Aug 072012
 

Cragun Haydee The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67, one of the most import­ant dan­cers of the 20th cen­tury has died at 67. His legendary part­ner­ship with , the ground-breaking work at Stut­tgart Bal­let with , and his beauty and virile strength as a dan­cer, will earn him a per­men­ant place in dance history.

Yes­ter­day, August 6, he suffered a seizure triggered by a lung infec­tion, and died in Rio de Janeiro soon after being admit­ted to hos­pital. His ex-partner in life and in dance, Mar­cia Hay­dée, said,

Richard was one of the best dan­cers in the world. Even after our sep­ar­a­tion, we were the best of friends; I could call him anytime.

He was born in Cali­for­nia in 1944. He stud­ied tap-dance and bal­let but also atten­ded the Banff School of Fine Arts in Canada, and he con­tin­ued to draw all his life. Cra­gun went to the in Lon­don and com­pleted his stud­ies in Copen­ha­gen where he spent a year as a private pupil of Vera Volkova.

In 1962 he made the most import­ant decision of his career and joined the Stut­tgart Bal­let, and in 1965 he was pro­moted to prin­cipal dan­cer. It was here that his 30-year part­ner­ship with Mar­cia Hay­dée star­ted, though he also partnered Fon­teyn and most other lead­ing baller­inas of the day. Cra­gun was a hand­some man on-stage and off , and when he cre­ated Petruchio for Cranko in 1969 in  the role fit­ted him like a glove.

He retired from the stage in 1996, and after three years as bal­let dir­ector at Berlin’s Deutsche Oper he moved with his part­ner, Brazilian cho­reo­grapher Roberto de Oli­veira, to Rio de Janeiro. Here they launched DeAn­ima Bal­let Con­tem­porâneo for young­sters from the black slums.

Cra­gun had been ill for some time after hav­ing a stroke in 2005, and com­plic­a­tions with the drug cock­tail which allowed him to live with AIDS.

His younger brother Lawrence said,

Rich was very talk­at­ive and cre­at­ive. He was always down to earth and never had a big ego. He was always look­ing to help people.

Richard Cra­gun leaves his part­ner with whom he has lived the past 14 years. He will be cremated tomorrow.

Richard Cragun today The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67

Career:

He was noted for his inter­pret­a­tions of Romeo and One­gin in Cranko’s sta­gings and cre­ated many roles for Cranko, includ­ing parts in L’estro armonico (1963), Opus 1 (1965), Moz­art Con­certo (1966), Présence (1968), Tam­ing of the Shrew (1969, the role of Petruchio), Brouil­lards (1970), Poème de l’extase (1970), Car­men (1971), Ini­tials R.B.M.E. (1972), and Traces (1973).

He also cre­ated roles in Peter Wright’sThe Mir­ror Walk­ers (1963), MacMillan’s Song of the Earth (1965), Requiem (1977), and My Brother, My Sis­ters (1978), Tetley’s Vol­un­tar­ies (1973) and Daph­nis and Chloé (1975), Neumeier’s Lady of the Camel­lias (1978) and A Street­car Named Desire (1983), which show­cased his endur­ing part­ner­ship with Hay­dée, Forsythe’s Orph­eus (1979), and Kylián’s For­got­ten Land (1981).

Cra­gun also cre­ated roles in bal­lets by Béjart, includ­ing La Danse (1983) and Oper­ette(1985).

In 1990 he starred in the Stut­tgart revival of the Broad­way musical On Your Toes. He retired from the stage in 1996 and was appoin­ted artistic dir­ector of the Ber­lin Opera Bal­let. He left Ber­lin in 1999 to start a new bal­let com­pany in the Brazilian city of Curitiba.

Obit­u­ar­ies:

New York Times - Richard Cra­gun, Stut­tgart Bal­let Dan­cer, Dies at 67
The Tele­graph —  Richard Cra­gun
The Guard­ian — Richard Cra­gun obit­u­ary
The Sac­ra­mento Bee - Obit­u­ary: Sac­ra­mento nat­ive Richard Cra­gun found inter­na­tional fame as bal­let dancer

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  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px The Ballet world loses a Prince: Richard Cragun dies at 67
Jul 302012
 

Schaufuss Tchaikovsky Trilogy Critics round up: Peter Schaufuss Tchaikovsky TrilogyThis prom­ises to be the most fun crit­ics round-up yet. Rarely have reviews been so unan­im­ously foul. Being that there was so little to save, the crit­ics left their stars in the drawer, and pol­ished their meta­phors with seem­ing glee.

No amount of spe­cial plead­ing, of aes­thetic jiggery-pokery, can excuse Schaufuss’s weird lib­retto as it plays its fatu­ous game by way of crass mickey-mousing and dis­mal romp­ing to Tchaikovsky’s ardours.

is Clem­ent Crisp’s response in The Fin­an­cial Times to Peter Schau­fuss’ pro­posal to link three Tchaikovsky bal­lets together as dreams within dreams: A Night­mare (), A ­Sen­sual Awaken­ing (Sleep­ing Beauty) and A Happy Dream ().

Pyotr Ilyich must be revolving in his grave,

remarked in The Sunday Times.… [con­tinue reading]

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Feb 202012
 

ELIZABETH CONNELL COL CCLIVE BARDA South African soprano Elizabeth Connell dies at 65Eliza­beth Con­nell, who died of can­cer on Feb­ru­ary 18 at the age of 65, was “a ded­ic­ated artist with a pop­u­lar fol­low­ing who paced her career to per­fec­tion”, said The Guard­ian. Born in Port Eliza­beth, South Africa, she stud­ied in Bri­tain at the Lon­don Opera Centre and made her debut as a mezzo-soprano at Wex­ford as Var­vara in Kát’a Kaban­ová in 1972.

Con­nell was acclaimed for her per­form­ances of the great Strauss, Verdi and Wag­ner heroines. Fol­low­ing her debut at Wex­ford Opera Fest­ival in 1972, she sang at the open­ing of the Sydney Opera House in Prokofiev’s War and Peace in 1973, and con­tin­ued to have a spe­cial rela­tion­ship with Opera Aus­tralia.  Fol­low­ing a five-year asso­ci­ation with Eng­lish National Opera, she was a freel­ance artist with the major opera houses.[con­tinue reading]

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Feb 122012
 

Whitney Houston 2011 Whitney Houston, queen of pop, is found dead at 48Few pop sing­ers have been gif­ted with a voice as glor­i­ous as Whit­ney Houston’s, and even fewer have treated their tal­ent with the frus­trat­ing indif­fer­ence she did toward the end of her life. She sold more records and received more awards than almost any other female pop star of the 20th cen­tury, but spent most of her last years mired in a drug addic­tion that sapped her will to sing and left her in a sham­bolic state, said The Guard­ian’s obit­u­ary.

Con­vinced that she had what it took to be a block­bust­ing star, Arista’s influ­en­tial pres­id­ent, Clive Davis, per­son­ally over­saw the record­ing of her first album. He also turned up with her in 1983 on the Merv Griffin chat show, where she was intro­duced to the Amer­ican pub­lic. … [con­tinue reading]

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Dec 292011
 

The Virgin and Child With Saint Anne Louvres art experts protest at overcleaned Da Vinci painting by resigningThe Louvre is facing accus­a­tions that it overcleaned a mas­ter­piece by , leav­ing it with a bright­ness that the Renais­sance mas­ter never inten­ded, repor­ted .

Two of France’s top art experts have voiced their protest over the clean­ing of The Vir­gin and Child with Saint Anne – a jewel of west­ern art – by resign­ing from the Paris museum’s advis­ory com­mit­tee respons­ible for its “res­tor­a­tion”, the Guard­ian has learned.

Such was their con­cern for the 500-year-old paint­ing that Ségolèné Ber­geon Langle and Jean-Pierre Cuzin – emin­ent former spe­cial­ists in con­ser­va­tion and paint­ing respect­ively at the Louvre – could no longer asso­ci­ate them­selves with its treatment.

Ber­geon Langle is regarded as France’s national author­ity on the art and the sci­ence of restor­ing paint­ings.… [con­tinue reading]

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Dec 162011
 

Car­los Acosta has writ­ten a novel, set in Cuba, and includes a sec­tion set duing the 1950s revolu­tion. It will be pub­lished by Blooms­bury in 2013.

Bill Swain­son, senior com­mis­sion­ing editor at Blooms­bury, described Acosta’s fic­tion debut as “a bold, earthy and ima­gin­at­ive novel, packed with won­der­ful char­ac­ters and the sights, sounds and smells of the island, reports .

“It has extraordin­ary twists of plot, fas­cin­at­ing insights into Cuba’s his­tory, and is writ­ten in a voice that is warm, funny, intim­ate and con­vin­cing. Car­los Acosta has a real gift.”

via guardian.co.uk[con­tinue reading]

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Oct 312011
 

Some dan­cers have a defin­ing attrib­ute: ’s ear-high exten­sions, ’s airy del­ic­acy, ’s enorm­ous jump. But what makes Cuth­bertson spe­cial is more to do with the qual­ity of her pres­ence. Her per­form­ances are very per­sonal: you never see a cliched ges­ture or a “bal­let dan­cer expres­sion”. Even in abstract work, her dan­cing is pecu­li­arly spon­tan­eous, trans­par­ent in its lack of rhet­oric or airs.

via The Guard­ian[con­tinue reading]

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