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Brenda Way
INTERVIEWS | By Penelope Ford

The Way Forward

It was my first visit to the Dance Commons, home of ODC/Dance nestled in San Francisco’s Mission District. Brenda Way, artistic director of ODC, looking summery on this Friday morning despite a bandaged ankle (nothing serious, routine dancer injury), met me in the foyer and took me on a tour.

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A Sweet Debut
REVIEWS | By Oksana Khadarina

A Sweet Debut

Two new ballets created by Alexei Ratmansky were unveiled by two major ballet companies in New York this spring season: New York City Ballet premiered “Odessa” during Here/Now Festival at the David H. Koch Theater; and American Ballet Theatre presented “Whipped Cream” at the Metropolitan Opera House. (This was a New York premiere of “Whipped Cream.” The ballet was first performed by ABT in March at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa, California.)

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Gustavo Dudamel
REVIEWS | By Victoria Looseleaf

Starry Night

Celebrating the opening of its 96th season at the iconic Hollywood Bowl, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, under the baton of the esteemed Gustavo Dudamel—his eighth season as the orchestra’s music and artistic director—offered an uneven program of ballet and music, some thrilling, some head-scratching, all begging for more, however.

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Through Tatiana's Eyes
REVIEWS | By Oksana Khadarina

Through Tatiana's Eyes

“Tatiana, dear Tatiana! / I now shed tears with you. / Into a fashionable tyrant’s hands / your fate already you’ve relinquished. / Dear, you shall perish; but before, / in dazzling hope, / you summon obscure bliss, / you learn the sensuousness of life, / you quaff the magic poisons of desire…”

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Let There be Light
INTERVIEWS | By Penelope Ford

Let There be Light

“I am the daughter of two immigrant parents from Venezuela and I was born in the United States. I happen to be very fair, blonde, blue eyes but I just got all the recessive genes in the family, basically,” Sasha De Sola beams.

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In the Music: Julia Rowe
INTERVIEWS | By Penelope Ford

In the Music: Julia Rowe

“I grew up in a rural area of South Central Pennsylvania. The arts aren’t a big thing there but my parents are actually both in the arts. My father plays the oboe in the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra in Pennsylvania.” For Julia Rowe, soloist with San Francisco Ballet, it's all about the music.

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We Shall Sea
REVIEWS | By Victoria Looseleaf

We Shall Sea

Nobody ever accused Heidi Duckler of thinking inside the box. The Los Angeles-based choreographer/director who founded her eponymous troupe 32 years ago and has been dubbed “Queen of Site-Specific Dance,” has set her works all around our sprawling megalopolis. Making use of iconic locations that include the L.A. Police Academy, City Hall and the long-gone Ambassador Hotel (the site of Robert F. Kennedy’s 1968 assassination), to moving in more intimate settings such as laundromats, parking lots and bowling alleys, the gal has guts, grit and gumption to burn.

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Free Skate
REVIEWS | By Penelope Ford

Free Skate

Le Patin Libre (“the Free Skate”) is a group of five high-level ice skaters eschewing the sparkles, and creating something akin to contemporary dance on ice. Their double bill “Vertical Influences” was brought to Toronto as part of this year's Luminato arts festival, directed by Josephine Ridge who discovered the troupe in the south of France. “It was a pinch-me moment,” Ridge writes for Luminato, “Here is young group of surprising, exceptionally talented and entirely original artists.”

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Lines in the Sand: Sarah Hay
INTERVIEWS | By Penelope Ford

Lines in the Sand: Sarah Hay

Sarah Hay, dancer-turned-actor and star of Starz channel 2015 TV drama, “Flesh and Bone,” recently moved to Los Angeles to pursue her acting career.  We took a walk with her on the beach as she talked us through her transition from stage to studio. Photographs by Karolina Kuras, dresses by Louiza Babouryan. 

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De Keersmaeker Rain
REVIEWS | By Sara Veale

Free Spirits Reign

“First and foremost it’s a party.” This is how Belgian choreographer Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker characterises “Rain,” created in 2001 for her troupe Rosas. As far as festivities go, it falls more on the side of relaxed rendezvous than all-night rager, but certainly a feeling of elation defines the work. Over the past 16 years, “Rain” has become a signature feature in the Rosas repertory and part of the wider pantheon of contemporary classics. Crafted not just in sync but in symbiosis with Steve Reich’s minimalist score “Music for 18 Musicians,” it swirls song and dance to form a dreamy...

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Marguerite and Armand
REVIEWS | By Rachel Elderkin

A Sense of Style

The final programme of the Royal Ballet’s Spring/Summer season sees the company perform a mixed bill of work by their founder choreographer, Frederick Ashton. Including two of his narrative works, one comic (“The Dream”) and one tragic (“Marguerite and Armand”), as well as the first piece he created for the Royal Opera House stage (“Symphonic Variations”), it’s a bill that pays homage to this admired choreographer. While there are times where the age of these works feels noticeable, the programme is, nonetheless, an enjoyable close to the season.

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In Frame: Isabella Walsh
INTERVIEWS | By Penelope Ford

In Frame: Isabella Walsh

Of dancing in the premiere of Liam Scarlett's“Frankenstein,” San Francisco Ballet dancer Isabella Walsh notes, “it's kind of a sad ballet, but really interesting. It's like nothing I’ve done before.” Walsh, who joined the company in 2016 as an apprentice and is newly promoted to corps de ballet, is getting used to traversing new ground.

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