Heartfelt Moments
The Australian Ballet’s “Signature Works,” as a whole, is a compact and varied celebration of dance in the moment.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
The Japan Society continued its Yukio Mishima Centennial Series with a newly commissioned dance work titled “The Seven Bridges (Hashi-zukushi)” based on Yukio Mishima’s short story by that name originally published in 1956. This playful, entertaining dance piece, geared toward family audiences, was a purposeful shift in programming—away from the usual sharp-edged seriousness of Mishima’s themes—to offer another side of his oeuvre. I was delighted to see this clever and current choreographic adaptation by the talented Takuro Suzuki performed by the very capable dancers of CHAiroiPLIN (a play on Charlie Chaplin’s name and the Japanese word chairoi, meaning brown). Suzuki was the perfect choice for realizing this project as he has a singular passion and skill for converting great literature into well-crafted dance works for audiences of all ages, which he does through a performance series called “Dancing Literature.”
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The Australian Ballet’s “Signature Works,” as a whole, is a compact and varied celebration of dance in the moment.
Continue ReadingThe Joffrey Ballet’s lithe and strong dancers take on four historic works in this mixed-bill “American Icons” programme.
Continue ReadingIn Trisha Brown's 1983 “Set and Reset,” dancers float in and out of the wings like bubbles.
Continue ReadingTalk about perfection! While the countdown is on, as Gustavo Dudamel, music director of the world-class Los Angeles Philharmonic, prepares to exit the stage for the New York Philharmonic (a big boohoo), his presence last weekend at Walt Disney Concert Hall further cemented his status as musical genius, tastemaker and catalyst for good.
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