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.San Francisco Ballet
Monotones I & II, Symphonic Variations, Thais
Pas de Deux, Elite Syncopations
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A night of mannerly British ballet after the Balanchine speed derby
San Francisco recently experienced was like swearing off caffeine. Three works by Sir
Frederick Ashton and the return of Kenneth MacMillans cartoon-colored ragtime
classic, Elite Syncopations, showed a different kind of genius altogether. Calm
where the Americans tend to go ballistic, polite to the point of looking subdued, watching
the works of Brits after Balanchine takes some getting used to. Ashton, who also would
have turned 100 this year, never set about changing the world like Balanchine. His oeuvre
seems more civilized, radiant, pearls compared to Mr. Bs string of glittering
diamonds, rubies and emeralds.
Adagio, the slow, sustained dancing which was Ashtons home
territory as a choreographer, also takes a special kind of dancer. In Monotones I
& II, the program opener, Ashton took the pianistic simplicity of composer Erik
Saties familiar Gnossienne and Gymnopedies (in an orchestral setting) and created
two slow-moving dances for three. In the first pas de trois, Nicole Starbuck, Rachel
Viselli and Ruben Martin, looked almost impatient for things to move along. Conductor
Andrew Mogrelias tempo was Ashtonian all the way, however, and when the second trio
showed-up, Brett Bauer, Muriel Maffre and Moises Martin, taller in stature and possibly
happier making lines than jumping around in petite allegro, showed what it meant to slow
down and fill the strikingly simple, intertwined movements with great beauty. This was
Maffres evening. Her extensions were stunning as usual, but, more than that, she
seemed to have just the right touch of serenity to her phrasing, a thorough understanding
of the Royal Ballet style, and the ability to demonstrate it with complete confidence and
clarity. And later in the evening, she got the biggest laughs.
Symphonic Variations, by some accounts Ashtons
masterpiece (circa 1946), made a long overdue San Francisco Ballet premiere. Tellingly
choreographed to Cesar Francks Symphonic Variations for Piano and Orchestra,
the piece is musically about as far as you can get from Balanchines taste for
Stravinsky. On a bright, spring-colored set and in simple white costumes, the six dancers
(who never left the stage) created an ambience of wonder. Three couples co-mingled as
Ashton played with the rules of the classical game--there were no obvious stars or
leaders. Still, the center couple, Julie Diana and Damian Smith, were almost overshadowed
by their bookends, Vanessa Zahorian with Joan Boada, and Tina LeBlanc and Nicolas Blanc.
LeBlanc, who has been dancing with a glow around her all season, seemed particularly
suited to the demands of this crisp and quiet piece of choreography. But it was Nicolas
Blanc, the only Soloist in the group, who seemed to be dancing at a higher level, with the
softest landings, clearest shapes and greatest musicality. He sang the steps.
If the music lacked drive, what Ashton underlined through movement were
the shades and radiant moments in the score. Piano interludes (played with the right
amount of emotion by Michael McGraw) and lush, cello-heavy string passages, each seemed to
pronounce themselves more beautifully because of the dance that was drawn from these
notes and measures. Stripped-down and deceptively difficult, this was a bravura-free zone.
Instead, Symphonic Variations created something subtle, a dance that was an
accumulation of details and surprises, a work of art unforgettable on its own terms.
Audience members were actually guffawing during Elite Syncopations.
This crowd-pleaser by Kenneth MacMillan (Ashtons successor at the Royal Ballet) from
1974 included original costumes by Ian Spurling which were more entertaining than much of
the dancing. Maffre, as the towering vs. tiny partner to the eager James Sofranko, pulled
off her pratfalls with a winning combination of elegance and smirk, while Rachel Viselli
and Stephen Legate got to be gloriously bad at dancing together. The rest of the piece, a
collection of rags, twelve in all, familiar and not, became eventually tiresome, lacking
in dynamic variety as they were--a little syncopation goes a long way. But the joy with
which the company camped it up was infectious. They deserved to have some fun and so did
the San Francisco audience.
Also on the program was the very short, very slight Thais Pas De
Deux, a 1971 Ashton piece doccasion which has somehow lasted this long. Neither
musically transporting nor choreographically interesting, Yuan Yuan Tan did her best to
look ethereal as Pierre-Francois Vilanoba, visibly challenged by the partnering duties,
looked the opposite.
April 19, 2004 Michael Wade Simpson