Writing the Book on Buddy Bradley
Near the end of her illuminating book on choreographer Buddy Bradley, Maureen Footer discusses Bradley’s work on Cecil Landau’s revue “Sauce Tartare.”
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
Programming, like staging and choreography, is an art, and Ángel Corella surpassed himself with all three in this early spring show featuring all new works. Since its inception in the early ’60s Philadelphia Ballet (then Pennsylvania Ballet) has been a Balanchine-influenced company. The costuming of all three works on this program reminded me of Mr. B’s black and white ballets, directing the eye to focus on the movement rather than the costumes or set design. Corella fashioned this program to highlight his own choreography, the world premiere of his ballet to Ravel’s Boléro. Subtly, like Ravel’s score, he built the entire program from slow and airy, to mid-tempo to its subito crescendo.
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Near the end of her illuminating book on choreographer Buddy Bradley, Maureen Footer discusses Bradley’s work on Cecil Landau’s revue “Sauce Tartare.”
Continue ReadingThe Philadelphia Ballet just premiered its current choreographer-in-residence, Juliano Nunes’s “Romeo and Juliet.”
Continue ReadingOne of San Francisco Ballet’s greatest assets is its home venue, the Beaux-Arts style War Memorial Opera House, with four rings of seating that require performers to project their energies practically to the exosphere.
Continue ReadingMisery, grief, sorrow. However you want to cut it or label it, the depths of emotion are too irresistible a thing for artists to not attempt to emulate or articulate.
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