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The
rest of the program was devoted to high-powered duets and
ensembles staged by co-artistic director Alexander Vetrov,
arranged by mood and style to fill the evening. Pavlova was
again seen, in the glittering Black Swan Variations from Swan
Lake, as a conniving minx luring Prince Siegfried into
betraying his beloved Odet. Her prince was Russian-trained
guest Alexei Tyukov from the Colorado Ballet, a solid dancer
who was in over his head with the variations. Everything he
tried was just this side of a struggle, and some of his landings
were floor-shattering.
Pavlova
ended her solo with a strange pastiche of rapid turns, jumps,
and references to other passages that seemed almost improvisational.
She omitted the traditional 32 fouettes, the whipping turns
on point, perhaps in deference to guest Bolshoi ballerina
Marianna Ryzhkina, who had the same choreography scheduled
in her program-ending Don Quixote Variations.
(The athletic sequence was so popular that it appears in a
number of classical ballets.) Ryzhkina injured her lower leg
in rehearsal here last October and had surgery to repair the
damage. There was no apparent effect on her dancing. She earned
a healthy ovation.
The
surprise of the evening was the super-charged performance
by Shea Johnson in the Diana and Acteon duet,
a Soviet-era blockbuster based on the myth of the goddess
Diana and the hunter Acteon. Johnson has been with the company
for a couple of years, paying his dues in the corps and appearing
in bit assignments. Nothing suggested he could be the powerhouse
who bounded on stage here with such animal intensity that
many audience members audibly gasped in amazement. Bravado
and arrogance colored all of his actions; even the trickiest
moves were tossed off with boldness and assurance. The crowd
witnessed a major talent claiming his place in the dance world.
He was rewarded with the biggest ovation of the evening, which
just about blew away his Diana, Maiko Abe, a sweet young Japanese
dancer with nice technique and beautiful line. She hasnt
learned yet to open up to allow any personality or emotion
to shine through and, next to Johnson, looked pale and colorless.
Guests
Olga Voloboueva and Howard Quintero gave a raggedy account
of the Grand Pas Classique by Victor Gzovsky but
were more relaxed in a brief new piece called White
Fog, choreographed for them by Eric Bortolin and set
to the music of Bach in a vaguely modern style. The whole
thing seemed to end before it began.
Ryzhkina
was seen again, in the love duet from Spartacus,
partnered by a more secure looking Tyukov but near
the end of the piece the lights went out in the orchestra
pit. The musicians kept it together, their only source of
light was flittering down from the auditorium. Conductor Ron
Spigelman eventually announced that there would be a slight
delay while the problem was being fixed. And for the next
several minutes, a lone violinist lamented the dim situation
by bowing a mournful rendition of You Are My Sunshine.
The
MCB Orchestra includes Fort Worth Symphony players, Dallas
Opera Orchestra members, and freelance musicians who play
particularly well together under Sligelmans direction,
no mean feat when youre following dancers with constant
tempo changes. He was associate conductor of the FWSO and
now heads the Springfield Missouri Symphony full time. Next
season, hell return for more ballet performances, as
well as four pops concerts with the FWSO.
©
Copyright 2008 FW Weekly
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