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The Dance Enthusiast Asks: The Australian Ballet about "Swan Lake"Return To FeaturesOn the Occasion of The Australian Ballet's 50th Anniversary Season and After Almost a Decade Away from New YorkThe Australian Ballet Returns to The Big Apple -June 12th - June 17th, 2012
* for tickets and program information click here |
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| The Australian Ballet's Swan Lake, choreographed by Graeme Murphy; Photo by Jeff Busby |
For 117 years the ballet world has been going swan crazy. Though the original 1877 version of Swan Lake ,commissioned for the Bolshoi Ballet in Moscow -music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and choreography by the German ballet master ,Julius Reisinger - was proclaimed a dud, the 1895 revamp fared much better. In 1895, at the Maryiinsky Theater in St. Petersburg, Russia - with Tchaikovsky's music revised by Riccardo Drigo (as Tchaikovsky had died in 1893) and new choreography by Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov- the ballet captured the hearts and imaginations of its audiences. The romantic, other-worldly love story was also enhanced by a beautiful star ballerina, Pierina Legnani. Legnani set the bar for all ballerina swans of the future by performing ,the now legendary, technical feat of 32 fouettes. (Fouettes are a series of successive whipping turns performed on one foot, on pointe.)
Choreographers continue to play with different versions of the basic tale: sad endings; happy endings; one woman dancing both Odette and Odile; two women taking on each role separately; two warlocks; all male casts as in Matthew Bourne's production; acrobatic swans in the Guandong Acrobatic Troupe's version, and riotous send-ups by dance companies like Ballet Trockadero and TV comedians,like Jim Carrey. The movie world jetéd into the action with Darren Aronofsky's The Black Swan but before even the movie, a sign that Swan Lake had truly immersed itself into popular culture -Swan Barbie.
For the first time in North America, audiences will be able to experience Graeme Murphy's award-winning interpretation. Murphy's Swan Lake, originally created in 2002, for the ballet company's 40th Anniversary, is loosely based on the Prince Charles, Princess Diana, Camilla Parker Bowles saga. Apparently there is no Odile, and instead of an evil wizard lurking about with a wicked daughter, there is a Baroness Von Rothbart, the princes' older, former lover who taunts the young bride, Odette. Instead of a case of mistaken identity and deception, we are presented with a conflicted, love triangle and the psychological effects of this situation on a young bride.
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| Adam Bull and Amber Scott in Swan Lake, choreographed by Graeme Murphy; Photo by Jim McFarlane |
Murphy, in the same Australian Ballet podcast quoted earlier, says his work was never "set out to shock." He points out that he wanted to "freshen up" the story and characterizations so that audiences would feel not "as if they are looking on something from a distance." He wants viewers of his Swan Lake to be able to become as emotionally involved in the story as the dancers are. When working with his Australian dancers, Murphy spoke with them about their "motivation" more than their technique. Fortunate to be working with a company that has stellar classical training, he wanted to concentrate on feeling, not positions, "the humanity is so important."
What will New Yorkers think?
Says Scott, "New Yorkers are so in touch with what is going on with the arts and are culturally excited and passionate. I am sure we will be received with open arms and interesting opinions."
| Artists of The Australian Ballet and Bangarra Dance Theatre in Warumuk- in the dark night, choreographed by Stephen Page; photo by JEFF BUSBY |
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