Dec 292012
 

PC280091 700x260 With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan

After changes of cast, threatened strikes, exor­bit­ant eco­nomic demands from chorus and dan­cers, and a can­celled first night, Sasha Waltz’s bal­let Roméo et Juli­ette finally opened yes­ter­day in .

Let’s start at the begin­ning. A couple of months ago the Teatro alla Scala web­site announced:

Roberto Bolle decided that the rehearsal peri­ods fore­seen would not have been suf­fi­cient to allow him to immerse him­self totally in a new style.

So Aurélie Dupont found that she had her famil­iar part­ner back as was signed up. The couple first danced the work, cre­ated on them for the , back in 2007. Bolle’s fans (i Boller­ini) were reportedly try­ing to off­load their tick­ets online immediately.

Then the chorus asked for a little extra in their wage packet as they were expec­ted to wear a cos­tume and mem­or­ize parts of the music, a bonus that would have cost the theatre 350,000 euros. ’s man­age­ment agreed to give a little extra to the six­teen chorus mem­bers who were required to do a few (hardly notice­able) move­ments, but this wasn’t enough. As the dan­cers also jumped on the band­wagon think­ing that maybe they ought to have a little more cash for dan­cing on a plat­form with a steep rake, the theatre decided to can­cel the open­ing on Decem­ber 19 (which was, bizar­rely, nine days before the sched­uled second per­form­ance). Need­less to say, in times where a third of Itali­ans are liv­ing near the poverty line, and a half of young­sters are out of work, their protest got no sym­pathy what­so­ever in the press.

How­ever this Roméo et Juli­ette is so flimsy and lack­ing in emo­tion, with an extremely lim­ited and con­fused cho­reo­graphic vocab­u­lary, that it may have been wiser to can­cel all the per­form­ances and leave it at that. Waltz made no use of the clas­sical train­ing these dan­cers have, and some of the com­pany obvi­ously have no feel­ing at all for dance theatre. These dan­cers were selec­ted to dance the clas­sical rep­er­tory, and not all are suited such a vastly dif­fer­ent dance style. Mick Zeni’s Friar Laurence, though, was impress­ive, and he obvi­ously has a nat­ural instinct for mod­ern dance which has been wit­nessed many times on this stage in the past.

Aurélie Dupont was con­fid­ent as Juliet, though not very com­mu­nic­at­ive. Hervé Mor­eau gave the out­stand­ing con­tri­bu­tion to the even­ing when he des­per­ately tries to scrabble up an inclined wall and con­tinu­ally falls to its base.  It is a solo without music and was power­ful and real, in con­trast with the super­fi­ci­al­ity of much of the rest.

The music helped save the even­ing with Hec­tor Berlioz’s Dra­matic Sym­phony stir­ringly con­duc­ted by Amer­ican James Con­lon, Music Dir­ector of the  Opera. The sing­ers, who also had cho­reo­graphic ele­ments to per­form, were very fine: mezzo-soprano Eka­ter­ina Semen­chuk, tenor Leonardo Cor­tellazzi, and the bass Nic­olas Cavallier.

The applause was warm for the soloists (dan­cers and sing­ers), but there were vari­ous boos and cries of “No!” when Sasha Waltz came on stage for her cur­tain call. The real tragedy here was not Shakespeare’s story, but how much money — bal­let com­pany, chorus, guest artists, sing­ers — was wasted on some­thing that will be presen­ted only eight times. This pro­duc­tion will surely fade away quickly from the company’s rep­er­toire, much as the applause fizzled out rap­idly after a couple of cur­tain calls.

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  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px With boos among the light applause, Sasha Waltzs Roméo et Juliette finally opens in Milan
Nov 052011
 

Nino Machaidze The opera worlds Angelina Jolie, Nino Machaidze:  Its useless to be nervousNino Machaidze, the 28-year-old sop­rano from Geor­gia, gradu­ate of ’s Teatro alla Scala Aca­demia, is in with Romeo and Juliet which is boom­er­anging her around the world’s opera houses for the last few years. The first four years of her pro­fes­sional career have been highly suc­cess­ful, and the LA Times recounts how she was thrust so sud­denly into the spotlight:

In Janu­ary 2005, ’s pro­duc­tion of Gounod’s “Romeo and Juliet” helped cata­pult into oper­atic super­star­dom young sing­ers Anna Net­rebko and Rolando Villazón. Soon these two were head­lining at major houses and in 2008 were set to re-create their L.A. roles with a highly anti­cip­ated new pro­duc­tion at the — until Net­rebko dropped out due to a much pub­li­cized preg­nancy.… [con­tinue reading]

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Oct 012011
 

DArcangelo 2011 Ildebrando DArcangelo talks to the LA Times about hunkdom, acting, comedy and future rolesIldebrando D’Arcangelo is in the City of Angels appear­ing in “” at the Los Angeles Opera. The bass-baritone “pro­jects a swag­ger­ing con­fid­ence and dan­ger­ous sex appeal” says the Los Angeles Times, acquir­ing “fans around the world as much for his voice as for his model looks”. He appears tall on stage because of his pro­por­tions, but face-to-face while he’s not petite, he’s not a hunk either; the bari-hunk label is one he, unsur­pris­ingly, doesn’t much like:

To be hon­est, I’m uncom­fort­able. I appre­ci­ate it if people say some­thing about look­ing good. In opera, if you see a beau­ti­ful per­son, it helps. But for me, hon­estly, I never thought about it,”

he said in a recent interview.

Artistic dir­ect­ors of com­pan­ies try to clas­sify sing­ers, it makes life easier for them.… [con­tinue reading]

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Sep 272011
 

Opera audi­ences are used to see­ing per­form­ances awash in spec­tacle. But they rarely get to glimpse the magic that occurs between shows — namely, “the changeover,” when one pro­duc­tion is taken down and another takes its place. “It’s like work­ing a huge jig­saw puzzle,” says Rupert Hem­mings, dir­ector of pro­duc­tion at Opera. “It may seem haphaz­ard, but everything’s done in order.”

On this Times video, you can watch the com­pany make the switch between its cur­rent offer­ings — Mozart’s “Cosi fan Tutte” and ’s “,” which con­tinue through Oct. 9.  Neither of the impor­ted pro­duc­tions is “overly scenery-heavy,” says Hem­mings, so “it’s a medium-sized change.” Even so, the pro­cess requires 4 1/2 hours and 45 car­penters, elec­tri­cians and sound and prop people.… [con­tinue reading]

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