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Ballet.co Postings
Bruce
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26-02-09, 11:40 AM (GMT) |
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"Ballet Black at ROH Linbury in London"
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Ballet Black opened at the Linbury last night with their latest quad bill.A review will be along later, but do give us your thoughts please and in the meantime... I'm pleased to say that John Ross, our man with the flashlight, was at the photoshoot. . .
 Cira Robinson and Hugo Cortes in Pendulum
 Chantelle Gotobed and Jade Hale-Christophi in Antonia Franceschi's Kinderszenen
 Sarah Kundi and Jazmon Voss in Will Tuckett's Depouillement
Ballet Black: Quad Bill - Linbury, Feb 2009 Ballet. co Gallery Area all images ©, John Ross If you spot a wrongly named dancer please contact John direct - John Ross Contact Details |
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Lynette H
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02-03-09, 04:58 PM (GMT) |
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5. "RE: Ballet Black at ROH Linbury in London"
In response to message #3
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I was there on Saturday afternoon. The Linbury was packed and Ballet Black got a really passionate reception. Ballet Black certainly deserve to be congratulated on putting together ambitious programmes of new choreography and getting audiences to respond to it so enthustasically. It was very professionaaly presented. I particularly appreciated the lighting design (David Plater). When so many new productions are dismal (in every sense of the word) it was good to see light used to illuminate the structure of the dance as well as let us actually see the dancers. I didn't necessarily take to every one of the four pieces in the programme. The Francheshi work seemed rather fragmented. Liam Scarlett's Hinterland was new to me (though it's a revival for them) and rather more appealing - a strong sense of structure. The audience favourite on the day appeared to be the closing work, Tuckett's Depouillement, a much more classical piece than he has made for some time. Very hard working dancers, particularly the sculptural Hugo Cortes who got the lion's share of the lifts. |
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gamzatti
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02-03-09, 04:48 PM (GMT) |
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4. "RE: Ballet Black at ROH Linbury in London"
In response to message #2
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Indeed AEHandley, it does provoke strong feelings from my side. Sorry, but I just can't help thinking "Here we go again! The usual moaning British style of journalism", instead of being upbeat and positve about the fact the ROH is showing those dancers and their talents, giving them a great chance to be seen! If only those journalist/critics would get out of their chairs and visit the British Vocational Schools, they would stop using the oh- so-tired phrase "Ballet is for white middle-class girls, despite Billy Elliot..." (I have heard this once too often now). Those Schools are full of children from many different backgrounds, mostly not middle-class at all, as well as being White, Asian and Black. Time to applaud and recognise all the efforts being made by the Outreach Programmes, and all the Dance Institutions involved. Yanna Schwartz |
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Bruce
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17-04-09, 09:56 AM (GMT) |
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6. "Ballet Black in Cambridge"
In response to message #0
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After all the hassle I finally got to see the wonderful Ballet Black, thought its taken far to long to type this up... Ballet Black Hinterland, Pendulum, Kinderszenen, Depouillement Cambridge, Arts Theatre 15 March 2009
I think I saw Ballet Black's first two programmes way back in 2002 and 2003 and was very impressed. It was nothing particularly to do with technical prowess or known choreographers or great costumes and lighting etc - all of which were at something of a premium - and everything to do with a glorious infectious attitude to dance, rhythm and moving the audience. Alvin Ailey and Dance Theatre of Harlem can induce similar feelings but it was Cassa Pancho's Ballet Black, with little money and its fresh London roots that gave me reasons to be cheerful for new things in ballet and dance. And good things don't stay hidden, particularly with the gusto of somebody like Pancho behind them, and it's been a pleasure to see the company, now based at the Royal Opera House, develop and spread its wings - to much critical acclaim too. I saw the last date of the company's spring 2009 programme, at the Cambridge Arts Theatre. Like the earlier Opera House Linbury dates it was full - the company is a great draw, were very well received, and I hope they get to tour more extensively. The wonderful news is that the quality of dancers in the company is now much stronger and the commitment to new work is pretty much unparallelled in the UK. Three of this year's pieces were new works by known choreographers and the last piece a new commission of two years ago. The 'old' work opened - Hinterland by Liam Scarlett (the young Royal Ballet choreographer) to a percussive piano score by Shostakovitch that displays all 6 dancers in the company to advantage as it canters along its neo classical way. Martin Lawrence, the ex-Richard Alston dancer, used Steve Reich's Pendulum Music for a 'fight you, love you', duet that intrigues. Strongly down-lit, like much of the evening's lighting, the athletic and hyper-supple Sarah Kundi and Jazmon Voss created a strong impression in work where Lawrence did a good job of fusing his contemporary background with the dancers' ballet roots. Kinderszenen by Antonia Franceschi was again for the whole company but her NYCB background here delivered a tough work that never really sold what it was about, nice though it was to see some touches of humanity creeping in. William Tuckett was the headline choreographer and after years of tending to explore dramatic work in the Royal Opera House his Depouillement (economy of means) represents a welcome return to pure dance. To Ravel's paired-back and yet beefy Sonata for violin and cello the four sections have lots of contrasts for the six dancers while all bound together with a passionate and relentless drive. This and the Lawrence are the big hits of the evening. While all four pieces had good individual merit, some much more, they were all based on tough, if strong, music and a neo-classical approach which in bulk can come over as rather austere. And I'm not sure if any of them is really defining of Ballet Black - I could see them all working well on Chamber companies with good dancers. So while I very much applaud such a bold commissioning policy - yes, yes, yes! - I also look back to the early years and more varied programming, mixing in some crowd pleasers, that also seemed to define the embryonic company better. I hope Ballet Black, from their present much stronger position, fold back in some of that strut and smile and wow, and they could do worse than resurrect Pancho's own The Boogaloo Room to some Count Basie jazz. I was certainly deeply impressed at the time: "The dazzle from the company as they enjoyed themselves was infectious and it somehow underlined the worth of the whole endeavour. There is a different, and unpretentious, bubbly attitude here and it's good." |
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Bruce Marriott
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