Jul 232012
 

Roberto bolle 2 Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in VeronaTonight Verona’s fam­ous Arena is sold out. All 15,000 seats will be full to watch Roberto Bolle and his ‘friends’ dance in the open air. It is a magical place.

’s Il Sole 24 Ore (the equi­val­ent of the Fin­an­cial Times, and the same col­our) spoke to him. Unfor­tu­nately half of these inter­views are always taken up with the same ques­tions, but as we know that dan­cers don’t eat a five-course meal before a show, and need to do reg­u­lar phys­ical exer­cise, let’s skip on.

Are the emo­tions always there?

They were there when I did the end of term shows, and they’re still there today. Now there’s less fear and more under­stand­ing: I’ve been on many stages, so now I have the con­fid­ence that you can only have after years of exper­i­ence. But the emo­tion is always present: if I lost that the pub­lic would know and it wouldn’t make sense to con­tinue dancing.

In 2008 there was the first “Roberto Bolle and Friends” often in places where dance is sel­dom seen, and you’ve been fol­lowed by an audi­ence of thou­sands… Now the Arena of Verona.

I am par­tic­u­larly excited to dance in the Arena. This year I have at my side some very spe­cial guests, like Alina Cjocaru and Johan Kob­borg, both Prin­cipals at the in Lon­don; then an Etoile from the , Alina Somova; Alex­an­der Jones, who is a Prin­cipal at the Stut­tgart Bal­let; Dinu Tamazlacaru with are here for the  pas de deux, then there will be solos, and also mod­ern and con­tem­por­ary cho­reo­graph­ers, so that even dance new­bies can drawn toward this art form and exper­i­ence its dif­fer­ent genres and pos­sib­il­it­ies from the outset.

In this period, in addi­tion to the Gala, there is also a sum­mer tour “Roberto Bolle: Twen­ti­eth Cen­tury Trip­tych” with cho­reo­graphy by Bal­anchine, Kylián and Petit.

This year I want to make a break with the past: I want to pro­voke more than usual, I want to bring joy to the audi­ence, but also give a strong con­trast of emo­tions. For bet­ter or for worse, I want to con­tinue telling pas­sion­ate stor­ies of love, con­flict, mis­un­der­stand­ings and justice, in dance form.

Photo by Lucy Keat­ing (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wiki­me­dia Commons

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  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in Verona
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in Verona
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in Verona
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in Verona
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in Verona
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in Verona
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in Verona
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Tonight Roberto Bolle and Friends alight at the 15,000 seater Roman Arena in Verona
May 262011
 

Four per­form­ances of Romeo and Juliet might not sound much, but if you’re per­form­ing them at London’s O2 Arena that means you need to sell an awful lot of tick­ets — think of it as an equi­val­ent of 40 nights at the .

Bal­let fans alone won’t fill it, neither will curi­ous tour­ists who want to see the dome from the inside. A new audi­ence needs to be seduced, so , a first soloist with the com­pany, has put together a cool video which gives a great sound­ing and eye-catching mod­ern slant to a 400 year-old story told with pointe shoes!

If you fancy a great night out and want to wit­ness a unique event — ad some pretty good dan­cers — book now.… [con­tinue reading]

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Dec 052010
 

Luke Jen­nings’ inter­view with is pub­lished today.

“I’ve spent my whole life try­ing to under­stand love,” Rojo tells me, with a self-deprecating smile. She’s come straight from rehearsal, and is dressed in func­tional warm-down gear, and the first thing you notice is that she’s got none of the art­ful, almost sub­con­scious affect­a­tion of most star dan­cers. She looks like a real woman, with curves that hint at an appet­ite for the good things in life, and dark, enga­ging eyes. It’s this authen­tic, groun­ded nature that makes her the pre-eminent dance-actress of her day. On stage, you see a woman dan­cing, not a dan­cer “being” a woman.

Rojo has been a Royal Bal­let prin­cipal for a dec­ade now, and shares top star billing with the Romanian-born Alina Cojocaru.… [con­tinue reading]

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Nov 262010
 

Ok, maybe he’s going a bit over the top, but being that there are more than 20,000 seats to shift for each per­form­ance Ray­mond Gub­bay needs to pull out all the stops.

The Royal Bal­let is thrilled to announce that it will dance a spe­cially pro­duced pro­duc­tion of Romeo and Juliet at The in June 2011.

reads the press release.

It will be the first time the world-renowned bal­let com­pany has danced in a UK arena and, in order to fully cel­eb­rate the occa­sion, there will be up to 2000 specially-priced £10 tick­ets at every per­form­ance. An all star cast of Royal Bal­let dan­cers includ­ing , Tamara Rojo, Alina Cojocaru, Johan Kob­borg, Edward Wat­son and will dance the roles of the fam­ous star­crossed lov­ers for five shows, which will include a schools mat­inée.… [con­tinue reading]

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