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Liam Scarlett

London City Ballet: Fall 2024 Season

September 21, 2024

“Larina Waltz,” choreographed by Ashley Page to the lilting melodies of Tchaikovsky, opened the program.  It was a dynamic expression of the classical ballet bona fides of this youthful company. Arrayed in a line of five couples, the men in black tunics and the ladies in white tutus, they performed unison partnering showing off the easygoing style that became more evident as the program progressed.  Couples peeled off until only one remained, soon replaced by a succession of couples, all of whom performed charming, if not dazzling, turns, lifts and complicated steps, the men leaping and the women showing off balance and grace.  This was a charming lagniappe, a gift to warm up the audience’s expectations. [more]

Ballet Festival: Program A

August 10, 2019

Joseph Sissens in Sir Frederick Ashton’s “Dance of the Blessed Spirits,” in The Joyce Theater’s Ballet Festival (Program A) (Photo credit: Maria Baranova)The Joyce Theater is presenting a two-week Ballet Festival, four programs under the artistic direction of Kevin O’Hare, director of The Royal Ballet.  Each program is curated by a different dance expert, the first by O’Hare, himself.Program A was divided into two parts, the first the more sedately classical, the second showing newer, more contemporary fare.  It was a fascinating, focused study of the state of ballet today, featuring, appropriately, two works by the British master of classical ballet, Sir Frederick Ashton. [more]

The Royal Ballet 2015: Program B

July 3, 2015

he Royal Ballet’s second program of its ridiculously short season at the David H. Koch Theater was disappointing as much for what was on it as for what wasn’t. What wasn’t there were any classical works. Among divertissement-type short works making up the second part of the show, there was not one classical Pas de Deux. Instead, the program opened with an abstruse modern ballet and ended with an equally abstruse new version of an old one with six very short works of varying quality and appropriateness sandwiched in between. [more]