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Theater sur la pointe: Canada's National Ballet Turns 35
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12577 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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6 / 1987 |
1,023 Words |
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Alexandra Tomalonis Alexandra Tomalonis is the editor of Washington Danceview
magazine and a frequent writer in the area of dance. |
Like any ballet company not fortunate enough to have developed or acquired a choreographer of genius, the National Ballet of Canada has suffered from an identity crisis in its thirty-five years. NBC, modeled after founder Celia Franca's alma mater, England's Royal Ballet, knows what it wants to be: a grand company, capable of performing the nineteenth-century classics with distinction, but also of creating important new works. While waiting for the choreographer who will shape not only its repertory but its performing style, the company has collected the great ballets of the last century like a maiden filling a hope chest. The policy has proved a sound one. The classics keep dancers in shape, and performances this spring at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. from March 31 through April 5 showed the company in splendid dancing form.
The three ballets presented during the brief season were shrewdly chosen. Balanchine's Serenade has become an international standard by which dancers can be measured. Ronald Hynd's lavish The Merry Widow, a full-length costume drama, is the perfect "Saturday night out" ballet. And in Glen Tetley's Alice, created for the company in 1986 and greeted with rapture in both Toronto and New York, the company undoubtedly hoped to triumph with a serious work.
Hidden Desires
Alice, however, was not a success here, although Tetley's concept is a good one: the adult, and married, Alice Hargreaves remembers childhood afternoons with Lewis Carroll and the tales he spun. She begins to think that Carroll was the great love of her life, and all four players - Alice, her husband, Child Alice, and Carroll - dance out their
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