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Conquering Carcassonne: Ballet Francais de Nancy Triumphs
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17202 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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2 / 1990 |
1,826 Words |
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Maya Wallach Maya Wallach is a dance writer, critic, and photographer
currently based in Los Angeles |
The Grand Theater in Carcassonne, France, is an outdoor amphitheater nestled in the castle's southwestern corner, sheltered by seventy-foot stone walls built six centuries before. It is not the easiest theater to play. Last summer the Festival of Carcassonne found only one dance company strong enough to conquer not only their formidable site but also their audience. Patrick Dupond's Ballet Francais de Nancy captured the French citadel with a full evening of dances choreographed by Ulysses Dove.
The Ballet Theatre Francais de Nancy was founded in the French city of Nancy in 1978 under the direction of Jean-Albert Cartier as a home for twentieth century dance. Specializing in works from the Diaghelev era and Balanchine's masterpieces, the company also showcased dances by contemporary choreographers such as John Neumeier, Maurice Bejart, Jiri Kylian, and Moses Pendleton, often performing behind ballet superstars such as Rudolf Nureyev and Patrick Dupond.
Two years ago Dupond made his association with company more permanent, signing a three-year contract as artistic director. He shortened the repertory, fired and replaced most of the corps de ballet, and began feeding his two dozen dancers his own diet of choice: classically trained teachers, widespread touring, and - most critically - master choreographers.
Dupond's single most important decision as director was inviting Ulysses Dove to Nancy for not one but four ballets. A former dancer with Merce Cunningham and Alvin Ailey, Dove pushes dancers to their limits and beyond, creating works of previously considered impossible physical and emotional intensity. For one month in 1988 and four
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