Tag Archive ballet

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A Damn Fine Release From Damfino Arts

I’ve missed the big arts organizations’ live performances in world-class spaces during the pandemic. But I’ve discovered a lot of small, innovative projects that I would have missed in normal years. Many of them might not even have happened during business as usual. One of them is “We’re All in This Together: An (almost) Post-COVID Ballet.” It’s a six-minute ballet video filmed at Vashon Center for the Arts. And it’s really beautiful. 

Image c/o Damfino Arts
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Seattle Dance Collective Gallops Apace

Originally conceived as a summer season company, the pandemic could have meant the end for Seattle Dance Collective. Instead, founders James Yoichi Moore and Noelani Pantastico galloped into a whole new approach. Without the barriers imposed by their usual PNB schedules and the need for performance space or even in-person rehearsals, SDC has increased its output with a series of innovative contemporary ballet films. The latest of these is Gallop Apace, a 10-minute interpretation of a scene from Romeo and Juliet that many dances skip over.

Trevor Tweeten photo c/o SDC

The Cast

Gallop Apace is a production of Seattle Dance Collective. I have seen every production this young company has ever made (most recently Alice – coproduction with PNB), but every single person involved in this particular piece was new to me. I had never even heard of the choreographers, Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber. They are known for using GAGA, a movement language created by Israeli dancer and choreographer Ohad Naharin – another thing that was entirely new to me.  

Trevor Tweeten photo c/o SDC

The primary dancer is Sara Mearns, a principal at New York City Ballet. She was a surprising choice for Juliet. I’ve only seen tiny women in that role, their small bodies highlighting Juliet’s youth and childish innocence. Mearns is an Amazon in the Patricia Barker mold. But she reminded me of my best friend in high school, a nearly six foot tall Swede who was as naïve an ingenue as ever existed, however statuesque the frame that housed her adolescent passions.

The Scene

In the play Romeo and Juliet, the teens pretend to attend morning mass, where they are secretly married. But they can’t be seen together, so they leave the church separately and pretend to have a normal day. Most of the attention goes to Romeo, who has his disastrous run-in with Tybalt. But while Romeo is out committing murder, Juliet is sitting at home, impatiently awaiting the night when she can see Romeo again. That is what this dance captures.

This setting is perfect for a pandemic production. It’s basically a solo in a big airy room. (The nurse bustles about in the background, occasionally peeking in on Juliet from the doorway and requiring Juliet to try to act normal.) Like my husband said, “I want to make art, but only if it’s on my couch and I don’t have to wear pants.”

Gallop Apace

In contemporary choreography, the dancing often starts before the music or continues after it stops. I don’t really like that. So I liked Gallop Apace better once the music started. Spoken word is another trend that only sometimes works for me – in this case it made sense to include lines from the play that helped orient the viewer and place the movement in the context of the story. What struck me first about the choreography was the way incredibly pedestrian movement stretched into more abstract dancing, then collapsed back into naturalism. I think that might be characteristic of the choreographers, but it worked especially well for a piece exploring the jagged inner experience of a young person having very big feelings.

Trevor Tweeten photo c/o SDC

Speaking of big feelings, dancers are far less likely than actors to mistake R&J for a courtly romance, but this is a very thirsty ballet. I was really glad I didn’t watch it with my kids.

Details

GALLOP APACE
Direction & Choreography: Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber
Music: Bachianas Brasileiras No.5 by Heitor Villa-Lobos
Cello: Coleman Itzkoff
Juliet: Sara Mearns
Nurse: Bligh Voth
Voice: Lihi Kornowski
Cinematography: Trevor Tweeten
World Premiere: April 15, 2021

Gallop Apace is available for streaming from April 15-22, 2021 on Vimeo or the SDC web page for $5.

{I received a free press link to this video, but chose to donate $5 to SDC because I want to support more work like this in the future.}

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PNB’s Digital Season Rep 4

Promotional Poster for PNB Rep 4

The fourth program of Pacific Northwest Ballet’s digital season, appropriately titled Rep 4 – launched? opened? posted? Premiered? – on Thursday, but I couldn’t watch it until Friday. It’s only available until Monday. So since time is short, I’ll try to keep my comments short. Rep 4 is a mixed rep program comprising world premieres by two of my favorite choreographers, and archival video of a third piece that PNB performed in 2017. I have mixed feelings about it.

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Romeo et Juliette From PNB at Home

If true love is the one that makes you throw away your own rules, it must hold true for art as well as relationships. Story ballets are supposed to be the easy one to get into, but to be honest, they’ve never really been my thing. And yet, Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Romeo et Juliette is one of my favorite ballets and one of my favorite adaptations of the Bard’s much misunderstood tragedy.

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Classic Dicks in the Canon

One of the most frequent – and most valid – arguments against the contemporary relevance of classical art forms like opera and ballet is their heroine problem. Misogyny is an unfortunate and unavoidable conclusion when the canon is littered with stories whose female characters are subjected to the virgin/whore binary and who usually end up dying for love regardless of in which category they are placed.

Philip Newton Photo c/o Seattle Opera

But then I watched the Met’s stream of Norma – a bel canto exception filled with strong, complicated women. In that opera, Pollione, the male romantic lead, starts out as one of the most obnoxious men in theater, a real dick. But he repents and redeems himself with an act usually reserved for the soprano – dying for love. His character development is so unusual that it got me thinking about men in opera. Women might get short shrift, but men aren’t portrayed very nicely either. Normalizing their bad behavior is another facet of misogyny, but the fact remains – if you believe the classics, men are just dicks.

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