May 142013
 

Francesco Ventriglia 332x500 Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in FlorenceAddio to Mag­gi­oDanza, the bal­let com­pany formed in 1967 under the aus­pices of the ’s Mag­gio Musicale Fiorentino.

A fin­an­cial crisis has res­ul­ted in the decision to axe the bal­let com­pany,  and cut the num­ber of tech­nical and admin­is­trat­ive staff, tak­ing the num­ber of wage pack­ets from 346 to 273. Chorus and orches­tra are saved how­ever, with the chorus los­ing two mem­bers who are retir­ing, and the orches­tra gain­ing three mem­bers tak­ing its num­ber to 96. The cre­at­ive work­shops will be closed and future pro­duc­tions will be made off site or hired in. The run­ning costs of 18 mil­lion euros each year to pay the staff can­not be sustained.

The bal­let com­pany had already been stream­lined to 16 ele­ments over the last few years, and after Vladi­mir Derevi­anko left the dir­ec­tion of the com­pany in 2010 it has been on shaky ground. Although is alive with the hashtag #giule­man­id­al­ladanza (#leavedancealone), many are coun­ter­act­ing with com­ments about the waste­ful admin­is­tra­tion, appoint­ments based on friend­ship or polit­ics and not merit, and remem­ber­ing some neg­at­ive press over the last years by crit­ics. The com­pany is now dir­ec­ted by the young cho­reo­grapher Francesco Ventriglia, ex–ballerino from the company.

Francesco Bian­chi, who heads the spe­cial com­mis­sion brought in to sort out the mess, stated,

For me it is with great regret that we must deal this blow to an artistic body that has an import­ant his­tory and tra­di­tion for dance and for Florence. The decision to close the com­pany is motiv­ated purely by eco­nomic motives and not artistic ones; Ventriglia has worked hard to give the com­pany a strong pro­file, nation­ally and internationally.

Uni­ons are obvi­ously up in arms, and are meet­ing with the com­mis­sion this after­noon. Bian­chi added,

Per­haps few people real­ise the ser­i­ous­ness of the situ­ation, even the uni­ons. We are 35 mil­lion in debt; this debt needs to be repaid. 20 mil­lion are debts with the banks who have blocked any fur­ther credit, and we have no money. If noth­ing is done imme­di­ately then the whole of the Mag­gio Musicale has no future.

The great Italian baller­ina , who is Head of Cul­ture for the Province of Florence, said,

I have danced many times in pres­ti­gi­ous pro­duc­tions for the Mag­gio Musicale Fiorentino, and the news of the clos­ure of Mag­gi­oDanza pains me greatly, because neither the work­ers in the theatre — espe­cially the dan­cers — nor the city of Florence merit such punishment.

I would have liked to have seen greater solid­ar­ity on the part of the chorus, orches­tra and other sec­tors of the theatre in sup­port of the dan­cers, but unfor­tu­nately this seems to have not occurred. It is ironic that this cut has hit dance harder than other areas when dance is the most pop­u­lar art form with the Italian pub­lic at this time.

Photo: Fancesco Ventriglia

Share
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in Florence
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in Florence
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in Florence
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in Florence
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in Florence
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in Florence
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in Florence
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Culture crash: MaggioDanza ballet company axed in Florence
Feb 282012
 

Balanchine fish dinner Bodies Never Lie introduces the Ballet Cookbook Dinner Series, starting with Mr B.

Bod­ies Never Lie, “A blog about dance in ”, has star­ted an intriguing new series of posts, kick­ing off with Eat­ing George Bal­anchine: The First Install­ment of the Bal­let Cook­book Din­ner Series.

Here is how blog­ger Ryan Wen­zel intro­duces his superb idea:

As both a bal­letomane and a bib­li­o­phile, I had little choice but to pur­chase The Bal­let Cook Book, by former baller­ina Tana­quil Le Clercq. Although out of print for dec­ades, the book has become legendary in dance circles. Cop­ies are like gold dust, but after a pro­longed online search I suc­ceeded in find­ing one for the rel­at­ively low price of $80.

Paging through it for the first time, it was clear the book was worth every cent.… [con­tinue reading]

Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • StumbleUpon
  • Email
  • RSS
Jan 252012
 

Sergei Polunin in The Sleeping Beauty photo by Johan Persson 500x439 Young ballet star Sergei Polunins shock resignation from the Royal BalletIt was with con­sid­er­able sur­prise that the bal­let world received the news of the depar­ture of 21-year-old Ukrain­ian from the . He was pro­moted to prin­cipal just two years ago, and was mak­ing leaps for­ward in his career with the com­pany, includ­ing the recent live relay of The Sleep­ing Beauty with his ‘part­ner’ .

Polunin was due to appear in The Dream next week and had given no indic­a­tion in rehears­als that any­thing was amiss, said The Tele­graph, but told Royal Bal­let dir­ector Dame Mon­ica Mason today of his decision to quit.

2 hours ago on his account, @sergei_polunin, he wrote,

Just have to go through one night!!! then will make my next moves.

[con­tinue reading]

Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • StumbleUpon
  • Email
  • RSS
Nov 172011
 

Cuba by @DavidHallberg2 700x525 Q&As with David Hallberg:  I first became obsessed with Fred Astaire, and then started tap lessons

’s fam­ily come from Fort Wayne, and in anti­cip­a­tion of Sunday’s relay of the Bolshoi’s , which marks his début with the com­pany, he answered ques­tions from the town’s News-Sentinel:

How much time have you spent in Fort Wayne, and what memor­ies do you have of it?

I spent a good part of my child­hood in Fort Wayne. I remem­ber vividly spend­ing a lot of time with fam­ily, in their respect­ive neigh­bor­hoods. And I still visit when I have the chance. Obvi­ously, my “hangouts” have changed from the coun­try club pool as a child to now spend­ing time at Club Soda, where my cousin is a bartender.

Fort Wayne has always been about fam­ily for me.… [con­tinue reading]

Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • StumbleUpon
  • Email
  • RSS
Oct 262011
 

Anthony Neilson, dir­ector of the much dis­cussed rivival of Marat/Sade, voices his opin­ion in ’s theatre blog:

If a reviewer should deem a pro­duc­tion a fail­ure, so be it. But at least start from the pre­sump­tion of pur­pose; dis­cuss the ideas. And this has been the rev­el­a­tion for me, as a rel­at­ive lud­dite, from this small fuss. There is now more insight to be had, in aggreg­ate, from than from our print media; and indis­put­ably more depth to be found in blogs writ­ten from pas­sion, and in reflec­tion. It is a small cul­tural revolu­tion and – like all revolu­tions – it looks like a good thing. For now.

via The Guard­ian[con­tinue reading]

Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • StumbleUpon
  • Email
  • RSS
Sep 212011
 

“The word is out. I will be join­ing the Bolshoi as a premier, mark­ing an import­ant step in my career and the Bolshoi’s his­tory. It has been and will be an unfor­get­table ride, full of chal­lenges and hope­fully tri­umphs as well. I am so thrilled and honored… upwards and onwards.”… [con­tinue reading]

Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • StumbleUpon
  • Email
  • RSS
Aug 222011
 

prague opera house 400x300 George Michael squeezes his new act into the Prague Opera HouseGeorge Michael launches his first European tour in three years at Prague’s State Opera House tonight facing some tech­nical hurdles to his new orches­tral format.

The Brit­ish pop idol’s Sym­phon­ica tour has some of his biggest hits over the last 30 years and favour­ites from other artists, all adap­ted for orches­tra. But the new orches­tral ver­sion has appar­ently caused some head­aches for the 700-seat Czech theatre, which in the past hos­ted the likes of Gustav Mahler, and Enrico Caruso.

Most of the whole she­bang I’ve put together for you doesn’t fit on the tiny stage.”

he wrote on ,

But hope­fully what we lose in terms of sta­ging we’ll gain in terms of intimacy.”

Other ven­ues include the massive O2 World hall in Ber­lin, ’s large Piazza Santa Croce, and London’s Royal .… [con­tinue reading]

Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • StumbleUpon
  • Email
  • RSS