A Danced Rituel
When Frank Gehry was tapped to be the architect of Walt Disney Concert Hall, home to both the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Los Angeles Master Chorale, he envisioned the space to be “a living room for the city.”
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Until American Ballet Theatre’s premiere of Christopher Wheeldon’s “Like Water for Chocolate,” my first thought upon leaving a ballet gala had never before been: “well that was hot.” ABT has found its new Valentine’s Day programming. Debbie Downers “Romeo and Juliet” and “Swan Lake” can take a rest. Spoiler alert: the star-crossed lovers in “Like Water for Chocolate” also perish together in the last scene, but the effect is, well, different. After decades of longing, Tita and Pedro are finally free to consummate their desire, and their love is so profound that at the point of climax they erupt in flames—their bed beautifully engulfed in fiery projections by Luke Halls. Though their earthly bodies are lost to the conflagration, their souls ascend to an astral plane, united for all eternity. Principal dancers Cassandra Trenary and Herman Cornejo, nearly nude, floated up into the clouds in a Kama Sutra-like tangle as the curtain fell. Ahem.
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When Frank Gehry was tapped to be the architect of Walt Disney Concert Hall, home to both the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Los Angeles Master Chorale, he envisioned the space to be “a living room for the city.”
Continue ReadingSan Francisco’s War Memorial Opera House is a grand, gracious theater, so it was a big deal to see the San Francisco Ballet School hold its end-of-year performances in that hall for the first time since at least 1985.
Continue ReadingAt its heart, “Sylvia” is a ballet about the resistance to love—a theme that continues to resonate deeply, as the human spirit often recoils from love, driven by fear, pride, a need for control, or the weight of duties and moral constraints.
Continue ReadingSince the 1970s, the Paris Opera Ballet has cultivated a distinctive tradition of nurturing its own dancers as emerging choreographers.
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