Thursday, May 30, 2013

iTMOi, Akram Khan Company

Loved: Akram Khan, like ,"Guys, just write me a new score for The Rite of Spring."

Loved: The result. Although, the music to the show is unlikely to have an independent life as the Stravinsky's masterpiece, within the show this mix of works of three composers functions perfectly well. Some electronic parts are very bodily, the pitch and the volume are present in the theatre in very physical manner, like in the clubs.

Loved: The crafty characters. Every one of them had their own colour (easy), shape (still not that difficult, although costumes in iTMOi are exceptional) and many, obviously, their own dances.

Not that loved: sometimes it looked that the author does not know what to do with the awesome creatures he built. The deity with horns is absolutely great, but when it enters the stage for the forth time I already knew that hmmm... it will not add anything new. 

Loved: Costumes. An excellent example how elaborated costumes provide more opportunities for a choreographer than challenges for a dancer. 

Loved: The opening dance of the dervish / priest. 
Not that loved: I wanted more of that guy!

Loved: Indo-European core story of a dying-and-rising god. Mythology is out of fashion these days, all the magic you can have is "battle magic" in games and fantasy. iTMOi works with my favourite sort of magic - spiritual. 
Not that loved: the final dance of the princess / heir. Sorry, it was weak.

Totally loved, through and through: the classic Indian dance elements used not as "oriental" tokens, but as powerful expressive vocabulary. 

Overall, when this piece is polished and refined, I would live to go once again. 

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Mariinsky - Scotch Symphony/In the Night/Ballet Imperial

Meanwhile, in London...

If I had a limitless source of money, I would definitely go to see this triple bill again, with Lopatkina in "In the Night". However, David Hallberg in the "Scotch Symphony" seemed more interesting to me, and I did not regret my choice. He was absolutely adorable and a perfect match for the role, displaying nobility and freshness of a true romantic hero.

On the other side, corps de ballet sometimes struggled to keep up with the rather challenging tempo of the piece, which was quite understandable when one kept in mind the novelty of such a style for the Mariinsky company.


I have never seen the ballet works of Jerome Robbins (Rabinovich) before, and was quite amused with his inventiveness. Accompanied by three nocturnes, three couples developed three relationship models: functional, dominating, disfunctional. Matvienkos were sweet and elegant, Victoria Tereshkina poured drama all over, but the truly mesmerising thing on the stage were Kondaurova's hands.

When I watched her in Firebird a couple of nights before, I thought that the wonderful hands / wings were just a part of the role, and anybody who dances the Firebird would be impressive. But in "In The Night" I forgot about everything on the stage apart from the beauty of her hands.


Ballet Imperial was just ballet imperial: triumph of technique over human nature.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Moving in

This blog has been separated from my older one to aggregate entries about performances I visited living in London. Being a bloody migrant, refusing to integrate and learn the language, I visit mostly dance and ballet shows, with only occasional pop-ups to the theatre.

So, here is the exodus pack, index of old entries, from newest to oldest (all in Russian, Google Translate rocks).

Mariinsky - Homage to Fokine
Dave St-Pierre Company - Un peu de tendresse bordel de merde!
ENO - Terry Gilliam - Damnation of Faust
American Ballet Theatre
OperaUpClose - La Boheme, Madame Butterfly
Bloomsbury theatre - Seagull
Bale de Rua
OperaUpClose - Barber of Seville
Bolshoi - Petrushka / Russian seasons / Paquita
Bolshoi - Serenade / Giselle
The Old Vic - T.Stoppard - The Real Thing
Yves Klein - Monotone symphony
Matthew Bourne - Dorian Gray

Not everything was blogged, but the plan is to improve and impose more discipline on contribution to entropy of the universe.