Touch Grass
City living is not for all of us. For many there is nothing more appealing than that stillness of nature, that sense of suspended time.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
San Francisco Ballet delivers one of the most intense home seasons in the dance world, a scheduling crucible that artistic director Tamara Rojo, in her four years of leadership, has tried to change without success. Because the company shares the magnificent War Memorial Opera House with the San Francisco Opera, and the singers occupy the theater all summer and fall, the Ballet can only use the stage from December through May. So, while most troupes prepare a spring season and perform it, then move on to prepare a fall season and perform it, San Francisco Ballet dancers spend August through November creating and rehearsing ballets for all six programs all at once. Come December, they blast through a month of “Nutcrackers,” then launch themselves into everything from Petipa classics to wildly un-balletic contemporary works with less than two weeks between each program to fine-tune roles they learned back in October. In this recent season’s most extreme turn-around, the dancers whiplashed from an all-Forsythe program to “Don Quixote” in just eleven days.
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City living is not for all of us. For many there is nothing more appealing than that stillness of nature, that sense of suspended time.
Continue Reading“Flower and Decoy” is stark, darkly poetic dance theater. Combining traditional Japanese aesthetics, supernatural horror and street dance, Tatsuya Hasegawa leads his all-male dance troupe, Dazzle, through an intricate, abstract contemplation of myth and mortality.
Continue Reading“Don Quixote” is a funny ballet—and I mean funny both as in odd and as in hilarious. This season, the American Ballet Theatre presented its fourth staging of this comedic classic, by artistic director Susan Jaffe and regisseur Susan Jones.
Continue ReadingEntering the theater at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, one hears birds chirping and the blowing of the wind. Haze swirls from the open stage revealing only the faint outline of a set built to resemble the windswept, sandstone rock formations of Wadi AlFann (Valley of the Arts) in the ancient oasis of AlUla in the Saudi Arabian desert.
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