Showing posts with label choreography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label choreography. Show all posts

Friday, 6 August 2021

Dancing in the Penthouse











In Back to the Studio with KNT  I described KNT Danceworks new venue in the ABC Buildings on Quay Street in Manchester and gave practical directions on how to get there, where the park and how to find the studio once inside the premises.   Though not designed as a studio the space is in many important respects superior to the rehearsal studios in the Dancehouse.

If there is sufficient demand the ABC Buildings will host the first studio Day of Dance for nearly two years on 14 Aug 2021.  It is a day on which Karen Sant hires some of the best dance professionals on stage or in the schools to train us.   Those whom she had assembled in the past include Alex Hallas, dancer and choreographer with Ballet Cymru, Harriet Mills, principal ballerina with the Karlsruhe Ballet and Joey Taylor of Birmingham Royal Ballet from the stage as well as great teachers such as Jane Tucker of Northern Ballet Academy and Martin Dutton of the Hammond School.

Next week's programme looks very inviting:

  • Beginner and Pre-Intermediate Ballet Class between 10:00 and 11:30
  • Beginner and Pre-Intermediate Choreograph between 11:30 and 13:00
  • Intermediate and Advanced Balled Repertoire between 13:30 and 15:00
  • Intermediate and Advanced Ballet Class between 15:00 and 16:30

If you want to attend this event (and why wouldn't you) you must register through the Class Manager app as soon as possible.   It will only go ahead if there are at least 15 takers for each event.   If you have not already signed up for the event do so soon.   Karen will need to make a decision at least a week ahead.  I have put my name down for the Pre-Intermediate Class and Choreography sessions.   I look forward to seeing some of you there,

Sunday, 20 December 2020

Meet Amedeo Giunta of the Plovdiv Opera House Ballet

Amadeo Giunta
© 2020 Amadeo Giunta 

 









 



A few weeks ago I joined KNT's Saturday online intermediate class and met a new teacher, He asked us to bear with him because it was the first time that he had taught in English.  He had no need to seek our indulgence. He had a love of dance which he communicated to us eloquently.  It came as no surprise to learn at the end of the class that he was a professional dancer. He is a member of the ballet troupe of the Plovdiv Opera House.

A few weeks later, he taught us again on the Day of Dance.  This time for a full 90 minutes.  There are many good teachers who have never been members of a company but those who have bring something very special to their classes.  I am not sure what it is but they make us want to jump that little bit higher or make a bit more of an effort at something else.  I don't know whether we jumped a fraction of an inch higher or whether our pirouettes were tighter and straighter but we definitely felt lifted by our teacher's manner.  

Immediately after the class, I contacted Karen Sant, the Principal of KNT, for the teacher's contact details so that I could ask him for this interview.  Karen sent me a short bio from which I learnt that his name was Amedeo Giunta.  I transmitted the invitation through a mutual friend and, almost immediately afterwards, I received his acceptance.

Amedeo told me that he was born in Barrafranca, a small, inland cathedral city in the province of Enna in Sicily.  He has a younger brother and two older sisters. The older of his sisters, Rosamaria, has two daughters of whom he is particularly fond. He says that the days on which his nieces were born were among the happiest of his life. He is justifiably proud of his region which is distinguished for its history, architecture, cuisine and traditions.  

He comes from a family of dancers.  His mother attended dance classes until she learned that she was pregnant with Amedeo.  Rosamaria teaches ballet to children and young people. It was she who took Amedeo to his first dance class at the tender age of 3.  He was the only boy in a class of girls.  He remembers being the centre of their attention sitting on the floor in his sister's dancing shoes. He felt at home in the studio right from the start despite being the only boy.

He studied hard under his first teacher Cettina Averna.   He describes her as almost a second mother.   After a few months of classes, he was invited to perform in public for the first time.  His piece was a Michael Jackson solo.  From that moment he knew that he was destined for the stage.

As there are no theatres near his home, Amedeo did not see ballet live on stage until his student days in Rome.  However, he had DVDs of the great classical works including Giselle, Swan Lake, The Nutcracker and Le Corsaire.  I asked him about his first live ballet.  It turned out to have been a dress rehearsal of Roland Petit's Coppelia.  That must have made quite an impression on Amedeo because Petit's version is particularly dramatic as can be seen from this clip in which Sergei Polunin danced Franz.  I asked Amedeo whether he was inspired by any of the artists that appeared in his DVDs. He replied:

"Of course as dancers, we all have our idols (Nureyev, Baryshnikov, and the more recents like Roberto Bolle, Carlos Acosta, Federico Bonelli, Angel Corella, Ethan Stiefel) but what most inspires me is the desire to improve myself not to be like my idols, but to be the best version of myself everyday."

 He said that he took advantage of every opportunity he could get to attend workshops with the leading Italian and international masters.  

Amedeo's big break came in 2012 when he won the best soloist title in the Mentana Danza Life competition.  This is the video for the 2013 competition.  His prize included a scholarship to the MAS professional school in Milan.

Between 2013 and 2015 Amedeo trained at the Balletto di Roma School, As it is attached to the Rome Ballet and directed by the distinguished choreographer, Paola Jorio, it is very prestigious.  I asked Amedeo whether he had any favourite teachers at the Rome Ballet School. He mentioned Alexandre Stepkine who taught ballet, Mauro Murri, another of his ballet teachers and his contemporary teacher, Paolo Mangiola.  Stepkine helped him to understand how to develop the power needed for jumps and tours en l'air.  Murri showed him how to work on his body with intelligence and awareness. Mangiola opened his eyes to new possibilities of movement and to explore new ways to find expression through the human body.  

As end of term shows often provide the first opportunity for artistic directors, critics and audiences to spot up and coming dancers, I asked Amedeo about his performances at ballet school.   He mentioned, in particular, dancing  Brighella in Alexandre Stepkin’s Commedia Dell’arte.  He also had the chance to dance with the Rome Ballet. That was his first experience of working in a studio with different choreographers.  He danced in Futura, a piece by  Milena Zullo who also taught at his school.  He took part in the premiere of Tefer by Itamar Serussi Sahar a the Belgrade Dance Festival.  Other performances included Tourning by Alessandro Sciarroni and Reveals which was created by the dancers themselves.

Amedeo seems to have enjoyed his time in Rome.  I asked him what was the most important lesson that he had learned there.  He replied:

"The best advice that I received was to focus on my limits, accept them and make them my quality,"

His first job was with the Sienna Ballet (Balleto di Siena),  One of the works in the company's repertoire is entitled in English The Great Pas de Deux which includes extracts from Don Quixote, The Sleeping Beauty and many more.  Amedeo had the chance to dance in the pas de deux from Le Corsaire. Diana and Acteon, and Esmeralda. He also learned some of the technical skills of staging a ballet such as lighting design and scenography. 

I asked him where he had acquired his teaching skills.  He replied that he had always assisted his sister and his first teacher Cettina Averna.  He would give classes to their students and choreograph pieces for their shows.  His bio mentions the "Snoopy School" so I asked him about that.  He told me that Cettina's classes are known as "The Snoopy School" because the sports and leisure centre where she gives her classes is named after Snoopy in Peanuts.  He is passionate about dance education not just for the talented but also for the public as a whole.  He said:

"Our mission is to make dance, culture and art more accessible to the people of our city and to destroy the prejudice that the ‘unknown’ takes within society."

That is identical to the mission of this blog and indeed Powerhouse Ballet which grew out of the blog.  I shall make it my business to keep in touch with those artists in Sicily.  Who knows? Maybe we can find a way of working together. 

As I said in the first paragraph, Amedeo is now with the Plovdiv ballet.  Plovdiv, like Manchester, is the second city of its country and it also has a long history.  It used to be known as Φιλιππούπολη because it was founded by Philip of Macedon.  Also like Manchester, Plovdiv is a big manufacturing and commercial centre with lots of theatres, concert halls and other places of entertainment, museums, universities and plenty of arts festivals.  The opera house was founded in 1953 and the auditorium now hoists operas, musicals and concerts as well as ballets.

Amedeo is very glad to be in Plovdiv:

"I enjoy every single day, emotion, show, moment. It’s amazing how much this country believes in culture and theatres, and I’m really happy to dance in such a beautiful city like Plovdiv."

While he has been there he has danced the Rat King in The Nutcracker and Magdavaya in La Bayadere.  He has also danced Siegfried in a performance of Swan Lake for children.  I asked him about roles that he would like to dance in future.  He replied  Birbanto in Le Corsaire and Rothbart in Swan Lake.

I learned that Amedeo had created some ballets of his own so I asked about them.  He replied:

"The piece that I created for State Opera Plovdiv is a pas de deux called  The Opposite Pole that talks about the attraction, relation and complementation of everything. For example, day and night are completely opposite from each other, but they compliment each other because they are attached together. It is inspired a lot by the symbol of Yin-Yang (That I actually have tattooed on my arm because it is a very special symbol that always appears in my life). It is choreographed to a beautiful music by an Italian composer, Andrea Farri and danced by myself and my colleague from State Opera Plovdiv, Mara Salvaggio. Now I am starting to choreograph a new piece for the company, under invitation by the artistic director Mariana Krancheva, with only male dancers! Which is a big challenge for me, and I cannot wait to develop it in the studio and hopefully on stage."

I guessed that Wayne McGregor might have been one of his inspirations and so it turned out.  Other favourite choreographers include Alexander Ekman, Marco Goecke, Akram Khan and Ohad Naharin.

I asked Amedeo whether he had any unfulfilled ambitions and this is what he said:

"The only ambition that I have right now is to dance all over the world, and why not create new choreographies and inspire people with them."

I asked him whether that might include the UK  "Living in the UK?" he replied,  "Why not? Who knows, maybe my next adventure is there!"

As for the future, he said that he has always loved teaching:

"So yes, later in life I would like to teach as well as choreograph in professional schools and pass all of my love for this art form to the new younger generations."
"In that case," I replied, "your students will ask you for advice,  What are you going to tell them?"

He said:

"The only advice that I want to give young aspiring dancers is to accept themselves with their limitations and their qualities and work on them. Only by working in that way, can they improve every day and maybe become someone that they never imagined to be. At least that is what happened to me. I started my career certain that the only way for me to dance was in modern or contemporary because of my body limitations for ballet; and I see now that I’m living a dream that I never even imagined, to dance in an Opera House."

How many others who have grabbed a barre can say that? 

Wednesday, 7 February 2018

So proud of those students and their teacher




Yesterday I celebrated the achievements of Ballet West's first year full time students and members of the school's senior associates programme in Glasgow in Fizzing! Ballet West's Rossini Cocktail 6 Feb 2018. Today I want to applaud the achievements of even younger students who train in the same studios as I do at Quarry Hill in Leeds. The above film records a live class which was broadcast on Facebook yesterday afternoon.

The class is taken by Cara O'Shea who is an excellent teacher.  I first saw her in action in Northern Ballet's Open Day 18 Feb 2014, I wrote:
"Ichino was followed in the studio by Cara O'Shea who taught two groups of junior boys. Her style was very different from Ichino's but equally effective. She has a mellifluous voice which she used as an instrument to coax the best from her pupils. "You've always wanted as audience" she said referring tot us. "Well now you have an audience and if they like you they may clap you." The children, who were already working hard, gave us their very best. They did indeed delight us and how we clapped. She is another wonderful teacher and again I could see that the kids were devoted to her. I would have loved to have been taught by her. In a way she did teach me for I think I learned more about ballet on Saturday from watching the teachers at work that I could from a score of performances or a pile of books,"
A few days later I actually got the chance to be taught by Cara for she stood in for our usual teacher  who was unable to take us on that day. The experience was delightful: "The years simply rolled away. We old ladies were young, energetic and happy today" (see A Treat For Us Old Ladies 27 Feb 2014).

I later learned that Cara and I had something else in common.  She had once danced Aurora in The Sleeping Beauty for the Chelmsford Ballet Company of which I am a proud non-dancing connection.  The company held Cara in enormous affection though they had lost touch with her. As I had attended Cara's classes I was able to tell them all about the marvellous work she was doing in the North of England.  They were so impressed that they invited her back to Essex to give the company a class which I believe they enjoyed tremendously.  If you look at the way she inspired her students yesterday you will easily understand why.

Cara is not only an excellent teacher. She is also a fine choreographer.  I have only seen one of her works, Small Steps, about the rescue of Jewish children from Nazi Germany in commemoration  of the Kindertransport  (see Small Steps and other Pieces - Leeds CAT End of Term Show 2 July 2016). It was profoundly beautiful and very moving and I long to see more.

If you live in or within a reasonable travelling distance of Leeds and have what the subscribers to Balletcoforum call a "DS" (that is to say, boy) or a "DD" (girl)  of the right age who is good at ballet and wants to learn more, you might show him or her this film and suggest an audition. If your child wants to have a go, you should download an application form from Northern Ballet's Applications and Auditions pageHowever, do bear in mind that the closing date for applications is approaching fast,

Wednesday, 26 July 2017

Dance and Diplomacy: Britain's IP Attaché to China will visit Northern Ballet


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Ever since Northern Ballet moved from West Park to Quarry Hill I have been looking for an opportunity to introduce the company to my connections in intellectual property (see Ballet and Intellectual Property - my Excuse for reviewing "Beauty and the Beast" IP Yorkshire 31 Dec 2011).

The opportunity arose when Mr Tom Duke, our IP attaché in Beijing, asked me to recommend a venue for a talk that he plans to give in Leeds on 19 Sept to business owners and their professional advisers entitled Succeeding in China - Mitigating the IP Risk. I could think of no better place than Northern Ballet' boardroom in its premises at Quarry Hill.

I suggested that venue for several reasons.

First, the building is magnificent, one of the finest new structures in the city. The view of Leeds from the boardroom is breathtaking.

Secondly, Northern Ballet creates a lot of intellectual assets such as choreography, costumes, musical scores, performances, properties and set designs which are protected by copyrights, rights in performances and unregistered design rights and the Northern Ballet brand is a valuable trade mark for all kinds of merchandise. The company performs regularly in China where it uses all those intellectual assets. It, therefore, exemplifies the topic of Mr Duke's talk.

The third reason for my suggestion is that letting fees and catering services are a source of revenue for the company. It helps to fund dazzling new productions.

Finally, I hope that some of the business owners, lawyers, patent and trade mark attorneys and other professionals may be tempted to return for a show at the Stanley and Audrey Burton Theatre or even a class at the Academy which I am sure they would enjoy enormously.

If any of my readers would like to attend the talk on 19 Sept it is free. Give me a ring on 020 7404 5252 or send me a message through my contact form.  The event starts at 09:30 with registration and networking.  Mr Duke will deliver his speech at 10:00. I will also speak briefly about the things you should do here before you leave for China. There will be opportunities for one-to-one discussions with all sorts of business and professional advisors. The event will end at midday so that Mr Duke can grab some lunch before his next appointment in Barnsley.

I have also written about the event in NIPC News and IP Yorkshire if anybody is interested.

23 July 2017
Jane Lambert
NIPC News
21 July 2017
Jane Lambert
IP Yorks

Friday, 30 December 2016

Terpsichore Titles: Best Choreographers


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Three awards this year and they all go to choreographers associated with the Dutch National Ballet.   The first is for full-length ballets, the second for one act works or less and the third is for the best new full-length ballet in the United Kingdom. My choice for the first category is Ted Brandsen, for the second Ernst Meisner and for the third David Dawson.

Two of the highlights of my year were Mata Hari (see Brandsen's Masterpiece  14 Feb 2016) and Coppelia (see Brandsen's Coppelia 12 Dec 2016 and Pictures of Coppelia 15 Dec 2016) and they were both created by Ted Brandsen. I also saw two of my favourite young dancers, Cristiano Principato and Emilie Tassinari, in Brandsen's Replay when I went to Italy in June (see From Italy with Love 1 July 2016). These were very different works but each and every one was a masterpiece in its own way. As I said in my last post, there has been some brilliant full-length works by Bintlley, Dawson, Maillot and Marston this year and they all have merits but Brandsen wins it on points.

If Brandsen won the full-length contest on points, Meisner won the short works title with a knockout. I fell in love with No Time before Time when I saw the video from Lausanne. I was amazed when I saw it at the Meervvart in Ballet Bubbles on 14 Feb 2016 and carried to my feet with the crowd's acclamation when I saw it at the gala in September. In my review of the gala I wrote:
 "The first time I saw the video of Ernst Meisner's No Time Before Time was in the Prix de Lausanne finals. I fell in love with it there and then. When I saw it live for the first time in Ballet Bubbles at the Meervaart Theatre on my birthday on Valentine's day it was the best present anyone could possibly receive. I expressed my appreciation in Thank You Ernst a few days later. Ernst Meisner is an extraordinary choreographer. His Saltarello had been the highlight of the Junior Company's Stadsshouwburg show of 24 Nov 2013. The performance of Embers by Nancy Burer and Thomas van Damme to the haunting music of Max Richter was my favourite of the following year. I described it my review as quite simply one of the most beautiful ballets I have ever seen. Well, No Time Before Time is Ernst's best work yet."
In the video above Ernst Meisner talks about his craft. It is well worth a listen.

Dawson's Swan Lake was so good that it has to be acknowledged (see Empire Blanche: Dawson's Swan Lake 4 June 2016). It was the best new full-length work for a British company all year though Cathy Marston and David Bintley were not far behind. Dawson produced a work of which Peter Darrell would certainly have been proud and Petipa too perhaps.

Friday, 18 November 2016

Dutch National Ballet Junior Company Auditions


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If I were a talented young dancer (or the mother, father, aunt, uncle, brother, sister, cousin, friend or teacher of such a dancer) I would be thrilled by the opportunity of joining the Dutch National Ballet Junior Company.  This is a half way house between ballet school and the professional stage which I discussed in an interview with Ernst Meisner in The Junior Company on 3 Dec 2014.

The Junior Company has already been the springboard for some brilliant careers.  I saw Michaela DePrince in Nov 2013 just after she had joined the Junior Company (see The Junior Company of the Dutch National Ballet - Stadsshouwburg Amsterdam 24 Nov 2013 25 Nov 2013) and she is already a grand subjet with the National Ballet. DePrince has been particularly successful but there are others who have done very well too. The outstanding young Italian dancer, Cristiano Principato, for instance, has already had a chance to show his talent for choreography by staging his own ballet (see Palagio 4 June 2016). Many of them have been recruited to the main company or been offered contracts with other fine companies such as the Stuttgart Ballet, the Norwegian National Ballet and the Hungarian National Ballet.

Such an opportunity has arisen because the Dutch National Ballet is holding auditions for next year's Junior Company at Amsterdam on 21 Jan 2017 (see Audition Junior Company on the Dutch National Ballet's website). Candidates can apply online so long as they meet the following requirements:
  • strong classical ballet technique;
  • minimums height of 5 feet 5 inches (1.65 metres) for ladies and 5 feet 11 inches (1.8 metres) for gents; and
  • graduating this year or next.
I hope that there will be at least a few applications from the UK and that some may actually be good enough to get in but I wish all candidates from all countries all the very best. Whether or not he or she is accepted I wish each and every candidate who is good enough to try every success in his or her training and subsequent career.

Sunday, 5 June 2016

Meet Danielle Gould of the Hungarian National Ballet

Danielle Gould
(c) 2016 Danielle Gould: all rights reserved








































Every so often a dancer stands out from his or her peers and commands attention. That happened at Budapest Opera House on Sunday, 17 April 2016 in the Puss in Boots divertissement of Sir Peter Wright's production of The Sleeping Beauty when the white cat appeared on stage.  Here's what I wrote in my review of the performance:
",,,, the young Canadian dancer Danielle Gould ,,,,, danced the white cat. It is not an easy character role particularly with a heavy cat mask. She has to be both human and feline: flirtatious at one moment, they playful slapping her partner at the next. It is one of my favourite divertissements of any ballet. She danced it well winning the hearts of the audience."
As I had attended the show as part of a contingent from the London Ballet Circle I was invited by Sir Peter, our patron, to meet the cast back stage. It was there that I introduced myself to Danielle. I congratulated her on her performance and asked her for this interview which she kindly agreed to give me.  My questions are in italics and Danielle's answers are in plain type.

Danielle. Thank you for this interview. I see from your website that you were born in North Vancouver which I understand to be a municipality within the Vancouver metropolitan area. Is that where you spent your childhood and adolescence?

"Thank you Jane, I am excited to be able to share my stories and adventures through your interview. I was born and raised in North Vancouver, more specifically in a even smaller part of North Vancouver called Lynn Valley."

"I was there once. I remember a narrow suspension bridge across a ravine. I was there for picnic or barbecue during a lawyers' conference in 1998.  It was a wet and windy evening and we had to cross the bridge which was slightly unnerving as the flimsy and slippery wooden walkway swayed under our feet."

"It was a fabulous place to grow up as it was a smaller community and to this day many members of the community are still supporters and fans of my dancing. I started in a small school there and Lynn Valley was certainly my childhood home. As I got more intensive with my dance training into my adolescence I did not spend as much time in Lynn Valley."

"Would you like to say something about the place or places you lived while growing up, your home and family?"

"Well of course I am so very lucky to have a extremely supportive and encouraging family that certainly helped me along the road from local school to professional training schools to professional ballet dancer. Also, driving me from academic school to ballet to competitions and everything in between. I also would spend a lot of time when I wasn't dancing on Roberts Creek Beach on the Sunshine Coast where my grandparents live."

"Do any other members of your family participate in ballet, other types of dance or the other performing arts?"

"Surprisingly none of my direct family has any involvement in the performing arts or ballet specifically. But now after all these years of watching ballet I think my family can understand it on different level and comprehension, especially my mom."

"What would you say were your main cultural influences while you were growing up? For instance, did your mother, other family members or school take you to ballets, plays or concerts? If so can you remember what you first saw and what most impressed you as you were growing up?

"My mom would take us often."

"How and why did you take up ballet?"

"Well this is a funny one.

I was a very energetic child, I didn't sit still very well and I liked to 'beat to my own drum'. I had a few lessons of gymnastics. Most went well except that the strict Russian teacher was always telling my mom to make me sit still or 'go out and run me beforehand - like a dog!' Then one lesson it was 'Bring your Teddy to class day' so I decided to bring my rubber snake.  When I pulled it out the teacher screamed and said: 'This is enough.'  I was too hard to handle.

So my mom, distraught at the thought of finding me another way to burn of the energy, was driving by the local dance school and saw a sign for 'Enrolment starting now.' I was too young for the youngest ballet class but the director had me demonstrate some exercises. She said: 'Fine, yes we take her.' And that's how it all began!"

"How old were you when you took your first lesson?"

"3."

"Did you like ballet when you first started?"

"I don't remember a time when I was not excited for ballet. So as far as I can remember I always liked it."

"When did you realize that you were particularly good at ballet?"

"The combination of usually being the youngest in my class, frequently asked to demonstrate exercises combined with feedback from ballet exams being highly marked. I would say that around age 9 or 10 I realized that I loved ballet, and I recognized that it came naturally to me. Though my ability was often recognized, progress did not come without hard work from a very young age.

There was always someone in all my classes or levels growing up that little bit better then me, or just maybe got that first place while I got the second. For someone who is a perfectionist and also very competitive I think having a bit of healthy competition always helped me to set goals and get better day by day. Its fun now to think back, as a lot of those girls that I started competing against from a young age have also gone on to professional careers."

"Was there a teacher in your early years who recognized your talent and encouraged you?"

"Yes, I had a few. Most importantly though Astrid Sherman and Melanie Dance."

"I see from your biography that you attended The Goh Ballet Academy and Pro Arte Centre in Vancouver. Which came first and how long did you spend at each ballet school?

"When the two teachers that I had been taught by already for a few years in Lynn Valley left to open their own school Pro Arte, I followed along.

Pro Arte started when I was 10 and at that time it was a small group of students with a lot of personal attention. For many of the years that I attended Pro Arte consecutively for summer intensives I attended Canada's National Ballet School in Toronto.  Every year they invited me to study there but I was not ready to make that move.

When I was 13 and completing my third summer school they once again invited me to stay offering financial support so I decided to stay. Then when I was age 14 -17 I attended the Goh Ballet academy."

"Were there any teachers at either school that inspired you at that stage?"

"When I made the transition to Goh Ballet Academy there were many teachers there that truly inspired me and helped take me to the next level.

At that time at Goh Ballet I was very lucky to have the opportunity to be taught by a variety of teachers as well. Mostly morning classes I would be taught by two of the teachers who were dancers with National Ballet of China. Then most of my coaching and other classes were with Vera Soloveyva and Nikolay Levitsky with whom I am still very close with to whom I speak often even now. They truly refined my technique but also were the two amazing coaches that helped me to succeed at competitions.

Also I studied and completed all my exams for the Royal Academy of Dance with Lynette Kelly and Fiona Smith. I completed all my exams to catch up in two years as well as received my Solo Seal and compete at the Genee in 2010.

Most importantly though during my time in the school the artistic directors were Choo Chiat Goh and Lin Yee Goh. Both of them nurtured us like a family. Especially Mr. Goh as for him the most important thing was artistry. I would spend many extra hours in the studio working on the fine details, everything from the finger tips to where my eyes were focusing on a certain step.

"Did you dance in any shows while you were there and what were your favourite roles?

"Training at Goh Ballet gave me countless opportunities to perform various repertoire and especially two performing tours through China. I performed my first full length ballet at 14 as Lise in La Fille mal gardée, as well many pas de deux from various repertoire.

I was also the premier cast of Anna-Marie Holmes's brand new production of The Nutcracker for the Goh Ballet. Uniquely for Vancouver to call its own Nutcracker. I was the Snow Queen and Dew Drop. This was an amazing experience for a dancer at such a young age.

Some other of my favourite repertoire which I performed while I was in school would have been the second time we toured China. I danced The Talisman pas de deuxLes Sylphides (Chopiniana) prelude variation and pas de deux and Yellow River."

"Training for excellence in ballet demands a lot of time. discipline, determination and energy that most young people are unable to give. What motivated you to persist?"

"The love of it.

Yes I had days where I have been so frustrated or angry with how something went, but for me I always had the motivation to wake up the next day and get back in the studio, which comes from true love and passion.

I feel when you love something enough and your passion for it is true that you don't have to search for the motivation as it is something that just comes naturally.

Ballet, if you don’t truly enjoy it and feel passionately about it, it is very easy to just give up because it is not easy,  But that's also what makes it interesting. No matter how good something was there is always some detail to improve, even it is simply just a personal opinion on one step. That is how you can go in every day and do the same exercises at the barre and never ever feel bored. Ballet is anything but boring."

"Did you ever compare your life to that of other young women and ask yourself: 'Why am I putting myself through all this and for what?'"

"No I always was happy with the choices I made, I would never go back and change the path I took. I won't deny that there have been choices that may not exactly have been the right ones and felt like the end of the world in the moment. But, looking back now, they all made me stronger and mean nothing now just a moment of time from the past adding to the story we call life."

"You mentioned your dance training at The National Ballet School of Canada in Toronto. At what age did you enrol in that school?"

"I started attending the summers schools there when I was 10 years old.  As I said earlier, the School asked me to stay on in Toronto every year for three consecutive years but I never felt ready. When I went to the summer school  for the third time at age 13 I decided to stay for the full year. So for my grade 8 school year I spent it in the school there. But I returned to Vancouver after that year to attend the Goh Ballet Academy."

"Toronto is a long way from Vancouver with a very different climate. How did you find your first winter in Ontario?"

"It's nice to hear someone finally to say: 'Toronto is a long way from Vancouver' because it truly is. Many people who have never been to Canada think well it's in the same country it can't be that far. Well it is... Canada is big! So yes."

"I know. I've flown across Canada and the USA several times.  The journey takes several hours.  Also, one should never forget that Toronto (unlike New York. Boston or Washington DC) is a long way from the eastern seaboard. As you say, Canada is big. You must have been young which is why I asked the question."

"I was still very young when I moved there for the year. The winter was different then Vancouver, as it was very very cold. But I liked it much better as it was brighter and sunnier then Vancouver with its never ending greyness in the winter. I love the sun so I enjoyed the change of climate."

"Toronto is also a great metropolis with theatres, museums and concert halls. What did you most like about Toronto?

"I certainly enjoyed my time in Toronto. I loved that there was nearly always something happening and so many events and museums and things to see. Being in the school and still fairly young we got taken as groups to most companies' performances. That was when I realized even more how much I wanted to be a professional ballet dancer. In Vancouver, though we have many good ballet schools, there is no professional
classical ballet company to look up to for inspiration."

"Was there a teacher in Toronto who inspired you?"

"Well I would say that all the teachers I meet with there inspired me. Both in ballet and in academic subjects. My year in the private school for the students of NBS was fabulous."

"And of course you saw all those performances by the National Ballet of Canada and visiting dance companies."

"Yes the School would take us to see most of the performances of the company. I was also extremely excited to get the chance to watch the Erik Bruhn Competition."

"Were you inspired by any particular ballet or dancer at that time?"

"Not particularly. I think I was still too young to watch just one person or ballet. Even now I couldn't name one ballet or dancer that I specifically connect to or feel inspired by as I tend to have many ways of finding inspiration."

I may see one dancer and feel inspired by their emotion and another by there technique, I feel it's very important to watch ballet or any form of dance and art being performed with a very open mind, to learn from it and therefore find inspiration."

"You mentioned a lot of performances with the Goh Ballet Youth Company. What was your favourite role?

"I danced many roles and pas deuxs that I loved as I mentioned earlier. But I think my favourite was performing the full Talisman pas de deux on our second tour of China. It is a fairly difficult pas de deux both in technique and the artistry and I loved that each time I performed it.   I developed both myself and the role. it was a good challenge especially with the intensity of touring many cities in China."

"I see that you entered the Youth America Grand Prix which has launched the careers of many fine North American dancers. Tell me how you came to enter that event?"

"I actually entered the event in a bit of a unconventional way. But that's no surprise as often I do things differently. It's good to be unique. Anyways, most dancers attend one of the semi finals somewhere in the world and then from there, the top three are selected to go to New York City for the finals where there are many opportunities for scholarships to schools as well as company contracts. Since I didn't have the money to attend a semi final location. I decided to send a video to the semi final video submission round and was lucky enough to be selected.

"I believe you reached the finals in New York City and did so well that you were offered a scholarship to the John Cranko School in Stiuttgart."

"In New York the performances and classes went very well and I was selected for the final round in New York as well. I received offers to several places but the one that I accepted (and I am thankful for to this day) was the full scholarship to John Cranko Academy. I remember being offered it and not really knowing what to say or think. I mean I knew about how amazing the dance scene in Europe was and I had heard lots about John Cranko School, but coming from Vancouver I was thinking of staying in North America. But I just took a chance and accepted the offer for Stuttgart and have never regretted it."

"Germany is even further from Vancouver than Toronto in a different country with a different language and a very different culture to that of Canada.  How did you adapt to living in Germany?"

"Well yes, it was a big culture shock. But one I embraced and enjoyed all the same. My road to move there was a bit rocky as I moved straight from the performance tour with Goh ballet in China to Germany. After two and a half weeks of performing in China there was not enough time to come home before flying to Germany.

I had to fly directly from Beijing to Stuttgart but sadly at Beijing airport I was scammed by the airline and they would not let me board unless I paid $1,000 dollars or got rid of one of my two suitcases. I had pre checked and confirmed that I could bring two but they insisted otherwise. I had no help and no phone and no one who spoke English. I had no idea what to do, because moving to Germany I needed my belongings.

Eventually I just stuffed more into one suitcase, wore far too many layers of clothing in the Chinese heat and stuffed two carry-ons full. I gave away all my snacks from home and all the lovely gifts from all the hosts in each city to some Chinese who didn't speak English but were very happy to receive them.  It had to be done because I was not missing that flight. I had to get out of China.

Eventually I made it to Stuttgart. At first I found it very new as I was living in one of the girls' dorms for the scholarship girls which was one apartment and shared by 6.  This was a new experience for me as the 6 of us came from very diverse and different backgrounds and cultures. There was one Canadian (me), one Chinese, one Korean, one Mexican, and two Brazilians. Though we got along very well it was just very different. As I am vegan sharing a kitchen was an experience I shall never forget.  There is a lot of meat in typical German food and all my room mates loved meat products. But, on the other hand, I loved using my free time on Sundays to grab the train and just go exploring, no car needed in Europe."

"Again were there any teachers who inspired you?"

My teacher in the Academy was very strict and strong at times I can admit now that there was times there that I really didn't like her at all. But now I can look back and see that even though she usually made someone cry in the class or told us we were all horrible it was all for the best and to make us stronger and better dancers."

"While you were in Stuttgart you were spotted by the Hungarian National Ballet and invited to join them. Can you tell us the circumstances in which you were invited?

When I was in my second year in the academy and it was time for auditions, the Hungarian National Ballet was the first one I attended in the very beginning of January. I was offered the contract and it was for me to start as soon as my visa was ready. I was feeling very over school and ready to start work so I accepted. There was a small amount of risk involved as the company here accepts you, and this is for everyone, on a three month trial period and there is no guarantee of a continued contract. But as you can see it paid off as three years later I am still here with repertoire and interesting experiences under my belt."

"How did you find the transition from student to full time member of a company?"

"For me, the transition was not that big of a change or very difficult as during my last two years at Goh Ballet I was performing and training intensively with both the Academy and the Youth Company. Then when I was at the Cranko Academy I understudied for two ballets with the company and so I already had a feel for it. I love being on stage and being busy, so the intensity of the performing schedule didn't feel like a big change for me at all."

"How do you like Budapest as a city?"

"As a city I absolutely love Budapest. It's stunning. Structurally the architecture throughout the entire city is beautiful and there is always something going on. Festivals, events, pop up store, new cafe and design shops on every corner. It's a booming city.  I have certainly seen the growth in just three years - especially due to the huge rise in the popularity of river cruises and the desire for tourists to discover the cities that are not the mainstream destinations in Europe, the more Eastern European hidden gems. Though I am enjoying the growth of tourism bringing innovation and change in the city, it has definitely caused some inflation which makes it difficult with our salary."

"What do you like most about Budapest and Hungary?"

"I have enjoyed the city and of course performing in the beautiful Opera House. As well, considering Hungary is a fairly small country, it has a variety of unique natural attractions to explore. I love being outdoors and have enjoyed several trips to Lake Heviz which is a natural mineral lake fed by a deep thermal spring and its waters have natural healing properties. It's one of the largest thermal lakes in the world. I also enjoyed visiting Lake Balaton, nicknamed the Hungarian sea, and its beautiful wine country. Also, the very large stalactite caves in the north of the country in Aggtelek National Park and the famous Danube bend in Visegrad."

"What do you miss most about North America?"

"I do miss some of the modernisms of North America as well as being able to literally find anything you could want at any given moment. As well, being from Vancouver, and the west coast of North America in general, there is an addiction to being a yogi kale eating health nut, which I totally am. In Eastern Europe the way of living naturally and the term veganism is still fairly new but slowly growing. And plainly sometimes I just miss everyone completely understanding me and speaking English."

"Tell me about a typical day in the company from the moment you report for work to when you go home."

"I wake up shortly after 07:00, have breakfast and get ready. I get to the Opera for 09:00 and class starts at 10:00 and finishes around 11:00 or 11:15. Then we have morning rehearsals that finish around 14:00. If we have a performance in the evening we finish then for our break. Otherwise if we don't have a performance we have another block of rehearsals from 14:30 to 18:00. Then, if it hasn't been a particularly busy day I usually go to the gym or have pilates. Then it's home for dinner and relax before bed."

"They say that Hungarian is the most difficult European language for a native English speaker. Do you have to learn it for work? If so, how are you progressing?

"Well it is a challenge but I have embraced it and have tried to learn it. My first year in the company before a lot more foreigners came, I did take lessons, as they spoke mostly Hungarian. Those lessons helped me to learn the basics and now I can understand quiet well when they speak in rehearsal or I can make basic conversation for shopping and going to the markets. But I won't deny that it is very hard and the level I am at now I have plateaued as to go further I would have to intensely study the grammar which is very difficult and would take a lot of time."

"Tell us how you keep in top physical condition. The exercises you do and the food that you eat."

"Well I have been vegan and a passionate health nut for many years now and thrive on this type of diet. I feel it works very well for myself and enjoy studying nutrition on the side and hope one day to help others learn the healthiest ways to live and eat. I also love to do yoga and pilates on the side and as well as swimming and routinely go to the gym and saunas."

"Tell us about the ballets and dancers who inspire you now and why?"

"Many different ballets and dancers for various reasons. We would be here all day for me to name and explain each one."

"What is the role that you have enjoyed most while you have been with the Hungarian National Ballet?

"I think my most recent role that I really enjoyed was dancing and performing the White Cat in The Sleeping Beauty. But I also enjoyed dancing the Russian Pair in The Nutcracker and  one of the two lead sylphs in La Sylphide. These are the specific roles I enjoyed dancing but any time I am on stage I am enjoying it let it be a soloist part, pas de deux or corps de ballet, though of course I prefer to be performing solo or pas de deux for, as everyone knows, corps is much harder."

"What are your interests outside work?"

"Outside of ballet I have a passion for travel, nature, exploring local farmers markets and design markets. I also love to do yoga and pilates. Also, if I want just to relax I love to go to a good cafe for tea or coffee and write or read blogs."

"Do you like film, music, books or the other arts?"

"I love to make my own jewelry and have been making it for many years now. I also enjoy the occasional movie here and there and I am a fan of magazines. I don't sit still very well, so usually my free time is still in some way active."

"How about cooking, travel, clothes?

"All three… travel is a must, as I mentioned above its a passion of mine. I have gotten very good at finding ways to visit places on a budget but still enjoy every moment of it. When I travel or even living here in Budapest I love to learn as much as I can about the culture the customs and traditions.

I absolutely love fashion as well, so even when I am traveling I like to observe the unique styles and trend in various places. But I love my clothing, just as each time you step on stage you are performing for the
audience and committing to the character, I feel clothing and fashion is a way to express myself off of the stage."

"Do you play any sports?"

"Not in particular, since I like to be active I am up for any challenge. Since my dad and brother are mountain and road bike racers, if its a family bike ride its more like the tour de France. I also enjoy hiking and long walks.

Coming from Vancouver where we are surrounded by nature we are raised in the woods."

"What are your favourite activities, films, books and music?"

"I do not have a set preference depends on how I am feeling in the moment, give it comedy, romance, action or adventure movie. Or in terms of music, I am open to every style and enjoy a variety."













"Returning to ballet, what roles would you most like to dance and why?"

"The roles I have on my goal list classically are definitely Juliet, Manon, Aurora and Giselle. I love ballets with a story where you can transform and immerse yourself completely in the character. It's so important to have good technique but ballet is more then just technique which would just make it a sport. It's an art and the emotion is why people come to see a ballet. They want to be moved and feel emotions which will only come through if you are 100 percent committed to the character you are portraying."

"Is there any choreographer or director you particularly wish to work with?"

"Not specifically.  The opportunity to have a piece created on myself would be a goal I hope for one day."

"You have already choreographed some work for your company which I admire greatly. When did your interest in choreography arise?

"I have always had an interest for choreography. Since a very young age I would spend hours in my basement just improvising to music and choreographing pieces. I remember creating choreography for my elementary school's talent shows. Also in our local dance competitions they had a category where the judge would chose a piece of music and you would have the chance to hear it once and then go on stage and improvise to it. For me creating movement to music has always come very naturally and I enjoy it. I usually start by finding a piece of music that I feel either moved by or that evokes certain themes or messages or that I simply just like and then the movement just comes to me."

"Who has influenced your as a choreographer?"

"I wouldn't say anyone has directly influenced me, but of course I keep my eyes open and watch as much of the new works by other international choreographers as possible. This helps to keep my mind full of inspiration for what is new and up and coming in the world of dance and ballet, be it from very modern to neoclassical to new full length classical ballets."

"Which dancers would you like to work with and why?"

"I couldn't name specific people but the best way to answer that would be with the type of dancer I enjoy working with, someone who is dedicated and curious. Someone who is interest and open to new challenges and ways of moving."

"Would you like to say a little bit about each of the works on the 'Choreography' page of your website: 'Between the Balance', 'Complexity' and 'Without Words'?

"So my first piece for the company here for the young choreographers' performance was Without Words. This piece was a play on the three wise monkeys, see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil. Mostly about those themes coming through and I was also moved by the music.

My second piece, Complexity was more about the music. I absolutely loved that piece of music. Therefore it was the complexity between movement and music as well as shapes starting in the boxes of light and finishing in them.

My most recent piece was a bit different then I usually work. The music was chosen for us and this piece was a collaboration piece with another dancer in the company. This was my first time to co create a piece with someone.  Although I am happy with the finished product it was a interesting experience."

"Are you working on a new ballet now and if so can you tell is about it?"

"I have ideas for a new ballet as well as music that I hope I have the opportunity to set and perform soon But sadly at this time due to lack of funding for the young choreographer performance I am not sure I will have the chance in the coming future."

"What advice would you give to:

  • a small boy or girl in Canada beginning his or her dance studies?"

Learn as much as you can, practice and never give up. But also enjoy time with family and don't put too much into competitions. Sometimes I did and learnt the hard way. You never know how one person's opinion will affect the results and it is really not the end all be all. Just use them as a learning experience and opportunity to perform on stage. "

  • "a 14 year old who knows that he or she is good and wants to take his or her studies further?"

"It is not about the school, it is about the teacher and coach that is working directly with you on a day to day basis. You want to find the right coach that is going to help you go the distance in both technique and artistry."

  • a young man or woman in the National Ballet School or a similar major ballet school in another country? or
  • a young man or woman who has his or her first job as a professional dancer?

Learn everything, especially if you are a cover or understudy. You never know when you may have to jump in. I know its hard to stand in the back corner for hours trying to learn it, but it pays off eventually. And watch, watch as much as you can, watch the other corps, the soloist, principals, how they work, rehearse and perform, its all learning for your own future."

Thank you so much Danielle. I am sure that all my readers will join me in wishing you all the best."

Finally, here is a photograph of Danielle in the outdoors that she loves so much.

Danielle Gould, Hungarian National Ballet
(c) 2016 Danielle Gould: all rights reserved

Thursday, 18 June 2015

Review: McQueen at St James Theatre, London




McQueen is a creative review of the life of tragic fashion designer Alexander (Lee) McQueen (Stephen Wight), as told to Dahlia (Dianna Agron), a fictional girl who apparently breaks into his house (or does she?) because she needs a dress. Like Lee, Dahlia is directionless and clinically depressed. He takes her on an adventure through his life story, in one night, during which time he makes her a dress which brings out her unique beauty – helps her see who she really is. There are various hints, but we are never actually told this.

The story is a vehicle, perhaps an allegory for McQueen’s artistic principle that fashion is the purest form of self-expression – how you dress (or in Lee’s case, the dresses he designs) expresses what you are. When Lee doesn’t have creative inspiration, he loses his way.
In a series of scenarios from his life, Lee effectively turns himself inside out to his mysterious intruder and they help each other through the night.
Why is this review appearing on Terpsichore, a blog about dance? Well, many of the scenes include dreamlike sequences where a group of dancers depict mannequins, wearing McQueen’s stylishly eccentric creations. The mannequins are his muses and Terpsichore is the muse of dance. David Farley’s production design and Christopher Marney’s choreography were striking from the first scene. I loved the opening sequence, where at some points it was hard to differentiate between dancers and mannequins. The dancers were all well cast, as they looked like living mannequins and they moved together beautifully as a group, with points of choreographic interest – posing and turning with lifts and exquisite silhouettes at different parts of the stage. Their skill belied the challenge of working with a relatively small space and a busy, changing set. In a later, party scene, the mannequins appear again, now representing beautiful party people – models perhaps – dancing and swaying around the stage in couples and formations, drawing Lee and Dahlia deeper in to the night.

The staging was perfect, and the lighting created and intensified the atmosphere, which was dark, but somehow optimistic. I found a balcony scene overlooking London particularly striking. Another fabulous creative device was when Lee fits a beautiful dress onto Dahlia on stage, transforming her from an obsessive fan to a late night muse who helps Lee find the inspiration that keeps him alive. This was so impressive – a nice detail was that he left one pin in the shoulder strap.
A lively, exquisitely designed production with fantastic set and production design, beautiful dancing and choreography and some excellent acting including a great Isabella Blow cameo from Tracy-Ann Oberman is let down by a plot full of holes. Here are just a few. Who is Dahlia? Is she real, or imaginary? Is she his alter ego? There are many references to her being already there, a doppelganger etc. Well if she is, it’s a bit bizarre that she’s an ‘I want, I want’ person, when Lee himself was obviously an ‘I get, I get’ person. Also if she is part of him, how come he has to tell her his life story? She’d already know all of that!

Dahlia makes a lot of suggestions that she is part of Lee, or his alter ego, but a lost American girl seems a strange alter ego for a talented, tortured designer at the height of his fame.
The reason the plot holes are so easy to spot is that the play is set between Isabella Blow’s suicide and Lee’s own. By this time his talent was globally recognised and he was at the pinnacle of his career. The programme included a useful timeline of his life, so when you read the programme, you wonder about the inaccuracies in the play. For example, Lee wasn’t ‘made’ by Isabella – he was a successful tailor before he was accepted to study on the MA course at St Martin’s and she bought everything in his graduate show. While in this play Isabella claims to be his Svengali, in reality she was a catalyst for his second career.

The play makes no reference to Lee's time at St Martin’s or his widespread recognition - including as British designer of the year – and only touches lightly on his serious issues with drugs.
The theme of self-harm and suicide – Dahlia gives no reason why she is so troubled – is treated lightly given Lee’s actual demise. The play ends on a possibly optimistic note, which is a plus point. Dahlia says she has had the best night of her life, which suggests that she is an individual in her own right. If she signifies part of Lee’s character, surely wandering around London reminiscing about his past to an imaginary friend is unlikely to be the best ever night for an internationally acclaimed fashion designer.

Even if you excuse the plot holes as artistic license, the wordy script made several scenes feel unnecessarily long. I would pick out in particular the scene in Lee’s dying mother’s house which could have been cut to less than half the length to get the message across. This was towards the end of the play and there was a distinct shuffling among audience members – the seats are not particularly comfortable.
Overall it was an entertaining show. The staging was beautiful and Stephen Wight was genuinely convincing as Lee McQueen. It helps that he really does look like him. He delivered his lines well – even the clunky ones – and he was on stage for the entire 1 hour and 40 minutes. Dianna Agron, however, was less impressive. At first I tended to agree with some critics who wrote that her acting seemed wooden, but her obvious professionalism throughout made me think that this is how she had been asked to portray the character Dahlia who would have fitted nicely into Twin Peaks.

And there was indeed a David Lynch quality about McQueen. The acting was generally pretty good, and I liked Tracy-Ann Oberman’s excellent take on Isabella Blow, though again half the number of words would have got the message across. I particularly liked her wafting around elegantly in the background of the dance sequences and other scenes.
I also have to declare a personal interest in McQueen, the play. My friend Amber Doyle is the dance captain, and I go to her ballet classes, so I was anticipating some excellent dancing. And I was certainly not disappointed. The perfect stylish dancing and choreography was one of the very best things about this show. I also felt that some reviewers were a bit harsh about the actors, particularly Stephen Wight, who I thought did a good job with an unwieldy script.

McQueen’s problem is that it is a hybrid – it’s not a musical, and a contingent in the audience who had come to see Agron based on her performance in Glee must have been disappointed that her only bit of singing is a few snatches of Billy Joel’s ‘Always a woman to me’, a song which I unfortunately associate with the John Lewis ad a few years ago.
McQueen is not a biography either, because it’s highly selective – it misses out important facts about McQueen’s life and influences and half the story is about an imaginary character, or doppleganger. Nor is it a ballet, either although much of the story is told in the dance sequences. All this means reviewers struggle to place it.

McQueen is an entertaining, beautifully staged tribute to a tortured and sadly missed talent and it successfully captures the strange and wonderful world of fashion – its creativity and its cruelty. It’s been described as self-indulgent, but what is fashion – and indeed much art too – if it is not self-indulgent? That’s the beauty of it! If you like fashion and dance, you’ll like McQueen.  I did.
NB, The image, by photographer Sam Mardon, shows the theatre’s special McQueen cocktails. This is because I had asked a contact at the theatre whether it was ok to take photos at any point and was told roundly that anyone with a camera would be escorted out. Having read some mainstream reviews I had considered putting a camera in my bag to facilitate an early exit! I’m glad I didn’t. The photo was taken on an iPhone before the show.

McQueen is at St James Theatre, London until 27 June. https://www.stjamestheatre.co.uk/theatre/mcqueen/


 

 

Thursday, 14 May 2015

Mixed Programme - with a sweet centre



Northern Ballet’s Mixed Programme, Linbury Studio, Royal Opera House



Northern Ballet is known for storytelling, and last night’s programme mostly lived up to this reputation. The Mixed Programme too lived up to its name: the five ballets designed by five choreographers each told a different story. 

Angels in the Architecture – Mark Godden’s Shaker-inspired choreography to Aaron Copeland’s Appalachian Spring (which includes the song ‘Lord of the Dance’) – featured six couples, with brooms and chair as props. The girls’ flowing circle dresses were particularly lovely – pretty, elegant and used to great effect choreographically as the dancers pulled them over their heads in different ways and I loved the creative use of the Shaker chair which had apparently inspired the piece. Personally, I wasn’t too sure about the brooms – I understand the motif, but there were a couple of times where they seemed to confuse the pattern of movement.

Christopher Hampson’s Perpetuum Mobile to Bach’s violin concerto in E Major was a beautiful classical piece which did not have a clear narrative – at least not one that I could discern – but followed the patterns of the music. I liked the way the dancers’ skill and dynamism brought this set piece to life as they leapt joyfully across the stage.

After the first interval, Little Monsters offered a complete change of tone with Dreda Blow and Isaac Lee-Baker doing marvellous things with Demis Volpi’s choreography. This was a fresh, innovative interpretation of Elvis Presley’s music, about as far away stylistically from 1950s cliché as you could get.  I thought it worked perfectly, making the most of the dancers’ exquisite physiques and energy. The theme was a love story, told in three songs, and it was both entertaining and emotive. I can still picture the resonant simplicity of ‘Are you Lonesome Tonight?’ with the two dancers who had been so closely entangled and engrossed with each other in the first two songs – ‘Love me Tender’ and ‘I want you, I need you, I love you’ – standing apart, each in their own spotlight.

A Northern Trilogy was perfect too, in a different way, offering a sensitive and entertaining take on the company’s northern roots, with Jonathan Watkins’ clever and cute interpretation of Stanley Holloway’s monologues, ‘Yorkshire Pudden’, ‘One-Each-A –Piece All Round’ and ‘The Lion and Albert'. As well as the dancers’ accomplished and enthusiastic performance and the straightforward storylines overlaying some deeper themes, the costumes and lighting accentuated the bitter-sweet sentimentality of these pieces. Yorkshire Pudden was lit in a way that suggested a sepia photograph, while the fresh brightness of ‘The Lion and Albert’ evoked images of the mid-20th century seaside holiday and managed to include humour without descending into pantomime.  Everyone in the auditorium was smiling – the programme had been designed with a sweet centre.

The final and most ambitious piece was Kenneth Tindall’s The Architect. This was highly original – and dazzling. I hardly know where to start. It was also the most obscure narrative of the programme, a cryptic version of the biblical creation scene with Adam and Eve – well, multiple Adams and Eves and a few pounds of apples. A beautiful opening sequence with what seemed to be Adam and Eve chasing a single apple set the scene for a dramatic sequence around birth and creation. There then followed a complex sequence involving several apples being passed mouth-to-mouth between the dancers while Adam had his own apple routine. This was certainly different, but I was a bit distracted from the tango-like ambiance by all the apples. In the final sequences a single apple, this time suspended above the dancers, provided a focal point for some clever and quite acrobatic group sequences enhanced by darker lighting design. Personally, I preferred the sections where there was just one apple in play, as it were.

I may have picked at a couple of details, but I was hugely impressed. It was a pretty tall order to create a contemporary ballet that balanced biblical narrative with biological symbolism and it looked amazing and the demanding choreography showcased the dancers’ extreme athleticism and flexibility. It also showed what an excellent company Northern Ballet are, particularly in the group sequences that expanded and contracted around the single, suspended apple. There were also some wonderful partner and individual pieces.

This was my first experience of Northern Ballet and I will definitely find opportunities to see them again. I love their originality, their clear identity and the way their work can be appreciated on multiple levels. I felt that their excellent dancing spoke for itself and didn’t need embellishing with complex staging. Having said that, it would be interesting to see The Architect performed in a bigger space.

Further Reading

10 May 2015  Between Friends - Northern Ballet's Mixed Programme (The Mixed Programme in Leeds)