japan. As a scholar her main interest lies in the XIX century Russian ballet, in its connections with the Italian ballet school. She has translated and edited Marius Petipa’s Memoires (2010) and Diaries (2018) into Italian, and she is currently writing essays and biographies about La Scala ballerinas dancing at Russian Imperial theatres.

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