NYC Ballet - Baiser de la Fee, Tschai Pas, Bal de Couture and Diamonds
The New York City Ballet winter season is in full swing, and I took in my first ballet of the season on Saturday night.
First up in the mixed repertoire, Tschaikovsky Celebration
evening was Divertimento from “Le Baiser
de la Fee,” a George Balanchine
ballet set to an Igor Stravinsky composition. (Divertimento was the only piece in the Tschaikovsky Celebration
that was not set to Tschaikovsky’s music.) As the repertory notes explain, the
music and dance can be traced back to the 1937 Balanchine work The Fairy’s Kiss (a.k.a., Le Baiser de la Fee). Portions were
excerpted for a Stravinsky festival in the 70s and later a final movement was
added. That final movement is Divertimento.
The ballet begins with several corps de ballet members and
is rather unappealing, but soon enough we move into the pas de deux (between
principal dancers (and real life married couple) Megan Fairchild and Andrew
Veyette) and that’s where things become more interesting. Fairchild looks like
she’s in a reverie – which will be broken in the final movement – flitting around
the stage with her beau. Next Fairchild and Veyette take turns stretching all
over the stage with their leaps, each time trying to get closer to one another.
Bringing Divertimento
to a close is a somber final movement. It’s heavier than the rest of the light
piece, yet still lovely. All in all, though, Divertimento didn’t stir anything in me. It’s pleasant but
forgettable.
Completely unforgettable is the Tschaikovsky Pas de Deux, an eight minute tour-de-force featuring
Tiler Peck and Joaquin De Luz.
Perhaps one of the things I liked the most was how it
reminded me of Aaron Sorkin’s writing. (Stay with me.) Like Sorkinese,
Balanchine’s ballet is fast, furious and precise, and punctuated with momentary
changes in pace for emphasis.
De Luz was good, and his turns amazing, though I would have
liked to have seen Jonathan Stafford or one of the Angle brothers (Jared or
Tyler) dance the role because there are some serious jumps in this ballet and
those three are leapers.
Tiler Peck, though, impressed like never before, exhibiting
signature NYC Ballet feverishly fast footwork throughout her solo passages. Watch
below as Peck talks about dancing this difficult but dynamite ballet.
After an intermission, we were treated to Peter Martins’s Bal de Couture, which premiered in
September at the Fall Gala. Once again, the gorgeous Valentino costumes
thrilled, and, since I was sitting much closer on Saturday night than I was in
September, I noticed details in the frocks I hadn’t seen before. Aside from
being able to see the structural designs of the dresses better, I also noticed
that the ladies in black and white were split into two groups: those with fuchsia
crinoline and pointe shoes and those with red. (Before, I thought they were all
red.)
The cast was nearly the same as at the Fall Gala (Savannah
Lowery danced in place of Maria Kowroski and Adrian Danchig-Waring danced in
place of Jonathan Stafford) and it was just as delightful on the second
viewing.
Completing the evening was Diamonds, one of the three pieces that makes up the full-length
Balanchine ballet Jewels. Despite the
sparkle of the crystals adorning the bejeweled costumes and set, Diamonds is rather lackluster, eliciting
excitement only here and there. (I had a similar reaction the first time I saw Jewels.) Maria Kowroski and Tyler Angle
(who have been partnering frequently these days) do fine work, but it just isn’t
evocative and strikes me as a ballet meant for display not necessarily
consumption.
New York City Ballet’s
winter season continues through February and includes a world premiere Justin
Peck ballet. Visit nycballet.com for information and to purchase tickets.
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