Something Old, Something New
Doug Varone and Dancers celebrated its 40th anniversary at the Joyce this final week of May with a time-honored formula—“something old and something new.”
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
The ballet community in Los Angeles, quite large and scattered, is fond of opining that they live in a “tough town for ballet.” Indeed, Los Angeles is one of the few major American cities without a correspondingly prestigious ballet company, a cultural graveyard where companies have risen and fallen over the decades. LA’s most prominent performing arts venue, the Music Center’s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, with excellent dimensions for dance, continues to host guest companies from around the world, but hasn’t bothered to berth a resident ballet company. Yet, Los Angeles Ballet, founded in 2006 by Thordal Christensen and Colleen Neary, continues to rotate through the theatres of La La Land.
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Doug Varone and Dancers celebrated its 40th anniversary at the Joyce this final week of May with a time-honored formula—“something old and something new.”
Continue ReadingThe world premiere of Remi Wörtmeyer's "La Bohème" marked a seminal moment in the history of BalletMet. The two-act production was unlike any that the 48-year-old Columbus, Ohio-based company has ever staged and showed a marked ascent in its artistic merit.
Continue ReadingIn rehearsal, Dionne Figgins is exacting. She has an eagle eye as she runs choreography in short sections, making sure each detail is accounted for.
FREE ARTICLEWhere do you go when you’re at the theatre? Are you looking for escape or confrontation? Do you want to weep for the world or tap your toe? In their latest tour to London for A Festival of Korean Dance, Korea National Contemporary Dance Company straddles somewhere in the middle.
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