
At City Ballet, a Swan Is Born and a Firebird Flies Into the Sunset
'It was pandemonium,' Maria Tallchief wrote in her memoir about her 'Firebird' debut, in 1949. 'The theater had turned itself into a football stadium, and the audience was in a frenzy.'
The only thing that went wrong was that they hadn't rehearsed the curtain calls.
Tallchief was New York City Ballet's first star, a thrilling dancer and a part of why the company rose to become the most important in the country. This season, City Ballet paid tribute to Tallchief's centennial with a program of ballets that George Balanchine created for her: 'Scotch Symphony' (1952),'Sylvia: Pas de Deux' (1950) and 'Firebird.'
Tallchief, of Osage descent, was a force, a testament to what American ballet could be. As the company's associate artistic director, Wendy Whelan, said in a curtain speech, 'Her discipline, musicality, power and integrity will forever be our north star.'
Throughout City Ballet's winter season, there were performances that inspired real celebration, if not quite pandemonium — especially Alexei Ratmansky's 'Paquita,' a valiant experiment pairing Balanchine's 1951 'Minkus Pas de Trois' with his own restaging of the Grand Pas Classique, the final act of 'Paquita.' Ratmansky rejuvenated ballet while pushing his dancers to become better versions of themselves.
To witness each cast, especially the formidable Mira Nadon in the ballerina role, was enlightening because the dancing was so alive — a fresh take on how a ballet, even a historical one, could be progressive. The season's other new offering, Justin Peck's 'Mystic Familiar,' was hardly that — its quest for innovation landed it in a place as earnest as its title.
I could have lived without the photographer Elizaveta Porodina's banners and prints, presented as part of the company's Art Series, which turn dancers into blurry, interchangeable beings. But the range and beauty of City Ballet comes from the individuals that make up its ranks, including two glamorous talents who were promoted to principal dancer this season: Miriam Miller, a towering, willowy blond; and Gilbert Bolden III, whose exceptional partnering and exuberant dancing make him indispensable. He is an artist who always gives his all.
The winter season wrapped up Sunday with 'Swan Lake.' Here are some highlights.
Indiana Woodward and Jovani Furlan
Indiana Woodward, as a soft, floating sylph, and Jovani Furlan, the man she encounters in a misty Scottish forest, had a sweet lavishness in 'Scotch Symphony.' Woodward, with exquisite detail and musicality, shone from her beautiful, open face to her finely etched arabesques and traveling bourrées, in which she drifted across the floor untethered by gravity.
Mira Nadon and Miriam Miller
The pairing of Mira Nadon and Miriam Miller in Balanchine's 1941 classic set to Bach's Double Violin Concerto in D minor — the lead women, in a display of vivid syncopation, illustrate the violins — was a ray of sunshine. The two dancers, with Miller making her debut, performed with shining ebullience. The smiles! The camaraderie! As dancers in the corps de ballet, Miller and Nadon always performed with a joyful warmth; here, together, they turned the heat on high.
Megan Fairchild and Joseph Gordon
This Balanchine gem, in the classical structure of a grand pas de deux, is 12 minutes of dazzling virtuosity made all the more piquant by the clean, effortless dancing of Megan Fairchild and Joseph Gordon. Fairchild, 40, who sometimes feels like City Ballet's gracious, unofficial host, has announced her plans to retire in 2026, which makes her performances — including her eloquent 'Divertimento No. 15' — treasured occasions.
Mira Nadon
This young principal dancer exists in a category all her own. In 'Concerto Barocco,' her sleek footwork mirrored the notes of the violin. In her star turn in 'Paquita,' above, dancing with Joseph Gordon, she imbued the ballerina role with sophistication along with a sassy sort of swing. And in her 'Swan Lake' debut, Nadon's rich dancing was full of details and imaginative nuance; straightening her arms overhead like raised wings, she seemed to grow taller. Falling backward into the arms of Peter Walker, her distinguished Prince Siegfried (so improved in his partnering), she seemed weightless, as if she were suspended, for a fearless moment, in the air. Never static, Nadon possessed a wildness, too — a mix of the seductive and the serious that made every moment gripping and new.
Dancers to Watch
The pleasure of City Ballet comes not just from the principals, but also from soloists and members of the corps de ballet who are always being tested. This season, there were many memorable standouts, including the lovely star-in-the-making Dominika Afanasenkov in 'Paquita' and the Pas de Trois in 'Swan Lake,' which also featured Allegra Inch, with her sparkling jump; Alexa Maxwell's exacting and eerie rendition of the Novice in Jerome Robbins's 'The Cage'; Charlie Klesa and Andres Zuniga, green yet striving to meet the challenges of Balanchine's 'Divertimento No. 15'; Rommie Tomasini, debuting in the role of the small Scottish dancer in 'Scotch Symphony' with pert sweetness; and the heaven-sent David Gabriel, whose detail and spirit in Balanchine's 'Minkus Pas de Trois' as part of 'Paquita' were tremendous.
Debuts and a Radiant Veteran
Peter Martins's 'Swan Lake' never completely flies — the garish, squiggly sets and costumes are an eyesore — but there is more dancing than milling around (as you see in some productions), and that's a good thing. And this year, there were five casts and an array of debuts to soak up, an experience that always feels like the thrill of the unknown. Of the Odette-Odiles, Nadon was like watching a dream, while Unity Phelan, so luxurious in 'Paquita' earlier in the season, seemed harried and rushed. Tiler Peck, dancing with Roman Mejia in a stylishly understated debut, was less enthralling as Odette than as Odile. Miriam Miller and Chun Wai Chan — both new in this production — had breathtaking moments and room to grow. And then there was Sara Mearns, a veteran Odette-Odile, whose rendition was so fragile, so heart-rending, and was tinged with maturity and melancholy that my breath was caught for days. She was unforgettable.
Ashley Bouder
Ashley Bouder, a crisp, virtuoso dancer of daring and taste who spent 25 years at City Ballet, retired after a final, startling performance of 'Firebird,' a ballet she was thrown into with little notice at 17. Vivacious and all the more splendid for it, she has never been the kind of dancer to take things slowly, but in this last 'Firebird' Bouder fixated on the details with a quiet focus that honored Balanchine and his choreography — in a way, more than herself. During her final, heartbreaking exit, Bouder, arched in a backbend with her gaze tilted up and with a spellbinding pause, she accomplished the unimaginable: She stopped time.
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New York Times
a day ago
- New York Times
At City Ballet, Casting, Coaching and Dances Worth Watching
Looks can be deceiving, even in ballet. On paper, the spring season of New York City Ballet looked safe and dutiful, with no premieres, except the stage performance of a pandemic-era dance film and more recent contemporary works, some welcome (by Alexei Ratmansky), others not so much (everything else). But the season had a surprising sense of purpose, which came from casting, coaching and commendable repertoire. Suzanne Farrell, the former City Ballet star, worked with the dancers on four ballets. The 50th anniversary of the Ravel Festival made for a memorable trip back to 1975. And debuts were plentiful; more than that, they were meaningful choices, the kinds of roles that challenge dancers at the right time and give them the space to grow. Ratmansky didn't need to present a premiere. Two sides of his artistry were already on display. There was the buoyant, technical 'Paquita,' his spirited look at classicism in the 21st century; and 'Solitude,' a remarkable ballet illustrating the inner turmoil and outer tragedy of the war in Ukraine, with dancing shaped by and seeped in sorrow. It is even stronger now — quietly devastating with an icy spareness and, from the dancers, deep, grounded conviction. Its placement on a program between Caili Quan's 'Beneath the Tides' and Justin Peck's 'Mystic Familiar' seemed clueless, as if all of contemporary ballet is on an equal playing field. It's not. Other programs were dragged down by ballets that felt like needless filler — Peck's blandly lush 'Belles-Lettres' and Christopher Wheeldon's drippy 'After the Rain' pas de deux. The pas de deux made what should have been a strong program of ballets by Jerome Robbins and Ratmansky interminable. Ballet is an art, but its athletic demands can be cruel: Gilbert Bolden III, a new, much-valued principal dancer, tore his Achilles during a performance of 'Scotch Symphony.' His recovery will take months. But that show went on — Jules Mabie filled in for him — and the season, which included a farewell to the longtime principal Andrew Veyette, ended on a cheerful note with Balanchine's enchanting 'A Midsummer Night's Dream,' made even more so by the debut of Mira Nadon, dancing with Peter Walker, in the second act divertissement. She moves like silk. Here are a few other standout ballets and performances. Kyle Abraham Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
28-05-2025
- New York Times
The Ballet Kids of ‘Midsummer' Bring Magic to the Bugs
There is Oberon, the King of the Fairies, and his beautiful Queen, Titania. Puck, a sprite, works his magic with the occasional unforced error, as mortals and immortals find themselves in a similar predicament: wanting to love. And wanting to be loved. But for all the sparkle of the mythological adults in George Balanchine's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream,' it's the kids — 24, plus Titania's page — that rule this fantastical realm. Enter the Bugs. These young dancers from the School of American Ballet are the heart of New York City Ballet's production. Technically, they play Fairies and Butterflies, but at City Ballet and its training ground, S.A.B., they are known informally as Bugs. (Perhaps less dignified as far as outdoor creatures go, but cuter.) These Bugs are small, exuberant bodies that, at times, scurry across the forest stage, gleaming in the moonlit night. They're a coalition, a small but mighty squad of fleet-footed girls, ages roughly 10 to 12 — 'a wholly unsentimental deployment,' wrote Lincoln Kirstein, who founded the school and company with Balanchine. Balanchine based his ballet more on Felix Mendelssohn's overture and incidental music for 'A Midsummer Night's Dream,' to which he added additional pieces, than on the Shakespeare comedy. Mendelssohn's sweeping music also thrills the Bugs no end. It puts the gas in their engines, the quiver in their antennas, the flap in their delicate wings. 'You're not walking down the street anymore,' said Naomi Uetani, 11, with a smile she couldn't suppress. 'I'm in a magical place. I understand 'Nutcracker' — yeah, you're in the candy land, but this is different. The feeling.' There's truth to that. 'George Balanchine's The Nutcracker' (1954) is a marvel of storytelling and dancing, and kids play a huge part in it. But 'Midsummer' (1962), which closes City Ballet's spring season this week, remains both grand and carefree, irresistible for its sweetness. That comes from the children. 'They bring so much to the whole idea of the forest and all the little creatures,' Dena Abergel, City Ballet's children's repertory director, said. In other words, they bring the magic. With militaristic precision they burst into the action — their movements sharp and swift — while brief, stand-alone moments bubble up, seemingly from nowhere, as when the Bug called the spinner whips around in place while drawing her arms up and down. The seven Bugs in the overture have more difficult steps, including the first two who perform big saut de chats, or catlike jumps. But largely, for the children, the dancing in 'Midsummer' is a group experience. 'They're all part of the finale, they're all part of the Scherzo,' Abergel said. 'Everybody gets to dance a lot in 'Midsummer.'' Arm movements — pushing them out like rippling wings — are important for the Bugs; running and sharp footwork, too. 'There are a lot of sauté arabesques and pas de chats, and those are things that Balanchine uses from beginning to end in the training,' Abergel said. 'They're practicing all of those crucial classical steps,' as they also work on moving in and out of formations. When she's casting, though, Abergel is on the lookout for something other than technique. 'Just like every creature in nature, there are different bugs and different energies,' she said. 'This is more about energy and that ability to move quickly and with excitement.' For Abergel, the sweetest moment in the ballet has nothing to do with nailing a tight fifth: It's when the bugs yawn and fall asleep on one another in a pile. 'You don't really need any technique for that,' she said. 'You just need to be in the moment and understand what it's about. I love that they experience that onstage.' The children, wearing dresses or short pants and whimsical headwear designed by the innovative costumer Karinska — there are a dozen designs with individual details on each, which is rare for an ensemble — frame the ballet. After the classical wedding scene in the second act, they return to a darkened forest stage for the finale. Isla Cooley, 12, loves this moment, when the adult dancers leave and 'then, us Bugs are running onstage and flapping our wings,' she said. 'I think it was a supervisor who told me that she thought it was like us kind of crashing the party. Because it's like, Oh, wait! We're here.' Last year Isla was the spinner. This year, she is a pop-up Bug. 'When Oberon motions to us, we pop up, we spin, and then we jump around,' she said. Naomi was the first Bug in the overture last year. For her big jumping moment, she said: 'You have butterflies in your stomach, but you also want to do it super bad. So I was scared, excited and like nervous at the same time. But yeah, I still couldn't wait to do it.' What was Balanchine looking for when he cast children in his ballets? 'Curiosity,' said Carol Aaron Bryan, 74, who trained at the School of American Ballet and danced in 'The Nutcracker' and 'A Midsummer Night's Dream.' 'A kind of wonderment — just wondering what this adventure will be.' Bryan was around Balanchine a lot. In 1961 and '62, she performed Clara (as the young girl in 'The Nutcracker' was then known) opposite his Drosselmeier. 'He always did something different in the transition scene, and I never knew what he was going to do,' she said. 'It was always a surprise.' His Drosselmeier would sit near her legs on the sofa where she was meant to be sleeping. 'The whole couch would shake because he'd be fixing that Nutcracker,' she said. 'And I remember this so vividly: He would take the shawl off me and then he would cover me again. Like he was my Drosselmeier, my godfather.' When rehearsals started for 'Midsummer' — the first entirely original full-length ballet Balanchine choreographed in America — she said she felt she had gotten to know him, which 'made it easier for me to react when he asked us for things.' She recalled him working with the students on their runs by taking them to the back of the studio and running along diagonals with them. 'He would really show us,' she said. 'He was so nimble on his feet. It's like his heels never touched the ground. He became a Bug, and he became one of the Fairies. He taught us how to be so light and so quiet.' For Bryan, he was the man with the magic. His ability to enchant lives on in 'Midsummer' — in its glittering array of kids. As Naomi said, 'Without the bugs, the ballet wouldn't be alive.'
Yahoo
27-05-2025
- Yahoo
'Little House on the Prairie' reboot adds Jocko Sims as the Ingalls' real-life doctor
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