logo
#

Latest news with #ActIV

Mariinsky Ballet's Maria Khoreva dazzles in Rudolf Nureyev tribute at Hong Kong festival
Mariinsky Ballet's Maria Khoreva dazzles in Rudolf Nureyev tribute at Hong Kong festival

South China Morning Post

time24-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

Mariinsky Ballet's Maria Khoreva dazzles in Rudolf Nureyev tribute at Hong Kong festival

More than 30 years after his untimely death in 1993, Rudolf Nureyev's name has lost none of its magic. Nureyev & Friends – A Ballet Gala Tribute revisits a project Nureyev himself created in which a group of dancers would tour with a programme of short pieces, presenting top-notch ballet around the world. Advertisement The repertoire consisted of works drawn from Nureyev's career. It ranged from the familiar, with some of ballet's most famous pas de deux, to lesser-known pieces and featured some of Nureyev's own choreography, making for an interestingly eclectic programme. Fittingly, the performers included dancers from the three companies with which Nureyev was most closely associated: the Paris Opera Ballet, Britain's Royal Ballet and what is now St Petersburg's Mariinsky Ballet – Leningrad's Kirov Ballet when Nureyev was there. After its initial revival in Vienna in 2024, this first Asian edition had as artistic adviser Paris Opera Ballet 'Étoile' Charles Jude, a protégé of Nureyev who danced in those original tours; the artistic director was former Royal Ballet principal David Makhateli; and the project manager was Hong Kong's own Lam Chun-wing , the first Chinese dancer to join the Paris Opera Ballet. Mathieu Ganio, formerly of Paris Opera Ballet, and one of the troupe's star ballerinas, Dorothée Gilbert, dance the duet from Act IV of Swan Lake as part of Nureyev & Friends – a Ballet Gala Tribute. Photo: Tony Luk, courtesy of the Hong Kong Arts Festival Galas are, inevitably, a lucky dip – some of the dancing was sublime, some good; if some was disappointing, the high points made up for it.

The Marriage of Figaro, ENO: Who needs props when a production's this fabulous?
The Marriage of Figaro, ENO: Who needs props when a production's this fabulous?

Telegraph

time06-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

The Marriage of Figaro, ENO: Who needs props when a production's this fabulous?

Doors are crucial in Mozart's supremely witty comedy Still, in this opera you don't expect to be confronted by nothing more than a set of four white doors in a white box, even if the box then turns out to be moveable and can travel up, down and backwards: the plainness puts a huge weight on the characters, who have to actively compensate for the absence of any props, chairs or other supports. This they do in Joe Hill-Gibbins's sparky production: behind every door, there is a story, characters appear mute from the doors when they are being sung about. Susanna and the Countess don't have a table on which to write a letter to the Count, so he appears between them, and Cherubino is hidden behind an open door rather than under a sheet. It doesn't all work, and slightly runs out of steam in the last act, as the white box retreats to the back of the stage, giving the singers almost too much space. Much of the success of this characterful show must be down to Jenny Ogilvie, whose movement direction creates a constant stream of striking, angular stage pictures. It enables telling relationships, often clustering the characters together as in the hilarious sextet in which Figaro's would-be bride Marcellina is revealed as his mother. This production received only a one-night stand in 2020 before lockdown closed our theatres, and is now revived with a new cast, except for the superb Hanna Hipp as the young Cherubino who overcomes the sacrilegiously sleazy dance treatment of her sublime Act II aria and does a genuine leap from a door onto a waiting mattress. The distressed Countess of Nardus Williams is wonderfully supple of tone, cleanly shaped in both her arias, matched by a lovely solo oboe, her sensuality longing for release. Mary Bevan is more strongly profiled as her maid Susanna, forceful in the many ensembles and then touching in her Act IV aria. David Ireland is a bumptiously assertive Figaro, and Cody Quattlebaum makes a notable debut as a lithe, crisp Count. Rebecca Evans's unusually emotional Marcellina makes one wish she were allowed her Act IV aria, which as normal is cut, and there is excellent support from Neal Davies as Bartolo and Ava Dodd as Barbarina. Under conductor Ainãrs Rubiķis, the music is driven along with propulsive speeds, and the occasional dislocation between stage and pit can be put down to expressive freedom. The effervescent orchestra and the busy chorus demonstrate what precious assets ENO has in these resources. The evening never drags: Jeremy Sams's ultra-clever text is arguably more a new libretto than a translation, but it is intelligible, funny, and on opening night was hugely enjoyed by all. Until Feb 22;

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store