A Dance for All
Company Grande, a new dance theater project from the Saitama Arts Foundation triumphed in their recent production, “The Rite of Spring.”
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
George Balanchine famously said, “ballet is woman.” But unusually, in “Kammermusik No. 2,” he featured an all-male corps de ballet. I can think of one other men-only Balanchine dance, and it happens to be running the same week this winter season: “Prodigal Son.” But the corps of brutish, heathen goons in “Prodigal” are caricatures. They don’t get the same range of challenging, filigreed steps that the “Kammer” men do—there’s a reason the City Ballet dancers affectionately refer to the latter ballet as “boy Barocco.” Yet, shockingly, “Kammer” does utilize a lot of the goon steps. More than most of Balanchine’s ballets, “Kammer” plays with ideas of gender. It was fascinating to contemplate this alongside an all-female Jerome Robbins’s rarity, “Antique Epigraphs,” which returned to the rep with very strong casting. Rounding out the Master Works I program were two more Balanchine dances that were essentially the inverse: the all-corps “Le Tombeau de Couperin” and the soloist-heavy “Raymonda Variations.”
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Company Grande, a new dance theater project from the Saitama Arts Foundation triumphed in their recent production, “The Rite of Spring.”
Continue ReadingIn the second week of February, an ensemble of young and remarkably accomplished dancers presented a lovely and generously conceived programme just beyond the Paris city limits, at the Théâtre des Sablons in Neuilly-sur-Seine, as part of a tour spanning not only several French cities but also Spain, Germany, Switzerland and Malaysia. The evening unfolded as a carefully balanced succession of styles, allowing the dancers to reveal both technical assurance and interpretative maturity. Overall, the cohesion of the ensemble and the clarity of their stage presence matched those of an established professional company. Yet this was not, strictly speaking, the...
Continue ReadingWith their inimitable blend of contemporary movement and the no-holds barred athleticism of hip-hop and the meticulousness of martial arts, Compagnie Hervé Koubi creates a visual language unlike any other.
Continue ReadingOh to love and be loved, what a beautiful mess it is. Nobody captures the contradictions of passion quite like Pina Bausch, whose “Sweet Mambo” is cast in her signature silly-meets-sincere mould—another treat for us Bausch bods out here, less fetching perhaps if you’re not a fan of her highly mannered house style.
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