QUOTE (Watermill @ Oct 12 2004, 06:36 PM)
A brilliant technician with a lot of soul.
What a perfect description of Poretta, Watermill! (I loved your review!)
I think the only lead cast members we saw in common were Cotton in the
Swan Lake pas de trois and Taylor in the Russian solo. I agree with all of your general impressions but one: I felt that the tempo of
Concerto Barocco was too slow in the first and third movements in the second performance, and that the corps had difficulty sustaining the energy that they were clearly and valiantly trying to ignite and re-ignite. (It's very possible that the orchestra was given a "slow-down" order after Opening Night and that the tempi differed.) Which was frustrating, too, because as the playing was rich and gorgeous, with the superb soloists, Margaret Bicheler and Lorely Zgonc (concertmaster), alternately blending into and riding the wave of the ensemble. The corps in
Barocco was nearly the same, with Ansa Desguchi replacing Tracy Taylor on Sunday. I agree wholeheartedly that this is a Balanchine work that is well within the capability of OBT, and I hope it is performed frequently in the repertory. It alone was worth the trip.
The women principals were Gavin Larsen and Anne Mueller, with Larsen partnered by Matthew Boyes in the second movement. Larsen gave a quiet, but breathtaking performance, with clear, unaffected movement and positions in the first and third movements, and endless legato phrasing in the central pas de deux. Her arabesque was like a harp. By contrast, Anne Mueller's movement was a bit forced and her energy was a bit frenetic; her technique is a little fussy, and some of her movement seems disproportionate.
On the other hand, when Mueller was teamed with Larsen and Kester Cotton in the
Swan Lake pas de trois, I so much preferred her energy, spark, and the amount of space she took up, and I really loved her in the part; she was one of the
Swan Lake highlights for me. Cotton's dancing in the pas de trois was a revelation: physically, his limbs are very much like Boal's, and while he's a different dancer, like Boal he has very clean and clear movement, with wonderful turnout, and a beautifully pliant plie. What was best, though, was his inflections throughout, infusing the piece with character, yet remaining classical. Throughout the piece I thought of the "minstral" pas de trois in
Chaconne, in which I think he'd be perfect.
I agree that the "courtiers" who appear at the beginning of
Swan Lake were so out of their element; they really looked like kids trying to be grown up. (Or Americans trying to be Royal.) The music is so grand, and they looked a bit awkward, which wasn't helped by how cramped the stage was. I was extremely impressed by the dramatic details in this production, particularly in the use of the music. There was particularly grand music at the entrance of the Russian dancer, and Tracy Taylor made a suitably grand entrance, but the audience didn't bite and take their cue to applaud!
The big dramatic insertion was a pas de deux for Odile and Prince Siegfried after Odile's and von Rothbart's entrance, which is ostensibly to remind the Prince how he met and fell in love with Odette, so he can reconcile this brilliant creature to the Swan Queen of the night before, but gives the audience context for Act III. The transition is brilliant: Odile performs a solo, at the end of which she lightly, quickly, but very suggestively touches her upper arm. The lights go down around the courtiers and the sides of the stage, leaving only the center of the stage illuminated. Odile and the Prince dance a very lovely pas de deux, I believe to the music from the Fourth Act pas de deux. It has some wonderful touches: at the end when he lifts her and carries her in a small circle, she, out of sight from him, moves her upper body in an Odile-like fashion, showing herself to be the sharpy that she is. At the very end, she repeats the suggestive movement on her arm, and "poof," the lights are up and the party continues.
A prolonged dramatic bit was played by the fiances. The dance of the fiancees starts out with three women, all dressed alike, but dramatically, each with her own personality. These were not genero-corps fiances: each implied through her head and shoulders that
she was Princess Right. Partway through there dance was a fanfare, and three more fiances entered from upstage, with reactions between both of the groups. (Suddenly, the first three, once rivals, were allies against the invaders!) Yet so much was done by posture and gesture, not by facial mugging, that it was never over-the-top. Later, when Odile appeared, they saw what was happening, and they knew she was bad news. But they were vivid enough that Odile had to give them several glowering glances, because they looked like they were going to give her up somehow. This wasn't a conceit, because the production emphasized Siegfried's confusion--more than usual he was about to commit, but doubts held him back each time, which made it really effective when he finally pledged himself to Odile. It almost seemed as if he was going to get away without making the fatal mistake. (So cruel!)
Alison Roper's Odile reminded me of Robert La Fosse's comment in his autobiography about how surprised he was at how independent the women at NYCB were than at ABT, who relied on their partners for a lot more support. Roper has long, beautiful legs -- a lot like Nichols: muscular without marring the line -- and wonderful feet. Her arms were terrific, too. As Odile, when she went into a penche, she was
going, whether or not he was ready. This played beautifully into the character, because he wanted her so much, he had to follow her, no matter how dangerous. And it showed an Odile that had to be reminded now and again that she was playing a character, because she was so enjoying playing him for a fool. I loved watching her
move.
Her fool was danced by Artur Sultanov. He's got wonderful limbs, a long line, and superb acting and mime ability. In presenting his mother and seating her in her throne, his understated gestures personified Prince. The partnering looked very smooth. I've seen him dance beautifully, but his solo dancing on Sunday was disappointing enough that I wondered if he was okay. (If he were a figure skater under the new Code of Points, his double tours and other jumping turns would have been called "underrotated.") His solo in the pas de deux was to the first variation in the original Black Swan pdd music used by Balanchine in
Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux. His ability to act, though, made the Prince's dilemma real, and that, to me, is more important than the fancy dancing in this ballet.
The pictures in the program aren't helping me much, but I think I've got this down to process of elimination: Daniela Martin danced in one of the Spanish couples, and her combination of controlled gesture and stillness in the rest of her body gave it a true flavor, yet remained balletic at the same time. Ansa Deguchi was very light and airy in the Neopolitan in contrast to Griffin Whiting's energetic dancing. Tracy Taylor was lovely as the Russian, but the stage was too cramped, since there was some business with two students and a big white scarf that spanned the width of the empty space on stage. Apart from some fine character expression by Matthew Boyes, the whole czardas look like an attempt not to step on anyone else, hard with five couples and a bit of stomping.
Orpheus Portrait was the middle work, danced by Kathi Martuza and Paul de Strooper. It was very well danced, and the death of Euridyce and Orpheus' attempt to bring her back from the underworld were quite lovely. I have a bit of a philosophical problem with it, though, because to me, the pathos of the story is the interference of powerful outsiders on their relationship, all of whom are stripped away in this retelling. However, the ending is wonderfully Wagnerian: if Wagner had composed
King Arthur instead of
The Ring of the Nibulungen, this would have been the final scene in which the sword is returned to the Lady of the Lake, and she floats away with it.
From what I could see, Keller Auditorium was packed on Sunday, and the crowd very enthusiastic. That was very heartening, after the few people who saw the spring program matinee at a much smaller theater. Christopher Stowell again spoke before the performance, urging donations for the live music fund to support live music for the other half of the year. In my opinion, the OBT orchestra is worth the investment, and so is the Company. The Company may have skipped the "arrived" part, because in this rep program, I think they are there.