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San Francisco Ballet
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A Sir Thomas Beecham recording that includes
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Christopher
Wheeldon walked away with the San Francisco Ballet performance Thursday night. And he
didnt have to dance a single step!
British-born Wheeldon, a former
Royal Ballet and New York City Ballet danseur now turned choreographer, presented Continuum,
the world premiere of a piece he has made on the San Francisco company. The audience
really liked what it saw, which is interesting because this is not an easy piece. Set to
ten short piano compositions by Gyorgi Ligeti, whose music Wheeldon also used for the 2001
Polyphonia, it is a long, abstract, leotard ballet that offers
nothing to look at but the dancing. As it is, thats more than enough.
Wheeldon has called Ligeti
best known for scoring the Stanley Kubrick films 2001: A Space Odyssey, The Shining and Eyes Wide Shut the
Chopin of our time. Indeed, his compositions have a certain mesmerizing quality, gently
avant garde but remaining within the canon of classical form. Continuum begins
with a rapidly accelerating figure, the dancers moving like the pistons of a machine. Next
there is an Adagio, full of arabesques, then a Presto solo for female dancer and an
exquisite pas de deux in slo-mo, to a Lento tempo. This is followed by an Allegro male
solo in which Gonzalo Garcia just about stopped the show.
And so it went, through multiple
variations until the end, when a black backdrop slowly descends, cutting off the light,
almost suggesting the end of the world. Wheeldon has a dance vocabulary all his own. His
movement is inventive and does not appear to take off from anything or anybody preceding
him. The company did exquisite work throughout with especially wonderful turns from Muriel
Maffre and the amazing Yuan Yuan Tan, in addition to Garcia. This may have been the first
performance of Continuum but, judging from
the multiple curtain calls, it wont be the last.
The program opened with a much
older ballet, Roland Petits 1974 LArlesienne. There must be something
about the sun in Provence that drives men mad. It surely happened to Van Gogh, who is
suggested in the backdrop of striated mountains and blazing sun, and it happens to the
hero of this ballet. Frederi, on the eve of his wedding to Vivette, a country girl, is
haunted by the image of a woman he briefly knew and loved in Arles (LArlesienne). As
the festivities progress, and even in the wedding chamber where his bride desperately
tries to seduce him, he is increasingly consumed by the specter of the woman who is not
there. The whole thing boils down to a study in obsession, with dance as the medium.
Petit set the piece to Georges Bizets famed suite of the same
name and his steps were wonderfully suited to each measure. The work is a showcase for the
principal couple, set against a black and white clad corps de ballet that executes quirky
folk-derived steps in celebration and acts as a kind of sympathetic Greek chorus as the
action heats up. The soloists here were Lucia Lacarra, a dream of loveliness in herself,
and Pierre-Francois Vilanoba, who mesmerized the audience with his vacant stare and
tortured athletic movement. He resists the madness, trying to return to the real world,
but in the end, leaps out of the window to his presumed death. A bit melodramatic but so
is cutting off your ear.
Val Caniparoli, San Francisco
Ballets beloved character dancer, has turned choreographer for Death of a Moth, premiered just a year
ago. This is a rather dark work, in spite of much frantic rushing about the stage. The
creator has said that the title is metaphorical, taking off from stories of the same name
by Annie Dillard and Virginia Woolf, but there sure is a lot of waving of arms, falling
down in a heap and women dressed in beautifully-colored gauzy and moth-like gowns.
Set to music by Carlos Surinach,
an air of melancholy pervades the piece. The five leading couples danced beautifully but
the exciting pas de deux and male solo at the end belonged to Julie Diana and Peter
Brandenhoff. Maffre had a wonderful slow turn at the beginning. It had its moments but Death
of a Moth seemed a little overwrought after the cool classicism of the Wheeldon.
Perhaps it is true that position is everything in life and the whole evening would have
fared better by having Moth fly in first and placing the Petit at the end. But,
as in any good sandwich, the most delicious part was in the middle. Continuum
gave audiences something really satisfying to chew on.
Suzanne
Weiss