Showing posts with label Siegfried. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Siegfried. Show all posts

Friday, 19 October 2018

Van Dantzig's "Swan Lake"

Anna Ol and Artur Shesterikov
Author Michel Schnater
© 2018 Dutch National Ballet, all rights reserved
Reproduced courtesy of the company




















Anna Ol and Artur Shesterikov White Swan Pas de Deux, Swan Lake Dutch National Ballet Gala, 8 Sept 2018, 19:30  Stopera

This year the gala for the opening night of the 2018-2019 ballet season was dedicated to Rudi van Dantzig. One of the works for which he is most admired is his production of Swan Lake which will be performed in March.  I have seen extracts before but not yet the whole ballet but the little bits that I have seen persuade me that this is special.  With van Dantzig's choreography, costumes by Toer van Schayk, how could it be otherwise?

On the opening night gala we saw two pas de deux from the ballet.  The first from the white act stars Artur Shesterikov and Anna Ol as Siegtied and  Odette.  The second was the seduction scene from the black act with Daniel Camargo and Maia Makhateli as Siegfried and Odile. I shall discuss that second extract tomorrow.

Monday, 2 May 2016

Jakop Ahlbom's Swan Lake

Teaser Swan Lake from Jakop Ahlbom on Vimeo.


First we had Mat Ek's Swan Lake, then Sir Matthew Bourne's, next David Nixon's, then Alexander Ekman and now Jakop Ahfbom's which will be danced at the Meervaart Theatre in Amsterdam between 21 and 30 June 2016 before going on tour to Eindhoven and Roosendaal in September.  According to Jakop Ahlbom's website, this is a joint production with the International Choreographic Arts Centre in Amsterdam ("ICK") and the Meervaart Theatre.  The Meervaart, incidentally, is the theatre in which the Dutch National Ballet Junior Company danced Ballet Bubbles on 14 Feb 2016.

The synopsis of the ballet is set out here:
"Swan Lake is een moderne vertaling van Het Zwanenmeer, een vrije interpretatie van het oorspronkelijke sprookje. Centraal in zijn bewerking staat de destructieve kracht van liefde. Hoe gaan wij om met de liefde, in alle puurheid maar ook in de dubbelhartigheid ervan. Jakop is geïnteresseerd in het dilemma van de mens die we willen zijn, en de mens die we soms moeten en zullen zijn. Hoe blijven we dicht bij onszelf in ons verlangen naar de ander, in ons verlangen naar volmaaktheid. Swan Lake is een associatieve vertelling, waarin de personages zich gewaar worden van hun obscure kanten, liefde niet alles overwint en een mens zijn diepste wezen niet kan verloochenen."
Now I have never studied Dutch (though I have German which I believe helps) so my translation may well be rubbish but I think that means that Swan Lake is a modern version of Swan Lake, a free interpretation of the traditional folk tale. The rest I can't make head or tale out of at all and the Google machine translation seems to be gobbledegook.

I have had a little bit more luck in the Lees Meer (Read More) section:
"Het oorspronkelijke Zwanenmeer vertelt het verhaal van de witte zwaan Odette, die is betoverd door de tovenaar Von Rothbart. Zij is ‘s nachts vrouw, maar overdag moet ze als zwaan door het leven. Tijdens een jachtpartij staat prins Siegfried op het punt de witte zwaan neer te schieten, als zij plots in een mooie vrouw verandert. Ze worden verliefd en hij belooft haar te trouwen. Dan zal de vloek verbroken worden. Ze spreken af dat zij die avond naar het bal op het kasteel zal komen. Daar verschijnt echter Von Rothbart met zijn dochter Odile. Zij is het zwarte evenbeeld van Odette. Siegfried denkt dat het zijn geliefde is, danst met haar en belooft haar zijn trouw. Als Odette bij het kasteel arriveert, ziet Siegfried zijn vergissing in. Haar kans op verlossing lijkt verloren."
This seems to tell the story of Von Rothbart's spell over Odette, Siegfried's falling in love with her and Rothbart's passing off Odile as Odette quite faithfully.

One big difference between this Swan Lake and everybody else's is that the choreographer is using an adaptation  of Tchaikovsky by Alamo Race Track rather than the original score. The cast will include Helena Volkov, Tycho Hupperets, Gwen Langenberg,  Ivan Cidrian Ugrin and Silke Hundertmark.

Sadly I won't be able to make it as I shall be in Italy for the Casa for Alessia gala but should be happy to publish a review from any of my dear readers.

Thursday, 20 August 2015

KNT's Beginners' Adult Ballet Intensive - Swan Lake: Day 3

Marius Petipa
Source Wikipedia





















Well it's over. We did our show. We have all had a stab at dancing four of the best known dances from Swan Lake. I feel a massive sense of achievement merely to have taken part in all the classes and rehearsals and the final performance even though I am conscious that much of the choreography was well beyond my physical strength and skill. I am enormously grateful to Jane Tucker for teaching this course and to Karen Sant for organizing it. I am also grateful to all my teachers for conducting me to the point where I could contemplate a workshop of this kind. Finally, I want to say a big thank you to all the other participants for making me feel so welcome notwithstanding my antiquity, awkwardness and lack of talent.

Our day started with warm up exercises on our pilates mats. Depressingly they included some that I could do perfectly well just a couple of years ago which were now quite beyond me. Sit-ups from a flat on the back position, for example. I could only achieve that by enormous exertion which was clearly not a good idea so I raised myself as much as I could and sank back with somewhat greater alacrity than anybody else. The exercise that I found particularly useful was for the feet. Just over a year ago my right foot started to give me trouble to the extent that I can no longer rise on it on demi. Jane showed is how to flex and stretch the toes. That really helped with some of the barre work later.

I felt very much at home in Jane's class for it started just like every class at Northern Ballet with a walk, skip and run. We did tendus at the barre, followed by pliés in second, first, fifth and fourth, then more tendus. glissés, ronds de jambe, cloches, grands battements and stretches. In the centre we did a port de bras, pirouettes of various kinds, chaînés and all types of jumps. A bit more difficult than the Over 55 improvers at Northern Ballet perhaps but still doable.

The last hour before lunch and the first hour after lunch were taken up with rehearsals. We did the Hungarian dance, Siegfried's solo, cygnets and the swans' entry.  There were sequences of each dance that I never mastered but the prince's dance was by far the most difficult for me.  It required assemblés, tours en l'air (which I had never tried before) and multiple pirouette turns which I have never managed in class. The swans' dance was the most satisfying to learn and execute.

The last event of the day was our show. We had been asked to bring white leotards, flesh coloured tights and a black skirt. I had ordered mine from Just Ballet in Essex. Those garments took their time to arrive because the rain had smudged the address. The Royal Mail in its wisdom had sent the package to Harrogate rather than Holmfirth. Happily I picked them up on the morning of the show. This was the first time I had worn ballet tights and I found them difficult to put on in the confined space of the ladies' shower cubicle. Nevertheless, I managed somehow.

As often happens the excitement of performing raised everybody's game - even mine - but it was over so quickly. I savoured every single second of the show.  Karen and Jane clapped us generously.  Jane asked us whether our expectations had been met. "Oh indeed they had" we replied. "They had been exceeded." Jane commended the progress that we had made in the three days of the workshop.

So was this workshop worth £200 and three days off work. Emphatically yes! I think the real benefit will be a heightened appreciation and understanding of the ballet when we next see Swan Lake on stage. In my case that will be Birmingham Royal Ballet's at Sadler's Wells. I shall be looking out for the changements and échappés of the cygnets and I will say to myself "I did that". I will share the pride of the noble Magyars in the Hungarian dance. My heart will leap with each of Siegried's tours en l'air. And I know what it is like to be a swan under a magician's spell. This experience will stay with me for the rest of my life.