Mishima’s Muse
Japan Society’s Yukio Mishima centennial series culminated with “Mishima’s Muse – Noh Theater,” which was actually three programs of traditional noh works that Japanese author Yukio Mishima adapted into modern plays.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
This season opener from English National Ballet gathers four markedly different works to showcase the gamut of the company’s evolving repertoire. Presented in chronological order from the date of choreography, the bill also tells a story of ballet’s own development throughout the twentieth century, from proudly neoclassical to powerfully contemporary, showing the possibilities of revival and renewal. Herein lies the platonic and the carnal, the playful and the profound.
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Japan Society’s Yukio Mishima centennial series culminated with “Mishima’s Muse – Noh Theater,” which was actually three programs of traditional noh works that Japanese author Yukio Mishima adapted into modern plays.
Continue ReadingThroughout the year, our critics attend hundreds of dance performances, whether onsite, outdoors, or on the proscenium stage, around the world.
Continue ReadingOn December 11th, the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater presented two premieres and two dances that had premiered just a week prior.
Continue ReadingThe “Contrastes” evening is one of the Paris Opéra Ballet’s increasingly frequent ventures into non-classical choreographic territory.
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Thank you Sara and Fjord for covering this EMB program. I am S.F. based but iI was in London the week of these performances and caught the Friday night performance at Sadler’s Wells. I so enjoyed the trajectory of the four pieces. I was thrilled to see the Martha Graham and quite taken with the Dawson. (I also saw Marc Bree’s “An Accident/A Life” and the Royal Ballet’s “Like Water For Chocolate.”