Friday 29 July 2016

Romeo and Juliet, Houston Ballet, State Theatre, July 6th 2016

Romeo and Juliet, Houston Ballet,  State Theatre, July 6th 2016


For those new to my blog I write about the holistic experience of attending the theatre. I buy my own tickets. So if you want a re-telling of the story please refer to the links for further information or for further insights.  Note, that I may provide different links for repeated main words or phrases.  I write for my memories of what I have seen, and is more of a stream of consciousness.

"Romeo and Juliet" by the Houston Ballet was presented as part of The Australian Ballet Melbourne subscription season and I attended The State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne on July 6th 2016.

The programme cast sheet had the poorest of printing quality and was hard to read.  Other regular patrons agreed in the poor quality on the synopsis side.

This is a glorious sumptuous production, choreographed by Stanton Welch.  He has developed into a fine story teller by filling in so many missing gaps that other versions do not reveal.  Though this is at the expense of what seems a longer work.  Some of the scenes were necessary to tell the story, though the John Cranko version is more succinct without the detail of this production.

Choreographically there is a depth to the individual characters which is particularly noticeable in the Act 1, Scene 2: The Market.  Though visually stunning the focus was all over the place and other audience audience members were trying to differentiate between each of the characters.

Each character seemed to have signature movements and Michael Chekhov would be impressed as if
was using their own psychological gesture.  The nuns flitted across the stage on pointe - not your traditional pas de bourree, but more with a prim and proper religiously superior gait.  So many spring pointes were used en pointe to show excitement and an innocence of youth.

Many variations of echappes: saute, a terre and en pointe; were used by both sexes.  These echappes symbolically showed the separation of the two families. These simple movements created a subliminal tension.  I adored the masculinity of the men who defiantly asserted their strength with an echappe to a turned in second stance and fists on hips epaulment.

The ballet was hard to follow at times due to the lack of focus and busy background action.  There was just too much to take in and savour!  Even at the end of Act One I said to myself that I have to see this act again to absorb the depth of skill in choreographing so many characters..

"Romeo and Juliet" felt like a long ballet but was well worth the ride.  The thunderous applause and cheering was unheard of in my 35 years of going to see The Australian Ballet.

Act 1, Scene 5: The Ball was beautiful but the costume's colours merged into the backdrop.  It was so hard to see the port de bras above the shoulders against this background, and what made it worse was that the males and females alternated arms and became a blurring and rotating kaleidoscope.  I enjoyed the simplicity of the choreography during the famous musical phrases, and longed to be able to see the arms more clearly.  At times it reminded me of a televised triangle of the girls' and boys' audition combinations from "A Chorus Line".

The costumes and sets by Roberta Guidi di Bagno were stunningly military in their colour coding for each family unit.  The set folded into various configurations to create the alleys which turned into the ballroom and then into the famous balcony scene.

Act 2, Scene 2: The Chapel where the wedding of Romeo and Juliet occurs, was a magnificently simple set with a screen flown in with a large cut-out cross.  Light beamed from behind to create a lovely cross on the floor.  This lit cross created a boundary for family, and foreboding their doomed future - like their crucifixion and their tombstones.

The bearded men in blue were so snappy and crisp in their turns and batterie.  They received and deserved their acknowledgement by the audience who appreciated their sublime dancing.  I think it was Derek Dunn as Balthausar and Oliver Halkowich as Benvilio.  One of these fine young men displayed the neatest and most pure attitude en avant piroutte en dedans I have ever seen a male dancer perform. That. rarely performed pirouette, alone was worth my ticket.

It is so refreshing when the men out-shine the woman in such a traditional art form as ballet.  This is not to say the woman did not dance well, they danced beautifully.  To see so many fine male dancers was electrifying.

Jared Matthews as Mercutio had me gasping at his power and his controlled pirouettes.  His sensational double tours en'lair were breath-takingly clean, crisp and polished.  He too made my ticket worthwhile.  Then Jared Matthews finished off with more turns a terre.  Jared Matthews finished his turn with a solid, masculine and forth right fifth position.

Lord and Lady Capulet were danced respectively by Linnar Looris and Jessica Collado. They commanded your attention.  With the caring Nurse danced by Barbara Bears these three created emotional and electric charges of concern for Juliet.  Each had their signature moves to demonstrate their concerns, frustrations and love for Juliet.

Tybalt danced exquisitely by Christopher Coomer.  The fight sequences seemed natural and paid homage to the Errol Flynn movies without being hammy.

The sword fighting sequences with about twelve dancers were exciting and created tension.  There was no pussy footing to be seen. The rotating circles of sword fighters created a visual feast.

The miming was clear throughout.  It was a little patronising and over-explained in some sections, but added the depth of story telling that other versions of this ballet lack.  Normally the miming is referred to by our ballet audience group as "fluffing about", but here we had more action than other narrative ballets.

Although Act 1 seemed to not have as much dance, it was still spectacular to watch.

Finally to the two leads.  Romeo and Juliet were danced sublimely by Connor Walsh and Karina Gonzalez.  My ticket value had soared to scalper's heaven with these two dancers.  My heart was pounding with the love and angst they portrayed.  Having been trained by Anne Wooliams and Jan Stripling, I had learnt so much about John Cranko and his version of Romeo and Juliet .    Connor Walsh and Karina Gonzalez spoke every line of Shakespeare's iconic love story through dance.

Connor Walsh and Karina Gonzalez are names etched in my memory for their exquisite technique and musicality.  We were voyeurs as they created the forbidden soft ballet-porn with their erotic but not pornographic sexualisation of the love story.  We were allowed to see the development of their relationship in such a beautifully revealing way.  The simplicity of the kisses were natural and not the cliched dance moves.  They were passionate, romantic and eternal.

Connor Walsh never missed a beat with his pure technique and skill.  My heart leapt out of my chest with a few of his lifts.  A MICA unit nearly had to be called when he swept Karina Gonzalez across the stage and threw her around his neck and created seamless, flowing images that will stay with me for a lifetime.  Connor Walsh's pressage where he lifted Karina Gonzalez above his head with straight arms was as if he were a crane on a building site lifting her to the top of the Eureka Tower.  Breath taking!  It was the equivalent of the Alex Jesaulenko 1970 mark in Australian Rules Football - to be recalled for ever. That is why Melbourne audiences love and appreciate both their Australian Rules Football and the majesty of ballet. Speechless!  (Not really speechless - I cannot rave enough about these two iconic 21st Century stars!)

Karina Gonzalez showed the innocence of Juliet with her pure lines and her precise but not clinical technique.  Her footwork was so neat.  Both Connor Walsh and Karina Gonzalez's acting and interaction with other characters had a depth of understanding to their respective roles.

The Arts Centre Melbourne had many toilets being renovated and the queues to the Ladies Toilet were so long and many chose to venture upstairs to near the VIC Restaurant at the second interval. More advance signage should have given patrons notice that specific toilets were closed in advance. I only noticed one sign had been covered over.  The second interval was only 15 minutes and many ladies were still scurrying back from the long walk from the street level.

"Romeo and Juliet" by the Houston Ballet at The State Theatre, July 6th 2016 was a terrific night of dance and I could see this production again.

Overall I gave this production an 8/10.


Netherlands Dans Theater, State Theatre, Saturday June 23rd 2016


Netherlands Dans Theater, State Theatre, Saturday June 23rd 2016

For those new to my blog I write about the holistic experience of attending the theatre. I buy my own tickets. So if you want a re-telling of the story please refer to the links for further information or for further insights.  Note, that I may provide different links for repeated main words or phrases.  I write for my memories of what I have seen, and is more of a stream of consciousness.


"Netherlands Dans Theater" performed a trio of works as an Australian exclusive at The State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne Saturday June 23rd 2016.

Our tickets were purchased about 7 months in advance upon their initial ticket release and they were snapped up fast.

We have seen "Netherlands Dans Theater" on about four or five occasions in the past, and seen each of their various programmes.  This time they did a trio of works "Sehnsucht" by Sol Leon and Paul Lightfoot, "Solo Echo" by Crystal Pite and "Stop-Motion" by Sol Leon and Paul Lightfoot,

"Sehnsucht" by Sol Leon and Paul Lightfoot reminded me of a contemporary version of Fred Astaire dancing in the room that turns around from "Royal Wedding".  Prince Credell is an athletic sleek and shiny black dancer who begins and ends this work.  He wears white loose trousers and shows off his magnificently masculine muscular physique.  Prince Credell dances sublimely and controls when he begins and ends the work.  He will not be rushed in framing this work.  If Prince Credell is the photographic negative then the two dancers Medhi Walenski and Parvaneh Scharafaliin the rotating box set are wearing the opposite colours. The male Medhi Walenski and Parvaneh Scharafali in the rotating box set are wearing the opposite colours to him with their white skin and black trousers.  The lady, Parvaneh Scharafali wears white tunic and is seated on the fixed-to-the-wall chair and leans on the equally fixed-to-the-wall table. 

This is a dance about yearning and Prince Credell introduces us to his yearning and desires.  It is voyeuristic at times as he poses while the others dance in the rotating cube.   Is he yearning for them or they for the outside world?  At times it has hints of regret and even razbliuto.  It is also like a threesome with no physical contact but intense emotional connections.

The dancing is sublime while the choreography at times is a bit clunky especially as the cube rotates.  There are pauses and shifts of weight to allow the dancers to get purchase and ready themselves for the next rotation.  I appreciate the editing in "Royal Wedding" is different to watching a life performance but felt these shifts were not as exciting and challenging our spacial perspectives.  

Saying this, I thought the use of the door and the windows was much more exciting than the cube turning.  This is where I felt we were challenged with our sense of spatial perception.

I could nearly scream at the cliched turned in a la'seconde attitude positions and yearned for more variety.  I was definitely feeling razbliuto about these positions.

The two side tabs revealed an ensemble of twelve dancers who rose from the wings.  This looked impressive at first but soon lost its appeal due to some of the sloppy ensemble timing.   When the ensemble were synchronised they looked terrific.  Note they were not doing a canon!

The ending was blurry as audience members scrambled for their mobile phones because the world was obviously going to end if they did not check them.  Prince Credell took his time to conclude the work as he remained crouched in his squat for many minutes until he finally rolled up through his spine and wandered very slowly off stage.  This reminded me of Lindsay Kemp's famous walk across the stage in "Flowers".  That was revolutionary and provocative back in 1875/76 and now comes across as indulgent.

"Solo Echo" by Crystal Pite was like being manipulated by others.  The soloist was like their plaything or toy as if the ensemble were the marionette operators.    I thought this was the most satisfying work in the programme.

The backdrop was a multi media of snow falling.

There were lots of suspended motions and off balances in the ensemble's ripple effects.  They demonstrated through dance the consequences of someone's actions and how it ripples through the lives of others.

My favourite section was when the six or seven dancers were in one line behind each other.  The main dancer moves upstage to each of dancer and tilts their head -first dancer right side, second left side and continued alternating as each dancer was thrust aside - quicker and quicker until the last dancer was caught.  This was a beautiful phrase that thankfully was not repeated.  There was a slight variation that hinted at this phrase but allowed us to savour the complexity of this work.

The lighting by Tom Visser created a flow and link to the choreography.


The final work was "Stop-Motion" by Sol Leon and Paul Lightfoot,  A large screen hung on down-stage right and showed a baroque type woman.  We saw close ups and various slow motion movement through out this piece.

Great extensions by the dancers showed power and their superb technique.

Five to six dancers brought a curtain forward and dumped white powder on the stage and returned the curtain upstage.  Usually this curtain device is shown to reveal a new dancer or create waves, and the dumping of the flour like powder was a surprise.  Though in hindsight the photos in the programme alerted us to some dancers getting very earthy with the powder.  The use of sand and powder was more successful in the co-production by The Australian Ballet and Bangarra Dance Theatre "Rites" based on "The Rite of Spring" where they used the coloured sands of the earth to paint their bodies ritualistically.  In "Stop-Motion" it seemed like a theatrical trick.

A bird flew off into the distance on the backdrop.  The dancers pulled back the black backdrop to create vaulted columns.  The side tabs rolled forward and were raised into the flies.  The lights above were exposed and lowered and reminded me of the finale of  the 2014 Broadway Tony Award winning revival "Pippin".  

The final pose had the man and woman interlocked reaching forward in opposite directions and created a semblance of hope after the heaviness of the theme of farewell and transformation.  The finale pose allowed the lightness of renewal.

Overall the dancing was sublime while the choreography was very repetitive at times.

Overall a 7/10.

Double Indemnity, MTC, Playhouse Theatre, Wednesday June 29th 2016

Double Indemnity, MTC, Playhouse Theatre, Wednesday June 29th 2016



"Double Indemnity" written by Tom Holloway and adapted from the book by James M Cain was presented by the Melbourne Theatre Company at the Playhouse Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne on Wednesday June 29th 2016.

For those new to my blog I write about the holistic experience of attending the theatre. I buy my own tickets. So if you want a re-telling of the story please refer to the links for further information or for further insights.  Note, that I may provide different links for repeated main words or phrases.  I write for my memories of what I have seen, and is more of a stream of consciousness.

"Double Indemnity"  is a great night of entertainment and should tour internationally with its superbly clever three revolving stages that create so many wonderful scenes.  The best part of the scenery is that it lives and is as much an actor as the rest of the cast.  This revolving set also allows for the most incredible transitions between places and actors by having one actor starting a scene before the next ends.  I thought this device was used intelligently and flowed beautifully to seamlessly move us into a new scene, whilst maintaining tension from the previous scene.

The acting by the cast paid homage to the film-noir genre without being hammy or over-acted.  Though some of the accents did drop at times and the intonation was more Australian rather than the driven American intonation.

The ending was a bit of a disappointment but after research was more in keeping with the non-specific ending of the book.  In hindsight our discussion as per many others leaving the theatre outlined the many possible endings within the context shown.

Costumes were magnificently rich and created the genre of "how was it done?" or "how did they or will they get away with the murder?"

Overall this production deserved a 8/10.

Wednesday 20 July 2016

Swan Lake, Australian Ballet, State Theatre, Wednesday June 8th 2016

Swan Lake, Australian Ballet, State Theatre, Wednesday June 8th 2016



For those new to my blog I write about the holistic experience of attending the theatre. I buy my own tickets. So if you want a re-telling of the story please refer to the links for further information or for further insights.  Note, that I may provide different links for repeated main words or phrases.  I write for my memories of what I have seen, and is more of a stream of consciousness.

"Swan Lake" choreographed by Stephen Baynes is usually a tight cohesive ballet.  This return season and the second night by The Australian Ballet, State Theatre on Wednesday June 8th 2016 should be re-titled "Swan Dive".

Let me first highlight and congratulate the sublime partnership of Kevin Jackson and Leanne Strojmenov.  Their partnership saved the evening for me.  Their chemistry and artistry was on fire with electricity to the back row of the State Theatre.

Now I have seen at least 40 live performances and many versions of Swan Lake by both The Australian Ballet and many international dance companies and I know the difference between a solid performance and otherwise.  Heaven help me with the number of versions I have seen on television, cable tv, or on video or dvd.

Act One saw a sloppy corps de ballet.  To top off Act One I saw one of the worst pas de trois I have seen in a ballet with sloppy footwork, individual timing and near falls.

The man was not supporting his turns and stumbled on about four occasions.

The corps de ballet were out of time and the lines were wonky or not straight.  The pas de deux during the corps de ballet main dances highlighted the hand to hand exchange between the male and female dancer as sloppy and laboured.

I repeat that Kevin Jackson and Leanne Strojmenov were great and may not have been aware how they saved this performance.

The Act Two white scene left me uninspired.  The corps de ballet seemed disengaged.  Take note the interview with Eloise Fryer on page 27 of the programme may explain why. I would expect that the swans would be holding their poses to create a frame and an atmosphere.  Not according to Eloise Fryer who explains that during these 15 minutes of holding a pose she will either look at the orchestra or will run over choreography through her head.  Well used this later technique during "Giselle"!  I am so not impressed that the concentration levels have resorted to this!  Maybe we could supply the corps de ballet with tablets and mobile phones to catch up on their social media obligations!

Overall this "Swan Lake" was more like a "swan dive"!