bolshoi_ballet_copellia_may_29_2011
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bolshoi_ballet_copellia_may_29_2011 [2011/05/30 11:30] – tomgee | bolshoi_ballet_copellia_may_29_2011 [2011/05/30 19:29] (current) – tomgee | ||
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===== Copellia ===== | ===== Copellia ===== | ||
- | Wow, one of the best Copellia' | + | Wow, one of the best Copellia' |
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+ | ==== Review by the Royal Ballet ==== | ||
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+ | The Bolshoi' | ||
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+ | Even in stillness, Osipova looks more alive than anyone else on stage. Her wide, challenging eyes, enormous grin and mockingly angled brows are already telling Swanilda' | ||
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+ | Technically, | ||
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+ | This new Coppélia, staged by Sergei Vikharev, has gone all the way back to the Cecchetti-Petipa production of 1894. The Royal Ballet' | ||
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+ | In the first act, for instance, the Mazurka and Czardas are not spontaneous, | ||
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+ | This may well be a more authentic reading of the ballet, but it brings with it a different mode of storytelling and character. Coppélius is presented as a generic boffin, lacking the eccentricity, | ||
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+ | There is no definitive Coppélia, however; every new staging adds a new slant. And the Bolshoi' | ||
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+ | ===== Morning Feast On the Bolshoi (Popcorn, Too) ===== | ||
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+ | //By ALASTAIR MACAULAY// | ||
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+ | On Sunday morning, in a live transmission of the Bolshoi Ballet’s production of the three-act “Coppélia, | ||
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+ | Her brio was unfailing. Quick jumps that usually stay close to the floor became, with her, astoundingly high. The rascally, holy-terror side of her personality has no better vehicle. Though “Coppélia” will be one of the three ballets she dances this June and July at American Ballet Theater, this was much more than just a taste of what’s to come. It also showed us the Bolshoi Ballet itself, too long absent from New York stages, and its first-rate 2009 production of “Coppélia, | ||
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+ | The current series of internationally broadcast live performances of ballet is a bigger deal than most New York | ||
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+ | dancegoers yet realize. This year some of us, but too few, have watched direct transmissions from the Royal Ballet in London, the Paris Opera Ballet and the Bolshoi Ballet in Moscow. Whether you’re interested in dancers or choreography or productions, | ||
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+ | True, on Sunday it was very nearly so — but since this was Ms. Osipova, the Bolshoi and “Coppélia, | ||
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+ | Anyone interested in “Coppélia” would find this production rewarding. This old Russian version, choreographed by Marius Petipa and Enrico Cecchetti, long ago fell into neglect in Russia, while it has become a fixture for many Western companies — the two most textually distinguished productions being New York City Ballet’s from 1974 (largely based, especially its first two acts, by Alexandra Danilova and George Balanchine on their memories of the staging they had known in Russia over 50 years before) and the Royal Ballet’s. | ||
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+ | This Moscow “Coppélia” was reconstructed by Sergei Vikharev — who has supervised a number of Mariinsky revivals in St. Petersburg — and he based it on notation by Nicholas Sergeyev, who staged it in London in the 1930s for the company that is now the Royal Ballet. The designers (Boris Kaminsky, sets; Tatiana Noginova, costumes) have likewise returned to the look of the 1894 staging. | ||
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+ | Since the dance notation of the late 19th and early 20th century was patchy, you sometimes deduce where Mr. Vikharev has supplemented its deficiencies and also where he would have been wise to consult other versions. There is, in particular, film in the New York Public Library of Danilova dancing the Act III pas de deux that shows a far more nuanced understanding of the old steps (especially the solo) than Ms. Osipova’s interpretation. | ||
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+ | Even if you see where it could be improved, though, this “Coppélia” is at once the equal of any in the West. The Bolshoi dancers have taken to this ballet as if to the manner born. It revives old Russian traditions of strongly delivered mime dialogue and European folk dances (here the mazurka and czardas), which they deliver with freshness, panache and verve. Gennadi Yanin plays Dr. Coppélius not as a buffoon but as a flesh-and-blood scientist with warmth and pathos. | ||
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+ | Ms. Osipova and Vyacheslav Lopatin both look enchantingly teenage as Swanilda and Frantz; the element of childish play in the characters becomes real. That’s why you wish Ms. Osipova would learn further dimensions for the Act III bridal pas de deux, which should have more womanly poise than she has yet to discover. One sequence in the Act I all-female variations could be phrased with more legato; another could be given with a much bigger sideways twist of the torso. Otherwise, there’s little to do but rejoice and marvel at what she does in the first two acts, and in her technical delivery of the steps throughout. | ||
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+ | Some of Ms. Osipova’s jumps explode like firecrackers; | ||
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+ | Mr. Lopatin’s bright-eyed and dimpled boyishness is a sweet foil for her. In jumps and turns he has plenty of flair, but what you remember is his impish rightness for the character. I hope we see more of him. | ||
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+ | Perhaps we will. Seven more Bolshoi Ballet broadcasts are scheduled in the next 13 months. The Nov. 20 performance of “Sleeping Beauty” will also show the official reopening of the Bolshoi Theater after its renovation. (In an intermission we were given sneak previews of the work being done by the restorers.) Bravo to the company for letting us see in these broadcasts what we have been missing. |
bolshoi_ballet_copellia_may_29_2011.1306769402.txt.gz · Last modified: 2011/05/30 11:30 by tomgee