NYCB: Spectral Evidence; Soiree Musicale; and Namouna
For my final ballet of New York City Ballet’s fall season, I attended a mixed repertory program that included three ballets I had seen already, but from a different perspective.
First up was the new Angelin Preljocaj, Spectral Evidence. This premiered just last month at the fall gala,
and features costumes by designer Olivier Theyskens. As previously noted,
Preljocaj was inspired by the Salem witch trials, but this isn’t nearly a
linear story ballet. I did not fully appreciate it at the gala, mostly because
I was seated in the “arm” of the fourth ring, giving me only a partial view of
the stage. On Saturday afternoon I was in the orchestra.
I get it this time. It’s a hunt. There are pursuers and the
pursued, and the roles keep changing. The music and choreography have a tribal
feel, which is appropriate for the hunt theme. The “breathing passage” is the
seduction, and it’s all quite powerful. (The music, including some with vocals,
is all from John Cage’s catalog.)
Though the men may, at times, seem to have some sort of
parochial or patriarchal control, the women are in charge and own their power. At
its core, Preljocaj’s ballet is a display of stunning modern dance, mixing a
majority of modern dance moves (along with tai chi) and sprinklings of
classical ballet language.
The cast here was the same as on the premiere night: Tiler
Peck and Robert Fairchild backed by Megan Fairchild, Adrian Danchig-Waring,
Georgina Pazcoguin, Amar Ramasar, Gretchen Smith and Taylor Stanley. (Ramasar
and Danchig-Waring have particularly tribal sections and they rise to the
challenge.) Robert Fairchild and Tiler Peck are incredible. Their pas de deux
is intense and precise, and they both are entirely in the moment throughout. What
a difference a different view makes.
Next was Soiree Musicale, a Christopher Wheeldon ballet that I saw when it had its NYCB premiere at thespring gala. As with my first viewing of Spectral Evidence, at the spring gala I had partial view seats. Not so this time.
Next was Soiree Musicale, a Christopher Wheeldon ballet that I saw when it had its NYCB premiere at thespring gala. As with my first viewing of Spectral Evidence, at the spring gala I had partial view seats. Not so this time.
Soiree Musicale is
like looking in on scenes from a prom (or the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance,
if you prefer). The “Waltz” and “Two Step” movements (that would be the first
and fourth movements) are group dances. For the “Scottische,” there are, of
course, two women (Kristen Segin and Indiana Woodward) fighting over the same
man. Well, the same men, as it happens. It’s lighthearted and rather humorous.
In the “Tango,” all the men vie for the prom queen’s
attention, the prom queen being danced with zeal by a captivating Brittany
Pollack. She entreats them to follow her around the stage, bringing them under her
spell along the way. The penultimate movement is the lovely “Pas de Deux” in
which the high school sweethearts (Lauren Lovette and Zachary Catazaro, both
impressive) fall in love. The prom ends with the “Finale” recapping all the
fun from the rite of passage.
Yes, it’s safe, especially for Wheeldon (After the Rain, Polyphonia), and no, it doesn’t
break any new ground. But it’s light and whimsical and it concludes with an gleeful
flourish.
Bringing the season to a close (for me) was the Alexei
Ratmansky ballet Namouna, A Grand
Divertissement. Now, the first time I saw this I had a perfectly good view
(I was sitting in one of my favorite spots in the fourth ring, center section),
but I just didn’t like it. Seeing it for the second time was different. I had a
better experience being prepared for something a little odd.
The basic story is timeless: boy sees girl and spends the
rest of his time trying to find and be with her. There are obstacles along the
way, like a smoking—not because she’s on fire but because she’s smoking a
cigarette—Ashley Bouder, and a trio of misfits (it would seem) in Abi Stafford,
Daniel Ulbricht and Megan Fairchild. Sara Mearns also gets in on the action and
is at her fiercest in some sort of divertissement/distraction. When he finally
gets the girl, Robert Fairchild dances a glorious pas de deux with Rebecca
Krohn.
The costumes (by Marc Happel and Rustam Khamdamov) are still
jarringly weird and not everything is cohesive and makes sense. But if you’re
prepared for an oddball presentation of a story, the actual dancing will
satisfy. (And it the score, Edouard Lalo’s “Namouna,” is pretty great.)
So that’s it for the fall season at New York City Ballet.
The Company will be back with The
Nutcracker this November and December, and then, soon enough, the winter
season, spanning January-March 2014, will be upon us. Visit nycballet.com for
more information and to purchase tickets. (Spectral
Evidence will reappear in February.)
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