Spellbound
Two performers crawl in on hands and knees wearing neon green, hooded coveralls—the lightweight papery kind made for working in a sterile environment—and clusters of balloons pinned to their backs.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
I had the fortune to sit next to two very charming and chatty longtime Smuin fans for the company’s San Francisco run of its fall triple-bill. David and Dan, let’s call them, are in my experience representative of the 16-dancer troupe’s loyal base. They relish connoisseurship of the Bay Area arts in general, and just that week also attended the San Francisco Opera and American Conservatory Theater. For more than a decade they subscribed to front-row dress circle seats at the San Francisco Ballet—“until the board ousted Michael Smuin for that boring new director”—Helgi Tomasson. Under Tomasson, they said, “suddenly all the dancing was perfect, you know? But emotionless.” They were thrilled when Michael Smuin made a comeback with his own San Francisco-based troupe in 1994, and have attended ever since. “We just love the dancers,” they said. “What they do here—it has feeling.”
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Smuin dancers Erin Yarbrough-Powell and Nicole Haskins in Stanton Welch's “Indigo.” Photograph by Chris Hardy
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Two performers crawl in on hands and knees wearing neon green, hooded coveralls—the lightweight papery kind made for working in a sterile environment—and clusters of balloons pinned to their backs.
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