Archive | May, 2012

An Officer and a Gentleman

An Officer and a Gentleman

The Lyric Theatre, Sydney
May 2012

By Kristy Johnson.

A film classic has come to life on stage at the Lyric Theatre, Sydney. The 1982 American drama film, featuring Richard Gere and Debra Winger, tells the story of a U.S. Navy aviation officer candidate who comes into conflict with the Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant who trains him. Working class heroes Zack Mayo and Paula Pokrifki are able to overcome their upbringing and personal obstacles to achieve their dreams.

Definitely one for the ladies, An Officer and a Gentleman features an athletic cast of handsome Navy recruits who perform an intense, physical dance and drill marathon. Bert Labonte as Sergeant Foley plays the role perfectly, taking the men through their paces and breaking off into song with his powerful tenor voice. His rendition of I’ll Be Damned could easily be considered the standout performance of the show.

An Officer an a Gentleman

Amanda Harrison and Ben Mingay in An Officer an a Gentleman. Photos by Brian Geach

Ben Mingay and Amanda Harrison, in the roles of Zack Mayo and Paula Pokrifki, are a perfect fit for a great love story. Amanda is the most consistently strong in the performance, providing stellar vocals. Humour also adds strength to the production, keeping the audience entertained throughout the opening scenes.

Credit must be given to the choreographer. It must have been a challenge to incorporate a dance and drill sequence to match the sergeant’s commands, but it looks effortless.

The set is what you would expect. Audience members are taken through the confines of a Navy compound and a budget motel, however the special effects are outstanding. The diving scene is portrayed superbly with the scene appearing as realistic as possible.

If you’re after a thoroughly entertaining performance, An Officer and a Gentleman is your match.

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Shadows – Twisted Element Dance Company

Shadows – Twisted Element Dance Company

Parade Playhouse, Parade Theatres NSW
May 2012

By Kristy Johnson.

It’s evident that Twisted Element Dance Company is all about creating quirky, unique and innovative dance performances, after viewing their latest creation, Shadows. Founded in 2010, Twisted Element has established itself as a small collective, aiming to create dance works that inspire and encourage creativity.

Shadows followed the abstract journey of a young woman’s love, heartbreak and  the discovery of her shadow self. Often in relationships, parts of ourselves that we don’t like emerge uncontrollably. The performance, created and directed by Angela Hamilton Hill, showcased eleven performers, who brought unique ideas alive through an original style of choreography, incorporating visuals, projection and film. Standout performers were Angela Hamilton Hill, Paul Walker and Claire Stephens.

The choreography allowed these standout performers to showcase their strengths. The movements required great technique, which these dancers were able to demonstrate. In time, I feel the other dancers will be able to improve their skill with guidance and more experience. Certain sequences were a little out of time, however it was still an entertaining work.

As expected for a contemporary style performance, costumes were minimal. However, the use of black ribbon to imitate the shadow self was quite clever. A large proportion of the performance was backed up with visuals and film. Some of the visuals I found to be quite interesting, others I have to admit I didn’t understand.

Overall, I found the performance to be quite entertaining and the time and effort that went into the creation of the show was evident. Angela Hamilton Hill has an innovative style of choreography that I’m sure will leave a lasting impression on those who see her future works.

Photo by Michela Secci.

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Sundowner

Sundowner

Kage Physical Theatre in partnership with Alzheimer’s Australia

Melbourne Arts Centre
May 8-13, 2012

By Tamara Searle.

Sundowner is a dance theatre work that proposes to give a voice to the unspoken subject of Alzheimer’s dementia, and to pay tribute to and reflect the courage required by sufferers and carers. Sundowner uses the language of physical theatre to tell the story of a woman who suffers from Alzheimer’s, and her family. It is tragic, but also funny in its treatment.

A voice over of a young boy invites you to meet his grandmother, a writer, who is a ‘bit different’, in the study of her home. The grandmother, played with extraordinary compassion and nuance by Helen Morse, can’t figure out how to do up her shoes any longer, so she cuts the laces off; she wears her cardigan back to front, lovingly readjusted by her daughter, over and over again; she often can’t remember where she is; and she talks every day to the friend she meets in the mirror. She remains a master at the crosswords, but she tells the same joke again and again. She has Alzheimer’s dementia.

After meeting the grandmother we are drawn into her memory and fantasies where we are introduced to her son (Stuart Christie), daughter (Michelle Heaven), and late Husband (Gerard Van Dyke). We see physicalized the memories of the woman – caring for her children, with her children when they are young, on Rosebud beach, romancing with her husband. The dancers in our protagonist’s memory and fantasy evoke emotional states such as the weight that the woman carries with her when aware of the state she is subsiding into, and the desperate attempts to run away from her inexorable void of forgetting. There is also a chorus of five fine, silver-haired music hall tappers. Perhaps these are angels who have already passed on? They are exquisite and joyful, filled with the pleasure of dance, and gorgeously costumed by Paula Levis. These fantasies and memories are played out in the study of the woman, and through the window of the woman’s home, which is veiled by a curtain and when lit from behind reveals a scene. We also see the role of carer once inhabited by the mother, inverted and assumed by the daughter in a series of physical motifs.

Central to the narrative of Sundowner are the woman’s attempts to re-enter her creative world as a writer. Her frustration builds as each time she realises anew she is no longer capable of the sustained thought required to write. The audience is privy to our protagonist growing more and more agitated over her inability to work. At the height of the woman’s fury and desperation, her daughter enters. The woman no longer recognises her daughter. Seeing her daughter as a threat, she tries to keep her away. The horror of Alzheimer’s is nowhere more manifest than in this scene. Her daughter begins to cry at the decline in her once astute, erudite mother, and ironically the woman doesn’t realise her daughter is crying over her, and begins to comfort her, briefly adopting the role of carer once more. Sundowner achingly achieves its aim of tribute to the courage of carers and sufferers in this moment.

One might imagine that Sundowner is a dark work without redemption, however there is much humour, intelligent dramaturgy, and playful performances which make the complexity of the issue accessible.

Photo by Jeff Busby.

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On The Rocks – Vertical Shadows

On The Rocks – Vertical Shadows

Chapel Off Chapel
May 9 2012

By Paul Ransom.

As one of the new breed of young choreographers currently muscling their way onto the Australian dance landscape, Melbourne based Stephen Agisilaou has the daring and sheer entrepreneurial spirit to make it happen. His company, Vertical Shadows, is electric with youthful energy and their latest showcase is a celebration of their smash-together aesthetic, bringing contemporary, urban, Weimar cabaret and narrative grit into the same space.

At times sexual, often sensual, but always energetic, On The Rocks is brimming with creative vigour.

Having said that, we should concede that heavily narrative works can easily overcook themselves and On The Rocks does have moments where it looks a little overwrought. This tale of a recently separated woman finding herself in an eerily Lynch-like bar struggling with melancholy, moving on, and the temptations of alcohol, could have been more subtle, perhaps more visceral, in my opinion.

Vertical Shadows Dance Company, On The Rocks

Photos by Matthew Denton, MDMedia

However, it could scarcely have been more enthusiastically rendered. Agisilaou has coaxed very committed performances from his cast, most notably from the sole female, Jessica Mortlock. The key trick here is the shrewd avoidance of simple, clichéd male/female juxtaposition and the development of character.

If Rocks itself could do with a little more ‘raw’, then the show’s opening vignette, the gorgeous pas de deux Crimson, is just about spot on. More obviously balletic, this is eight minutes of entrancing ‘avian’ courtship. (And beautifully lit birds they are too).

Overall, Vertical Shadows’ latest production ups the ante for Agisilaou. There is a growing confidence here, a willingness to stretch out and yet remain true to an individual vision. If this guy isn’t already on your dance radar, he should be.

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Onegin – The Australian Ballet

Onegin – The Australian Ballet

Sydney Opera House
May 2012

By Lynne Lancaster.

What a glorious revival of this production by The Australian Ballet! Lavish and spectacular, Onegin showcases some extraordinary choreography and brilliant dancing. The company are in fine form – an excellent way to celebrate their 50th anniversary this year.

Based on the Pushkin novel, Onegin features stunning opulent sets and costumes as designed by Jurgen Rose. The lacy dripping flowers of Act 2 are exquisite and in the ballroom scene of Act 3, the sleeves of the women’s dresses are like flowers too.

Cranko’s demanding choreography is seamless and in some of the pas de deux, in particular, there are some very difficult lifts and throws. There is lots for the corps to perform with ballroom waltzes and character dancing, but this ballet is mainly a vehicle for the  main characters, with a huge dreamy pas de deux for Tatiana and Onegin in Act 1 and a despairing farewell pas de deux as the climax in Act 3 . Add to this Lensky and Olga with their joyous pas de deux in Act 1, the ballroom flirting in Act 2 and a showpiece pas de deux for Tatiana and her husband Prince Gremin in Act 3.

The Australian Ballet

The Australian Ballet's 'Onegin'. Photos by Branco Gaica.

The bright, joyful character dancing of the corps in Act 1 is contrasted with the agonizing sculptural tableaux for Tatiana and Olga in Act 2 when they beg Lensky to call off the duel.

We see Onegin’s change of heart as brilliantly portrayed by Rudy Hawkes.  In Act 1 he is cold, elegant, aloof, a Byronic /Mr Darcy hero in black, who determinedly breaks Tatiana’s heart by tearing up and returning her letter. He then seeks to cause major mischief by flirting with Olga. In Act 1 there is the wonderful ‘mirror’ pas de deux where Tatiana dreams of him as her hero and lover. In Act 3 the tables are turned and Onegin is an explosive whirlwind of passion, kneeling at Tatiana’s feet, begging for  love and understanding, but alas it is too late.

Our leading lady, Tatiana, was marvellously danced by Rachel Rawlings. We see her develop from a shy, bookish teenager who falls foolishly and passionately in love with Onegin in Act 1, to Act 3 where she has blossomed into an elegant society wife with her doting husband Prince Gremin.

As Lensky, Onegin’s friend and Olga’s fiancée, Ty King-Wall is magnificent – at times jaw-dropping. He has a fabulous long stretched line and wonderful soft ballon. He is all charm and youthful exuberance. The young and happy, deliciously in love pas de deux for Lensky and Olga in Act 1 is delightful.

Olga, Tatiana’s sister, is delightfully danced by Lana Jones. She is more light-hearted and frivolous than Tatiana and does not seem to realise the consequences of her flirtation with Onegin until it is too late. She is exquisite in the Act 1 pas de deux especially.

With the combination of a dramatic love story, Tchaikovsky’s glorious music, lavish, sumptuous sets and costumes, and Cranko’s swooping, expressive choreography terrifically danced, Onegin is a tremendous production that has audiences swooning.

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All-star cast unites for Australia’s Legally Blonde The Musical

All-star cast unites for Australia’s Legally Blonde The Musical

By Kristy Johnson.

Already in its third year in London, this smash hit is heading down under to Sydney in October. Having won seven major awards including Best New Musical 2011 at the Olivier Awards, this all singing, all dancing, romantic comedy, doesn’t look like it’s going to slow down anytime soon.

Based on the Hollywood film Legally Blonde starring Reese Witherspoon, college sweetheart and homecoming queen Elle Woods heads for Harvard Law School to try to win back her ex-boyfriend, Warner, after he dumps her for someone more serious.

The all-star Australian cast includes Lucy Durack who plays the lead role of Elle Woods, Rob Mills in the role of Warner, David Harris, Erika Heynatz and Cameron Daddo.

Dance Informa caught up with Lucy and Rob, who starred together in the Australian cast of Wicked, after the launch party in Sydney.

Lucy Durack as 'Elle Woods' in Legally Blonde. Photo (c) Brian Geach.

Lucy Durack

You must be absolutely thrilled to play the lead role of Elle Woods. How excited are you?

Oh extremely excited! It’s a role that’s going to be so much fun to play. I auditioned for nearly a year so it’s one that I’ll be really grateful for and certainly not take for granted.

Can you describe what the auditions were like?

The auditions were in Sydney early last year, and then in November they flew me to London for my final lot of auditions.

The first auditions were like your regular auditions but once I got to London that was pretty nerve-wracking. I knew a lot of money had been put into sending me there and I just hoped I could come up with the goods. So I was very relieved when I did.

Had you always had a keen interest in becoming involved in this particular musical?

When I got cast in Wicked, we saw Legally Blonde overseas and I thought it was such a fun show. I had grown up watching the film, so I really love it. It was certainly one that I had my eye out for. I was hoping that it might come out to Australia and I could audition for it. So I’m very grateful that I got it.

There are great names such as Rob Mills, Erika Heynatz and Cameron Daddo playing roles alongside you. What has it been like so far, to work with them on this new project?

Well I’ve only met Erika once and that was at the launch but she was so nice, and I really think we are going to become great buddies. Rob and I have been friends for a long time so I’m absolutely thrilled. And on top of that we’ve got David Harris – he’s such a great guy. And then we have Cameron Daddo and I’ve never met him before but I’m really looking forward to working with him also.

Rob Mills

Congratulations on landing the role of Warner. Had you watched the film Legally Blonde, prior to auditions?

Yeah, I think in high school. My mum actually watched it a few weeks ago. She asked me if I was the nice boy at the end, or the boy who breaks up with her (laughs).

Can you describe the audition process for us? Had the producers from London come out to Sydney for this?

Yeah, the producers came out here for the auditions, kind of like how the team for Wicked came out here also. That was pretty cool. I got sent in for the role of Emmett, but as soon as I walked in to the auditions they said no. They said you’re not Emmett, you’re Warner. Come back on Friday for Warner. So I came back on Friday for Warner and I got Warner (laughs).

How excited are you to be playing the role of Warner?

I’m really looking forward to it. I’m just happy to get any part in the show!

The cast sounds amazing, and I know you have already worked with Lucy before. Were you excited to work with Lucy again, having worked alongside her in Wicked?

Absolutely. We talked about the shows that were coming up during Wicked. I knew she was very keen to play the role of Elle Woods and I have to give great props to her. She’s very inspirational and a tremendous role model. If you want something, then you have to work hard for it. She got two of the biggest roles in musical theatre in Australia in the last four years, which is pretty amazing. She comes from a good family, a good upbringing. I’m really looking forward to working with her again. She’s extremely professional. She works really hard at working on scenes, making sure that everything is always getting better. She’s never one to throw it in, so to speak. She leads by example and is a great inspiration for everyone.

With the show starting in October, when do rehearsals begin for you?

Around late July. I’m really looking forward to it.

The international award-winning hit LEGALLY BLONDE THE MUSICAL is premiering at Sydney Lyric Theatre, The Star on October 4, 2012. For more information, visit LegallyBlonde.com.au

Top photo: Rob Mills and Lucy Durack in Legally Blonde. Photo (c) Brian Geach

Published by Dance Informa dance magazine – everything dance in Australiadance news, dance auditions & dance events.

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New Cities & More Prizes for Showcase Championships

New Cities & More Prizes for Showcase Championships

Showcase National Dance Championships will increase its national tour this season to include up to 18 Regionals. With a massive prize pool of over $85,000 up for grabs this year, the search is on for the next generation of the nation’s TOP dance studios. Who will be it be?

They have reached out once again and invited more dance studios this year to give them the chance to win the title of “Australia’s next TOP Dance Studio”. Apart from the fantastic cash prize of $5,000 to the TOP winning group it also gives the studio national recognition for its outstanding efforts.

The Gold Coast National Finals, held annually at Jupiter’s Casino, have always offered many opportunities to dance schools, including the ever popular Summer Dance Workshops held during the event and the Battle of the Star Show held on the last day, which has the best of the best dance schools in the nation compete for the overall titles.

Jupiter’s Showroom has just undergone a 20 million dollar upgrade and the dancers at Nationals this year will be having the opportunity to perform in the best and newest performance venue in Australia.

Showcase has always been the leader in offering massive prizes and this past year was no exception. There were not only the four Dancer of the Year trips to the USA and Canada awarded, but there were also trips presented to dance teachers which included an all expenses shopping trip to Bangkok. Three dance teachers were also awarded the pinnacle prize to attend the US Federation of Dance Competitions Gala show in Cancun Mexico.

Peter Oxford, the National Director of Showcase, has his sights on expanding the many opportunities for Dancers all over Australia by adding competitions in Darwin, the Sunshine Coast, Fraser Coast and Newcastle this season, in addition to the ever popular cities such as Sydney, Canberra, Perth, Melbourne, Hobart, Brisbane, Auckland and Christchurch.

Dance studios can enter solos, duo, trios and groups, in many forms of dance including jazz, lyrical, contemporary, tap, ballet and hip hop.

Showcase attracts over 7,500 acts in any one season! There’s some amazing talent out there and you can be part of it!

Showcase looks forward to seeing some new studios at one of their 2012 regional cities as they travel around Australia and New Zealand.

Remember…Everyone’s a STAR at Showcase!

How to Enter
Dance schools and soloists wanting to be part of the Showcase Nationals must qualify with 85 points and over at one of the regional championships that are held in select cities across Australia and New Zealand.

Want more info?
The website
www.showcasedance.com has complete information on the event, including entry forms and rules. The large cities do tend to fill before the closing date, but dancers are allowed to travel out of their own area to qualify in another city. National Finals dates are scheduled for January 14th -21st 2013 at Jupiter’s Casino.

Become a fan of Showcase on Facebook. www.facebook.com/showcasedance and check out our website for past competition results, videos of the Nationals and more.

Contact
Call (02) 9662-1598 or email
dance@showcasedance.com with any questions

 

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Australian Tap Dance Festival

July 9 -15 2012 at The Space Dance & Arts Centre, Melbourne.

For all the info visit www.australiantapdancefestival.com.au

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English National Ballet’s Exclusive Aussie Season

English National Ballet’s Exclusive Aussie Season

The world-renowned English National Ballet will tour to Australia for an exclusive season in Sydney at the new, The Concourse, Chatswood, from Friday June 8 to Sunday June 17, 2012.

Tickets are already selling fast as dancers and lovers of dance gather to see the company which hasn’t toured to Australia since 2001.

Under the leadership of Artistic Director, Wayne Eagling, this highly respected European company will bring its top soloists and principal artists, presenting a programme suited to young and old in the intimate 500 seat theatre at The Concourse.

The English National Ballet was established in the 1950s and has since emerged as one of the foremost touring companies in Europe. This internationally acclaimed classical ballet company tours both nationally and worldwide. Founded by two British ballet greats Alicia Markova and Anton Dolin, the English National Ballet grew out of a series of gala performances. Today, with 67 dancers from 20 different countries, they provide a group of dancers who enrich each repertoire they perform. The original 1950s aspiration for the Company, to take popular ballet to the widest geographical audience at a price they can afford, remains as valid today as when first expressed by the Company’s founders.

English National Ballet's Anais Chalendard and Vadim Muntagirov in Suite en Blanc

Recently the subject of the popular BBC reality series The Agony and the Ecstasy the English National Ballet is enjoying an international recognition unheard of in classical dance circles. And it is not only the public who are supporters of the English National Ballet. The prestigious company has enjoyed the patronage of Diana, Princess of Wales and currently HRH Prince Andrew, The Duke of York.

The Australian programme, accompanied by a live orchestra, will open with George Balanchine’s neo-classical masterpiece Apollo and close with Serge Lifar’s spectacular bravura piece, Suite en blanc. These two great classics will frame a selection of favourite pas de deux from Manon, Don Quixote or Black Swan, and Trois Gnossiennes, featuring the company’s stars. Set to an Erik Satie solo piano piece, contemporary choreographer Hans Van Manen’s Trois Gnossiennes, will showcase the great finesse, control and superb classical technique of the English National Ballet dancers.

Suite en blanc was described by its choreographer, Serge Lifar, as “a real parade of stars”. A plotless display of classical technique, with strict emphasis on the perfection of line, the ballet was created in 1943 to showcase the virtuosity and elegance of the Paris Opera Ballet. With its white costumes against an inky black setting, the ballet remains a stunning showcase of dance, as glittering and exhilarating as its first performance nearly seven decades ago.

Don’t miss this unique opportunity to see the English National Ballet. Tickets are now on sale at www.theconcourse.com.au/enb

Top photo: Dancer Anais Chalendard of English National Ballet in Apollo. Photo by Laurent Liotardo.

Published by Dance Informa dance magazine – everything dance in Australiadance auditions, dance news, dance events and resources for dance teachers.

Posted in Dance News Australia, Top Stories0 Comments

Dancing to Live Music

Dancing to Live Music

By Laura Di Orio.

George Balanchine said, “See the music, hear the dance.” The choreographer, like many dancers, found inspiration for movement within music. To be able to move one’s body to music can be magical enough. And to be able to dance to live music is, for many dancers, a dream.

Here, Dance Informa speaks with professional dancers who enjoy the privilege of performing to live music. The Australian Ballet’s Brooke Lockett, Miami City Ballet’s Rebecca King and Joffrey Ballet’s Fabrice Calmels share their expertise and the joy of making the music come alive.

Do you prefer dancing to live or pre-recorded music?

Brooke Lockett, dancer with The Australian Ballet, backstage during a performance of Sugar Plum. Photo courtesy of Brooke Lockett

Brooke Lockett, Coryphee with The Australian Ballet
The positive to recorded music is you get an inner rhythm and timing, and the work becomes very consistent, and in some cases, almost predictable. You can never assume anything when it’s to live music. The tempo can be faster or it can slow down parts you prefer faster, but all issues aside, nothing gives me goose bumps more than the sound of a sublime live orchestra playing Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake. The curtain goes up and the music floods onto the stage from the pit. It goes through your bones and brings everything you have been rehearsing to life.

Fabrice Calmels, Principal Artist at the Joffrey Ballet
For me, it is preferable to dance to live music, but there are actually times when I find pre-recorded scores a safe alternative, like in a very difficult performance on tour.

For you, what is the biggest challenge of dancing to live music?

Rebecca King, Corps de Ballet Dancer with Miami City Ballet
The music’s tempo can be a challenge. Even though the conductor knows exactly what the dancers need, the speed can still vary from performance to performance. It is our job to be completely in tune with the orchestra because you never know what is going to happen. Because the musicians, like us, are susceptible to human error, sometimes the music can sound different, which can catch the dancers off guard. This is the beauty of live theater – you never know what you are going to get.

For you, what is the greatest reward of dancing to live music?

Brooke Lockett
When a ballet is extremely difficult or you are quite nervous about a role, music is an incredibly powerful escape that has the ability to take you away to another place on stage. Without it, I don’t know that my profession would be as powerful or as rewarding.

Fabrice Calmels
Here’s what is going on with live music: You have a full orchestra with different instruments working together as a team, following a score and led by a conductor, who, in turn, is watching and observing every move from us, the dancers. With the conductor’s expertise, he is able to match the choreography with the music and create the flow. For me, it is communication at its best.

How does dancing to live music compare to dancing to recorded music?

Fabrice Calmels, principal artist with the Joffrey Ballet, in Jessica Lang's 'Crossed'. Photo courtesy of Fabrice Calmels

Fabrice Calmels
The beauty of live music is the clarity of the sound, and performing at Chicago’s Auditorium Theater, we have one of the best engineered houses in the world. It was built for live music, and its acoustics are incredible. Live music is simply rich. There is something about the quality of instantly created sound and vibration that is priceless. Recorded music has so many factors that come into play, such as how well the track may be recorded, the quality of the player or speakers, static, or speakers that sometimes do not separate well the low-bass from the mid-bass.

Brooke Lockett
The sound is the biggest comparison. It’s like when I see a live music concert, and no matter how loud I play the CD after the show I can never recreate that same feeling or volume. You hear so many more elements and instruments when it’s live.

For a piece that you will eventually perform to live music, what is the process of incorporating the musicians or conductor into the rehearsals?

Rebecca King
Our conductor, Gary Sheldon, spends a lot of time with us in the studio during rehearsals. He not only comes in the week before we take a program to the theater, but he also tries to be around when the choreographer or repetiteur is in town working with us. He has told me that he finds it very important to familiarize himself with our works as much as possible. This makes it easier for him to know when certain cues are coming up, or what tempos different dancers are comfortable with.

Do you usually try to build some kind of rapport with the conductor and musicians?

Brooke Lockett
Absolutely. Sometimes you are feeling a little flat or have an injury, and it’s important for them to know those things. And for those shows when you are on fire and loving it, you can really bounce off one another.

Rebecca King, dancer with Miami City Ballet. Photo by Susan Stocker, Sun Sentinel

Rebecca King
I think all the dancers at Miami City Ballet have a great rapport with our conductor. He always makes an effort to say hello in the hallways, wish you “merde”, or good luck, before a show, and commend you on your performance after the curtain comes in. You can tell he really makes an effort to know the dancers, which we really appreciate. We don’t have a lot of interaction with the musicians, but we do always make an effort to thank them when we see them leaving the pit. Without them, their talent and extraordinary effort, we would not be able to do what we do.

What’s been a memorable moment of performing to live music?

Fabrice Calmels
The beginning of Lar Lubovitch’s production of Othello starts with a very powerful overture by the orchestra. This leads to the first dance, “The Prayer”, when Othello rises from a kneeling position for a stunning solo done only by creating circular movement with his arm. In every rehearsal and performance, I become Othello in that moment, located near the first panel of the stage, waiting for the main curtain to go up. I am already kneeling with both hands gathered as a prayer resting against my forehead. The orchestra is playing the score, the drums become explosive and so powerful that I feel my hand bouncing up and down from the vibration they create from underneath me. It completely gets in me, my heart begins to beat like a drum. It’s an experience unlike any other.

Brooke Lockett
We had a guest conductor for a season of Swan Lake once and we had all been talking about how slow it was, and in our final Act II entrance as a Cygnet it was like we were doing Willies from Giselle, it was so slow. We had the giggles for the entire entrance and had to quickly pull ourselves together.

Rebecca King
My first year in the company, we were performing Balanchine’s Symphony in 3 Movements, with a score by Stravinsky. Ask any dancer and he/she will tell you that the complexity of Stravinsky’s music has no doubt kept them up at night. Trying to memorize every note and count is no small feat. During a section of the first movement, the three principal couples were on stage, and there was a brief pause followed by a change in the music. Something was missing. The dancers suddenly realized that the instrument that was, at that moment, in charge of keeping the beat was nowhere to be found. They started counting aloud to each other to keep themselves in sync. Thankfully, this confusion only lasted a few bars before another change in the music arrived. We found out later that the musician playing the instrument in question had fallen asleep in the pit!

Top photo: Fabrice Calmels, principal artist with the Joffrey Ballet, in Edwaard Liang’s Age of Innocence. Photo courtesy of Fabrice Calmels.

Published by Dance Informa dance magazine – everything dance in Australiadance news, dance auditions & dance events.

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