Showing posts with label abt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abt. Show all posts

5/17/2012

Petipa - Le Corsaire / Ethan Stiefel, Angel Corella, Vladimir Malakhov, American Ballet Theater (1999) Review

Petipa - Le Corsaire / Ethan Stiefel, Angel Corella, Vladimir Malakhov, American Ballet Theater (1999)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I am a big FAN of ballet, but not a CRITIC; thus, I'm not qualified to analyze this performance down to every minute detail as some of the other very erudite reviewers have done. Dance--especially ballet--is far and away my favorite form of performance art, and I loved ABT's "Le Corsaire" for overall presentation, great artistry, lively dancing, and excellent editing.
The Dancing. "Le Corsaire" is a full-length ballet story that centers on a beautiful slave (Medora, danced by Julie Kent) who becomes the object of desire of more than a couple of pirates (principal characters danced by Ethan Stiefel, Angel Corella, Joaquin De Luz and Vladimir Malakhov). It's a theme we're all familiar with (I dare say, perhaps in real life also), so the inbuilt intrigue is enough to keep viewers interested throughout the story. The dancing in this performance (staged in Southern California in 1999) is absolutely awesome from a technical standpoint, and there are many moments that caused me to marvel. Principal dancers Corella, Paloma Herrera and Malakhov put on truly amazing displays of athleticism, balance and fluidity. Same with Julie Kent, who still looks like my ideal ballerina in terms of beauty and grace. Even the corps shines, especially in Act III. I must admit [picky comment] I was a tad underwhelmed by Ethan Stiefel, not because of his dancing, but because he seemed to be miscast: his slight build and boyish looks just didn't convey what I expected from a pirate. This little "flaw" was not enough to detract from the performance.
The Interludes. Prior to each act there is commentary by Artistic Director Kevin McKenzie and interviews (more like sound bites) with dancers and backstage personnel that are supposed to provide insight into what is portrayed as a confusing (I'm not certain why) storyline. Although it's a mildly interesting added dimension to hear the characters speak behind the scenes, much of the cast comes across as a little goofy and/or tongue-tied. I watched the first time; in the future I'll likely skip these parts.
The Visuals. I have to say that this ballet DVD showcases some of the best camera work and editing I've ever experienced for a dance performance. Edits betwen full stage and individual character views are timely and allocated perfectly. Thankfully, the common mistake (seen so often on television these days) of zooming in on a performer's face--while missing the body's attitude and movement--virtually never surfaces on this disc. There are a couple of distracting instances where the conductor's baton flicks into the bottom of the picture, and where some standing audience members obscure the dancers at curtain call time. Still, 99% of the time the camera is looking exactly where my eyes want to go, and that scores big points in watching a great performance like this.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Petipa - Le Corsaire / Ethan Stiefel, Angel Corella, Vladimir Malakhov, American Ballet Theater (1999)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Petipa - Le Corsaire / Ethan Stiefel, Angel Corella, Vladimir Malakhov, American Ballet Theater (1999)

Read More...

2/18/2012

American Ballet Theatre Now - Variety and Virtuosity (Dance in America) (1998) Review

American Ballet Theatre Now - Variety and Virtuosity (Dance in America) (1998)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Finally, this thrilling gala performance is available on DVD! The transfer is crisp and the dances are nicely indexed so you can jump to your favorites...not that you'll want to skip even one of them. But I'm sure every balletomane will have her or his favorite. Mine is "Remanso", a pas de trois for men based on a Garcia Lorca poem. Taped in 1998, these performances feature many of ABTs upcoming stars (Corella, Carreno, Herrera, Stiefel) as well as seasoned veterans (Jaffe, Bocca, Hill, McKerrow). Angel Corella delivers breath-taking turns in his pas de deux with Paloma Herrera from "Don Quixote."
Although comprised of eight separate dance performances, each segment is intercut with fragments of backstage interviews with the dancers and artistic director Kevin McKenzie. Nothing momentous is revealed, but it's nice to hear the dancers express their enthusiasm for the works they perform and for the company that have the priviledge to dance for. Introduced by prima ballerina assoluta Natalia Makarava (looking great in a maroon silk and velvet gown by Gianfranco Ferre), it moves quickly and is the type of DVD you'll want to watch over and over. Far superior to ABTs other recent offering on DVD, "Le Corsaire," in which the dancers make fun of ballet (with justification) in between-the-acts interviews...and which is difficult to watch more than once.
I never understand why "fine art" DVDs offer so few "extras" (in this case, none). If you go to a live performance of a ballet, you get program notes on the music and choreography and short biographies of each principal dancer. Is that so difficult to transfer to a bonus material section on a DVD? Are there copyright issues? Anyway, don't let the absence of extras deter you, this DVD really delivers the goods. Buy it, watch it, love it.

Click Here to see more reviews about: American Ballet Theatre Now - Variety and Virtuosity (Dance in America) (1998)

Variety and virtuosity are the key qualities of American Ballet Theatre's tradition. The company has long distinguished itself through its artistic eclecticism and its star power. In this dazzling program, leading American Ballet Theatre dancers are joined by guest artists to perform highlights from the company's 20th century repertoire, including romantic, classical and contemporary pieces as well as the premiere of a new piece by Nacho Duato.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about American Ballet Theatre Now - Variety and Virtuosity (Dance in America) (1998)

Read More...

2/15/2012

Adam - Giselle / Carla Fracci, Erik Bruhn, John Lanchbery, American Ballet Theatre (1968) Review

Adam - Giselle / Carla Fracci, Erik Bruhn, John Lanchbery, American Ballet Theatre (1968)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Erik Bruhn and Carla Fracci were one of the most famous dance partnerships, and it's our good fortune that one of their "trademarks," Giselle, was preserved for posterity. (I mean, imagine how cool it would have been to have a video of Nijinsky and Karsavina dancing together.)
Both Bruhn and Fracci are better in the first act than the second. Fracci's radiance and beauty make her an enchanting village lass. You can see why Albrecht would fall in love. Plus, this is one Giselle who is visibly infatuated with Albrecht. Fracci is wonderful at conveying the almost feverish intensity of her love, from the way she stares at him, slack-jawed, to the way she blows him kisses in the Spessivtseva variation. They are a believable couple both in lust and in love. And I love the little touches Fracci puts in her mad scene. Instead of letting her hair fall down completely (like most Giselles) Fracci simply loosens one strand of hair from her bun. As she runs around the stage the bun becomes messier and messier. There are also real tears flowing from her beautiful face. Erik Bruhn has a stiff, aristocratic bearing that's also very appropriate for this role.
Unfortunately, I dont think Fracci and Bruhn are as great in the second "Wili" act. The second act is supposed to be about Albrecht's redemption. Bruhn doesn't show much in the way of remorse -- he's still the stiff noble of Act 1. I also own a Giselle with Rudolf Nureyev as Albrecht and with Nureyev you can see the remorse and ardor. The second act also exposes some flaws in Fracci's technique. At the start of the pas de deux one notices that her developpe is not very solid, for one. Her balances are a bit shaky. Fracci's Giselle in Act 2 is very different from her portrayal in Act 1. Fracci chooses to make her somewhat cold and remote, with a ghostly pale-powdered face and stern expression. Over time, I've come to accept this sterner, angrier interpretation of Giselle in the second act and even prefer it. Fracci is less skilled at the exposed developpes of the second act as she is in the little hops and entrechats. She and Bruhn choose not to do several now standard lifts between Giselle and Albrecht.
The thing about this film that *really* bugs me though is the way it was directed. The director Hugo Nieberling decided to be "cute" and shoot the movie somewhat like a music video. Tilted angle shots, weird cut-aways from the dancers to a basket of grapes, and a strange, long-take fixation on the backsides of some horses. It gave me a headache. I thought this nonsense would end in Act 2, but nope. Nieberling cuts away from the dancing of Giselle, Albrecht, Hilarion, and the Wilis to shoot their *reflections* in a pond.
Unfortunately, Giselle seems to be like Odette/Odile in that ballerinas, even the greatest ones, fall into the "either/or" category. Natalia Makarova, for instance, is hauntingly beautiful in Act 2, but she lacks the wholesome joie de vivre to be entirely convincing in Act 1.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Adam - Giselle / Carla Fracci, Erik Bruhn, John Lanchbery, American Ballet Theatre (1968)



Buy NowGet 10% OFF

Click here for more information about Adam - Giselle / Carla Fracci, Erik Bruhn, John Lanchbery, American Ballet Theatre (1968)

Read More...

8/17/2011

Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake / American Ballet Theatre, Murphy, Corella (2005) Review

Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake / American Ballet Theatre, Murphy, Corella (2005)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
American Ballet Theatre's Swan Lake, as presented on PBS' Dance in America series, is a must-have for any serious ballet lover. The settings & costumes are fresh and new. The age-old story of love, betrayal, and redemption is set to Tchaikovsky's lush score with some new music and a new scene. Of course the cornerstone of any ballet is the dancing. Gillian Murphy is absolutely remarkable as Odette/Odile, soft and vulnerable as the Swan Queen in acts 2 & 4 and hard, brilliant, dazzling as Odile in act 3. Angel Corella's Prince Siegfried is a perfect match for her. He is a brilliant dancer and a good actor, although I would have liked to have seen what Ethan Stiefel could have done with the part. The chemistry between Murphy & Corella is palpable. However, I have an old VHS of Swan Lake with Natalia Markova & Ivan Nagy, and I must say there has never in my opinion been a danseur noble to compare with Nagy. He was Siegfried incarnate.
Herman Cornejo also shines in the small role of Benno, Siegfried's friend, and he and the two female dancers (whose names I confess I don't know) make the first act trio a joy to watch. Georgina Parkinson is just right as the queen mother, stern yet loving. Victor Barbee is wasted in the small role of the master of ceremonies. In his younger days, he was an outstanding Rothbart.
One very unexpected pleasure in this ballet was Marcelo Gomes, who did such a fine job in Le Corsair as the villainous pirate, as the human Rothbart. He was wisely given a dance with the four princesses in which he is so handsome and seductive that they are putty in his hands--and he has an effect on the queen as well! I give him a standing ovation. Brilliant!
Rothbart's dance and a prologue in which we see him seduce the human Odette are two welcome additions, although I wish the prologue had been a little longer.
I have two minor complaints. First of all, the princesses were generically costumed. None of them had an of the flavor of their native countries in their dress. This is, however, not really important, just something I noticed.
Secondly, however, I saw no need to have another dancer as the demon Rothbart complete with green skin and huge, curving horns. One Rothbarth would have been perfect; two is a joke.
I strongly recommend this DVD to any lover of Swan Lake. It's one you'll treasure.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake / American Ballet Theatre, Murphy, Corella (2005)



Buy NowGet 8% OFF

Click here for more information about Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake / American Ballet Theatre, Murphy, Corella (2005)

Read More...

8/09/2011

Born to Be Wild - The Leading Men of American Ballet Theatre Review

Born to Be Wild - The Leading Men of American Ballet Theatre
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I must admit to some disappointment in this DVD; not because of the quality of the content but rather the content itself. Also, this disc is short, very short...only 54 minutes in fact
This DVD features four of the male stars of todays American Ballet Theatre: That being, Jose Manuel Carreno (Cuba), Angel Corella (Spain), Vladimir Malakhov (Russia) and Ethan Stiefel (USA).
I'd expected some extended video of each of the dancers actually dancing, but instead the bulk of the video is more of less a mini biography of each of the dancers with brief snippets of each of them from previous shows they were in.
There is also an extended section showing them rehearsing a dance, a pas de quatre, danced to Scubert's piano quintet; the finished work is about 7 minutes long and shown at the very end of the disc. This was well done and performed before a live audience.
I think the highlight of this disc, to me, was a short segment of each of them on a trampoline, with a single photograph frame capturing some spectacular aerial pose at the apex of their leaps. Unbelievable height and agility.
All in all, not quite what I expected when I purchased this DVD. That is not to say that I didn't enjoy it, I did, (getting some insight on the lives of these fabulously talented individual was very interesting, but it's just not something that I'd probably watch more than once. And watching some of my favorite choreographed dances is something that I do watch on a regular and repeated basis.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Born to Be Wild - The Leading Men of American Ballet Theatre

This DANCE IN AMERICA performance/documentary explores the lives of the ABT's four lead male dancers: Cuba's Jose Manual Carreno, Spain's Angel Corella, Ukraine's Vladimir Malakhov, and the U.S.'s Ethan Stiefel. Concludes with the four dancers performing.

Buy NowGet 10% OFF

Click here for more information about Born to Be Wild - The Leading Men of American Ballet Theatre

Read More...

8/04/2011

American Ballet Theatre at the Met - Mixed Bill (1984) Review

American Ballet Theatre at the Met - Mixed Bill (1984)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This eclectic program (Les Sylphides, Sylvia pas de deux, Kenneth MacMillan's Triad, and Paquita) is a beautiful slice of ABT's wide range of repertory and features sparkling performances from Baryshnikov, Cynthia Gregory, Fernando Bujones, Cynthia Harvey, Marianna Tcherkassky, Martine van Hamel, and many others. Although the taping itself is a little less engaging than I would like (ABT's 1998 tape, Variety and Virtuosity, is far superior in this aspect), this is still a wonderful addition to any ballet fan's collection.

Click Here to see more reviews about: American Ballet Theatre at the Met - Mixed Bill (1984)



Buy NowGet 10% OFF

Click here for more information about American Ballet Theatre at the Met - Mixed Bill (1984)

Read More...

7/22/2011

Don Quixote / Baryshnikov, Harvey, American Ballet Theatre Review

Don Quixote / Baryshnikov, Harvey, American Ballet Theatre
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is my favorite ballet tape, and I look forward to having it on DVD. I don't even know where to start in my praise, so I'll begin with the smaller parts. Susan Jaffe and Cheryl Yeager as the dream Mercedes and Amor absolutely shine. It is no wonder Jaffe has become a superstar. Johan Renvall is adorable in the small part of the innkeeper's son and has a few incredible leaps. Frank Smith has become an excellent character dancer as the innkeeper, who is Kitri's father. It was good to see Robert LaFosse in a small role as well, as he had subsequently left American Ballet Theatre for the New York City Ballet. Unfortunately I do not remember the names of the soloists who dance Kitri's friends, but they are also quite lively. On a sad note, the late Peter Fonseca, who died too young, sparkles in the corps and in the gypsy camp scene. He would have been a major international star if he had lived, and I was fortunate to have seen him, Jaffe, Yeager, and Julie Kent with the Maryland Youth Ballet when they were in their teens. Patrick Bissell, also, is a very attractive Espada. He, too, died too young and is much missed.
In my opinion, Cynthia Harvey was a wonderful Kitri. Not only was her dancing outstanding, but her personality shone through the role of the kittenish innkeeper's daughter who was determined to win the man she loved, even though he was merely a poor barber, and also to keep the upper hand in their marriage. Baryshnikov exudes charm and demonstrates that he was, at that time, the world's greatest dancer.
However, for me the highlight of the ballet was Victor Barbee as the rejected suitor Gamache. There is no better actor in all of ballet and, although he wasn't the strongest dancer in the corps, he carries the role with panache and aplomb. He receives the last curtain call, and rightly so.
Although Minkus is not the greatest ballet composer, the score is easy to listen to. The costumes and settings are colorful and enjoyable. There are some unanswered questions, including where Kitri changed her clothes between act 1, when she runs off with Basil, and act 2, when they arrive at the gypsy camp, as she took nothing with her! And doesn't she notice that there is no blood on the knife Basil pretends to stab himself with? But they can be easily overlooked.
This is a really enjoyable ballet. I strongly advise buying it!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Don Quixote / Baryshnikov, Harvey, American Ballet Theatre



Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Don Quixote / Baryshnikov, Harvey, American Ballet Theatre

Read More...