One of the great mysteries of the arts world is why one discipline can thrive while another dies a lonely death in the very same city. Yet it happens all the time, and Boston is the latest case in point. One of America’s great arts towns, full of top-quality music, fine museums, and a famous theatre scene, it has simply never embraced dance, and several companies are currently paying the price. Boston Globe 0
Category: dance
THE GIELGUD AFFAIR
When Maina Gielgud left the Boston Ballet six months before she was even scheduled to begin work as the embattled company’s new artistic director, accusations flew over whose fault it was, and speculation over the “real” reason for her dismissal was rampant. The latest theory: it’s (almost) all about the money, baby. Boston Globe
RETIREMENT IS OVERRATED
Nearly forty years after Merce Cunningham burst onto the scene and changed dance forever, the 81-year-old choreographer is still one of the most innovative figures in modern dance. “The work is not and has never been trendy or appealing to popular taste. When making a dance, Merce has never considered what might be commercially viable.” Yet somehow, Cunningham has been embraced by the public like few other choreographers before or since. The New York Times (one-time registration required for access)
GOING VERTICAL
The ramrod straight perfect vertical line, the perfect split arabesque, is one of the most beautiful positions for a ballerina. So how did it come about? The Telegraph (London)
FROM THE BARRE TO THE BOARDROOM
Performers aren’t always the most suited to be arts administrators, but David McAllister might be the exception. After giving his last performance at the Sydney Opera House on Saturday, he will step into his new role as artistic director of Australian Ballet and plans for his inaugural season already include a new “Swan Lake” and “Sleeping Beauty”, and adding 10 new dancers to the company. “His dressing room tells the tale. On one side of the table is eye makeup, foundation and powder. On the other is an ever-increasing stack of business papers.” Sydney Morning Herald
BOSTON BALLET BACKLASH
When the Boston Ballet unexpectedly dismissed several of its dancers last month, and then fired the incoming artistic director who had apparently ordered the action, the troubled company went into full defense mode, with everyone involved desperate to blame someone else. Now, two of the dismissed dancers paint a dismal picture of an organization where the buck stops nowhere. Boston Herald
CROUCHING DANCER, HIDDEN WIRES
If you haven’t taken Hong Kong action movies seriously, now may be the time to start. Dance critic Joan Acocella of The New Yorker pays particular attention to “wirework, whereby the fighters are attached to wires, like Peter Pan, so that they can move upward as well as in the usual directions… such feats leaven the film’s violence with a sort of joy. By producing a longer arc of action, wirework allows for longer takes–hence, expansion, afterthoughts, fantasy.” The New Yorker
THE NEW PAS DE DEUX
With the folding of Cleveland’s only full-time ballet last year, other companies have decided to take some chances in an effort to draw crowds. Several smaller dance troupes have been reinventing the classic pas de deux recently, replacing the traditional male-female dance of love with duets featuring (gasp!) two male performers. The Plain Dealer (Cleveland)
BOSTON BALLET MAY BE RECOVERING
The Boston Ballet, beset by management shake-ups, dancer turn-over, and lawsuits, may at last be settling down. One clue: promoting Jorden Morris to chief ballet master. “I’m in the position of basically putting a dance team together and making sure that it’s a strong, talented company. I can tell you that I will hire the best dancer for the job. That is the bottom line.” Boston Herald
LOSING ON A TECHNICALITY
The family of former Boston Ballet dancer Heidi Guenther may appeal its loss in a wrongful death suit against the company, saying the case was thrown out on technicalities. “What’s most troubling about this anomaly in the law is that a worker can be treated negligibly and even die, but have no right under the workers’ compensation system.” Boston Herald
