Monday, November 21, 2011

A young patron enjoying PNB's Nutcracker-themed tree at McCaw Hall.

Opening Weekend Festivities November 25, 26 & 27
Join us at the decked-out McCaw Hall for a performance on the opening weekend of Nutcracker and enjoy these activities, FREE for all ticketholders
  • Magnificent 20-Foot Tree
  • Holiday Carolers
  • Marvelous Magicians
  • Crafts for Kids
  • Mini Dance Classes
  • Story Time with Show-and-Tell Costumes
  • Lights, Lights, and LIGHTS
  • Larger-than-Life Sendak Statues
  • Costumed Characters
  • Mini-Stage for Pretending
  • Orchestra Meet-and-Greet
Plus! Classical KING FM and Music Center of the Northwest will be hosting their popular Instrument Petting Zoo at matinees during opening weekend of Nutcracker (see additional dates here). Stop by and get a feel for the instruments that make Tchaikovsky’s beautiful score come to life!

 
Don't forget to bring your camera! Although photographs are not allowed inside the theatre, you will want to capture the magic of McCaw Hall before and after the performance.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Enduring Duos: Corps de ballet dancer Jessika Anspach on Balanchine's Divertimento from "Le Baiser de la Feé

Jessika Anspach in Divertimento from "Le Baiser de la Feé.Photo © Angela Sterling.   
Enduring Duos
Love Stories... Those great enduring duos: Princess Aurora and her Prince (I know he has a name, but does anyone know it?). Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet. Romeo and Juliet. Peanut Butter and Jelly... I know. PB & J are inanimate objects, incapable of offering or experiencing love, but you can't tell me that their union isn't a magnificent one that's stood the test of time! But I've forgotten one that's worth mentioning... and in my opinion it's way better than PB & J!

Balanchine and Stravinsky
A perfect marriage between dance and music. A romance that has been immortalized through 39 ballets, 22 of which, in 1972 were performed as a part of the New York City Ballet Stravinsky Festival  (In all there were actually 31 ballets performed in this 8-day festival but the other 9 by other choreographers...). The mere thought of dancing 22 Balanchine-Stravinsky ballets makes my heart sing and my head hurt... I can't imagine the kind of counting that must have gone on... I mean it's bad enough having to manage one Stravinsky piece but 22?!!! Confusion. Chaos. Migraine.

Well I've been blessed to dance in a few of these 31- namely Symphony in 3 Movements, Rubies and Agon. Other than the common denominators of composer, choreographer and pink tights and pointe shoes, these ballets couldn't be more different. Symphony in 3 Movements is an homage to WWII with its formations and patterns resembling armies advancing or planes circling. Rubies is a sexy, light-hearted little number set to Stravinsky's jazzy Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra. And Agon... In my opinion the cherry on top of this Balanchine-Stravinsky sundae is really best described by Balanchine himself: "See the music, hear the dance." And literally with minimal costumes (black leos and pink tights) and sets (a blue backdrop) that's all you see... You see the music danced.

Well, I'm happy to say that last Friday night I got to add a fourth Balanchine-Stravinksy jewel to my collection: Divertimento from "Le Baiser de la Feé." And once again this sweet ballet hardly resembles the previous three already "in my bag", so to speak.

Dressed in a sweet little tutu with a golden bodice and and off-the-shoulder puffy sleeve, you'd think I'd be dancing to Mozart or Haydn not to the music of the man who composed The (riot-inducing) Rite of Spring! And yet the score for Baiser is strangely melodic. Don't get me wrong. It's still Stravinsky with its wonderful rhythms and crazy counts (a 6, an 11, three (two?) 10's and a 7... yikes!). But that's the fun of it... You exercise both your body and your mind. And you get to have fun with it too! There's a playfulness to Balanchine's musicality that in one sense is reminiscent to Rubies... just watch the principle woman execute her solo. It seems like her feet are flirting with the floor as she piques about... The same goes for the demis and corps as we punctuate the music with speedy and precise footwork in the first movement... And boy is it ever pufffy!

But what I love most about dancing Baiser, more than the musicality, more than the mental and physical challenge it presents, is that it feels like home. We had our first onstage rehearsal for this Rep last Tuesday night and my soul felt like it was singing as I danced the first movement. And I was reminded once again that this is why I do what I do. This is why I dance!

So needless to say I'm quite excited. Not just because I got to add another Balanchine-Stravinsky jewel to my resumé... but because for the first time I got to premiere this new piece to PNB's repertoire in a demi-soloist role. It's a first for PNB and a first for me too! I'm excited. I'm humbled. And I'm so grateful!

And this is just one love story - okay I guess two: between Balanchine and Stravinsky, and Jessika and ballet. There's a whole evening full of them! So if you haven't bought your tickets yet, what are you waiting for? DO IT! You can get them at www.pnb.org. But you'd better hurry... "And they lived happily ever after" is just right around the corner.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Ballet on the Radio!


PNB and Classical KING FM have partnered to bring ballet right to you whether you're at home, in the car, or at the computer. Tune in to any (or all) these three programs to experience the best of PNB wherever you are:

NW Focus to Feature Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliette
Wednesday, November 2 at 8:00 pm


In anticipation of LOVE STORIES opening, Classical KING FM’s Northwest Focus program will feature the balcony pas de deux excerpt from Sergei Prokofiev’s moving Romeo and Juliet (Op. 64, 1935–1936). Please note that NW Focus starts at 8:00pm and the Prokofiev excerpt will play at approximately 9:30pm.

Musical Chairs to Feature PNB Music Director Emil de Cou
Friday, November 4 at 7:00 pm

Pacific Northwest Ballet Music Director/Principal Conductor Emil de Cou shares stories about his transition to PNB as well as music which has inspired and moved him, including some pieces from films you may not expect!

LOVE STORIES Live Broadcast
Saturday, November 5th at 7:30 pm

Pacific Northwest Ballet is pleased to announce that classical KING FM will once again bring listeners five performances by the PNB Orchestra, live from McCaw Hall. The November 5 broadcast will include an intermission interview with PNB Artistic Director Peter Boal and the following five pieces from LOVE STORIES:

Divertimento from "Le Baiser de la Fée" (Stravinsky/Balanchine)
Afternoon of a Faun (Debussy/Robbins)
Balcony pas de deux from Roméo et Juliette (Prokofiev/Maillot)
Black Swan pas de deux from Swan Lake (Tchaikovsky/Stowell after Petipa)
Aurora’s Wedding from The Sleeping Beauty (Tchaikovsky/Hynd)

Tune in to 98.1 Classical KING FM or listen online at www.king.org/listen