Download details - ROSTOC.us

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Medieval theatre wikipedia , lookup

The Nutcracker wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE
Segerstrom Hall, Orange County Performing Arts Center, Costa Mesa, CA
Mixed repertory program
Tuesday-Thursday — May 2-4 at 8 p.m.
Apollo
Choreography George Balanchine
Music: Igor Stravinsky
Jeu de Cartes
Company Premiere & Center Debut
Choreography: John Cranko
Music: Igor Stravinsky
Gong
Center Premiere
Choreography: Mark Morris
Music: Colin McPhee
Sylvia
Center Premiere
Choreography: Sir Frederick Ashton
Music: Léo Delibes
Friday — May 5 at 8 p.m.
Saturday — May 6 at 2 & 8 p.m.
Sunday — May 7 at 2 p.m.
Theater: Orange County Performing Arts Center – Segerstrom Hall
600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa, CA
Tickets:
In person Online Phone TTY Groups -
$25, $40, $55, $70, $85
the Center Box Office
www.ocpac.org
(714) 556-2787
(714) 556-2746
(714) 755-0236
Page 1 of 4
ABT May 06
AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE
May 2-7, 2006 in Segerstrom Hall
COSTA MESA, CA – American Ballet Theatre returns to Segerstom Hall at
the Orange County Performing Arts Center for its 18th engagement on May
2-7, 2006 with The Center premiere of Sir Frederick Ashton’s Sylvia and a
program of mixed repertory, including George Balanchine’s Apollo, the
Company Premiere and Center debut of John Cranko’s Jeu de Cartes and
Mark Morris’ Gong, also a Center debut
MIXED REPERTORY
(May 2-4, 2006)
Apollo
George Balanchine’s Apollo, set to music by Igor Stravinsky, was
given its world premiere by Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in 1928. It was first
performed by ABT in 1943 at the Metropolitan Opera House. The ballet,
which is a simple program without a plot, includes the birth of Apollo,
dances with the Three Muses – Calliope (Muse of Poetry), Polyhymnia
(Muse of Mime) and Terpsichore (Muse of Dance and Song) – and the god’s
ascent to Mount Olympus. Apollo is staged for ABT by Richard Tanner.
Jeu de Cartes
John Cranko’s Jeu de Cartes, “A Poker Game in Three Deals,” was
given its world premiere by the Stuttgart Ballet in Stuttgart, Germany on
June 22, 1965. Danced to a score by Igor Stravinsky, Jeu de Cartes includes
scenery and costumes by Dorothee Zippel. The ballet is considered to be
among Cranko’s choreographic jewels. ABT’s performance of Jeu de Cartes
on May 2 marks the ballet’s company premiere and the Center debut.
Gong
A ballet for fifteen dancers, Mark Morris’ Gong was given its world
premiere by ABT in 2001. Suffused with orientalism, Gong brilliantly melds
light and shadow, gamelan-inspired music, and Isaac Mizrahi's colorsaturated costumes to create a kaleidoscope of innovative movement. Staged
by Tina Fehlandt, Gong is performed to “Tabuh Tabuhan” by composer
Colin McPhee. Lighting design is by Michael Chybowski. This marks the
ballet’s Center debut.
Page 2 of 4
ABT May 06
SYLVIA
(May 5-7, 2006)
With a score by Léo Delibes, Sylvia was Sir Frederick Ashton’s
second full-length work when it was premiered by The Royal Ballet in 1952
with Margot Fonteyn, Michael Somes and Alexander Grant in the leading
roles. Set in mythical Greece, Ashton described the plot as “Boy loves girl,
girl captured by bad man, girl restored to boy by god.”
The ballet tells the story of the nymph Sylvia, who has pledged her
allegiance to the chaste goddess Diana. As an acolyte, Sylvia has sworn off
love. However, she is pierced by the arrow of Eros and falls in love with the
shepherd Aminta, only to be kidnapped by the hunter Orion. In the way of
things mythological, the gods intercede.
Performed by ABT in two acts, Ashton’s Sylvia is staged by
Christopher Newton, former dancer and ballet master for The Royal Ballet.
This new production has scenery and costumes by Christopher and Robin
Ironside, with additional designs by Peter Farmer.
This engagement by ABT will signify the first time Sylvia will be
performed at The Center.
AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE
Recognized as a national treasure since its founding in 1940, ABT
annually tours the United States, performing for more than 600,000 people.
It has also made more than 15 international tours to 42 countries as perhaps
the most representative American ballet company. Many of these
engagements were sponsored by the U. S. State Department.
The company is committed to presenting a repertory of the best ballets
from the past and encouraging the creation of new works by gifted young
choreographers. The repertory does, in fact, include all of the great fulllength story ballets of the nineteenth century, such as Swan Lake, The
Sleeping Beauty and Giselle, the finest works from the early part of this
century, such as Les Sylphides, Jardin aux Lilas and Rodeo, and acclaimed
contemporary masterpieces such as Airs, Push Comes to Shove and Duets.
ABT has built on its extraordinary repertoire by commissioning works by all
of the great choreographic geniuses of the twentieth century: George
Balanchine, Antony Tudor, Jerome Robbins, Agnes de Mille and Twyla
Tharp, among others.
Page 3 of 4
ABT May 06
In 1980, Mikhail Baryshnikov became artistic director of ABT,
succeeding Lucia Chase and Oliver Smith who had jointly guided the
company since 1940. Under Baryshnikov’s leadership, numerous classical
ballets were staged, restaged and refurbished, and the company experienced
a strengthening and refining of the classical tradition. In 1990, Jane
Hermann and Oliver Smith succeeded Baryshnikov and immediately
established an agenda that was dedicated to maintaining the great traditions
of the past while aggressively pursuing a vital and innovative future.
In October 1992, former ABT Principal Dancer Kevin McKenzie was
appointed artistic director. McKenzie, steadfast in his vision of ABT as
"American," is committed to maintaining the Company's vast repertoire and
to bringing the magic of dance theatre to the great stages of the world.
Julie Kent, Maxim Beloserkovsky, Angel Corella, Paloma Herrera,
Gillian Murphy and Ethan Stiefel are among the remarkable artists who
dance with ABT. The company also has a number of dancers with ties to
Southern California including: Stella Abrera (South Pasadena), Lara Bossen
(San Diego), Misty Copeland (San Pedro), Ashley Ellis (Santa Monica),
Jennifer Lee (Corona), Ilona McHugh (Santa Barbara), Jessica Saund (San
Diego) and Jennifer Whalen (Ventura).
Page 4 of 4