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Archive for backstage

Ana Karenina III

PATRICIO MELO
Ballet de Santiago
Santiago, Chile
BIO | POSTS

Well tomorrow we have Ana Karenina general rehearsal, the premiere will be next monday, this is very nice ballet for all the company, the principals have 7 pas de deux, the soloist and the corps have a lot to dance, so it is very good for all. Very dramatic ballet, beautiful music. I hope you enjoy these photos and the Ballet de Santiago.

Marcela Goicoechea and Luis Ortigoza.

The corps in the first scene.

Ballet de Santiago on the stage.

Luis Ortigoza in the first act variation.

Andreza Randisek and Rodrigo Guzmán are the principal second cast.

Andreza and Rodrigo in second act pas de deux.

The country scene.

Marcela and Luis in the second pas de deux in first act.

Luis Ortigoza.

The orchestra.

Recent Posts by patricio

Packing Out

JUSTIN PECK
New York City Ballet
New York, NY USA
BIO | POSTS

Off to the Kennedy Center…

Recent Posts by justin

The cutest toy soldier i ever did see

JUSTIN PECK
New York City Ballet
New York, NY USA
BIO | POSTS

I stumbled upon some old pictures from Nutcracker this past season, and remembered that Anthony Huxley premiered in the role of the Soldier Doll. With his cat-like landings, razor-sharp technique, and equipped size, he made a strong impression in the debut.

Recent Posts by justin

Swan Lake

PATRICIO MELO
Ballet de Santiago
Santiago, Chile
BIO | POSTS

Hi, well I can´t post this before my vacation travel but I am in Chile again just for a few days before continuing with my vacation yeaaaaaaa hehehehehehhe. I took these photos in the last Swan Lake performance, like always I hope you enjoy and thanks so much for all your nice comments to my work. We start in March and the first ballet will be doing is Ana Karenina, so we will see you soon for some Ana Karenina rehearsals to start. More about Ballet de Santiago and the 2008 season.


Backstage.

Marcia and Pablo.

Marcela and her shoes.

Luis in first act.

Nicolas, Luis and this beautiful dog.

Luis.

Dolores after her variation in Pas de Trois.

Cecilia in Pas de Trois

Nicolas.

Marcia and Maite.

Maite in her dressing room.

The Dog and the Swan.

Marcela ready to dance.

Ready to start.

The Corps.

Swans.

Paulina and Tania.

Marcela and Luis.


Marcela and Luis.

Rehearsal.



Luis and swans.



Quena.


The End.

Recent Posts by patricio

Recollect & refresh

EVAN MCKIE
Stuttgart Ballet
Stuttgart, Germany
BIO | POSTS


( …in the world of Geraldine Georges. more at www.geraldinegeorges.be )

!

It’s been awhile!… I suppose it’s high time that I share a few minutes with the ever-popular Winger family!
Though I have become more of a ‘’distant guest contributor'’ here (not my words) due to an increasingly heavy workload, I still check in from time 2 time to see what has been going down. I have been able to meet a few other contributors in 2007 and especially enjoyed catching up with David H. after a decade, seeing Patricio dance with Luis and Marcela from South America and first meeting and then sharing jet-setting tips with Christopher in a german Christmas market only to realize who it actually was a day later!!!! I also want to congratulate Kristin on being an absolute role-model this past year while making difficult life choices. I wish you, Kristin, happiness in your new position at NYCB and am glad you still manage to make time for this site. There doesn’t seem to be any other cyber-place with such a variety of different artistic voices!

I was asked recently what some of my highs and lows of 2007 were…I thought it might be a good way to discuss what’s been going on with me since I last wrote.

Aside from the little problems that can arise in a world filled with blood, sweat and tears, I found myself confronted with some more threatening issues in 2007. I became sort of plagued by a variety of significant injuries that prevented me from doing things that I REALLY wanted to be a part of; like touring to Korea again with Sue Jin Kang, creating a new role in a Christian Spuck ballet, and just generally working on improving my abilities as a dancer. This is when I was forced to realize that ‘lows’ can turn into ‘highs’ if you come at problems from the right angle. Every dancer goes through a huge injury at some point and having the advice of friends and accomplished dancers like Bridget Breiner and Robert Tewsley to guide me through was invaluable. I launched into therapy that taught me new things about my body and I learned about the power of breathing among other things. I decided to have a GREAT time and so I spent days visiting friends from Berlin to Paris. I was happy to see wonderful art and theatre in both places and meet exciting new people. One night after seeing an ABT(on tour) show at the Theatre du Chatelet I found myself on the Avenue de L’Opera. I stood staring at the beautiful Opera Garnier where I had JUST danced one month before. Now I was an invalid dancer shivering outside in the rain wondering if I’d ever be onstage again. A friend called me and invited me to hear him DJ at Le ParisParis which is also on the Avenue de L’Opera so i turned my back on the Garnier and swore to myself that I would forget the stage if just for that night and have a good time. I did but it was difficult to remove my thoughts from the theatre. During the following months I started to let go a bit and noticed an immense improvement in my condition (two ruptured and herniated discs in my lower back). The time soon came to come back to work and I was ready to take on new challenges and more mentally/spiritually prepared to do so than I was before I left for therapy.

Because things move so quick here (the company has had about 70 shows since I penned my last post even…), I was back onstage within a 2 week time period. Being there this time was like a new experience though. I enjoyed myself more than ever because I could feel that through letting go of the ’silly stresses’ of dancing, I had matured as an artist…if even just a tiny bit. ;)

I won’t bore with other small details that followed this event but I will mention one thing that happened right around that time that I consider to be a highlight of my year: I was cast as Prince Siegfried in Swan Lake!
I was going to dance my first principal dancer role with a great big company AND my partner would be doing it for the fist time aswell! What happened next was a combination of greatness and misfortune…

My Odette/Odile, Linda and I rehearsed and rehearsed. The company and staff were so behind us and I felt incredible chemistry with my partner. We were finally ready to dance our first show! We stepped onstage together and with adrenaline flowing heavily, we delivered to a hungry audience that was eager to witness our virgin attempt of the Tchaikovsky classic. Things went well and the excitement increased as we completed the 3rd act where the sorcerer’s evil swan daughter deceives the Prince and tricks him into marriage. It was time to ‘fall into’ the beauty of the 4th and final act that has a tragic love pas de deux that is exclusive to the Cranko version. We danced together for what was to be the Swan and the Prince’s final dance before she is turned back into a swan creature indefinitely and the Prince drowns trying to save her. I could feel her breath on my neck and the moment was magic when suddenly there was a funny sounding click and I realized that my partner’s shoulder had come dislocated in one of those backwards port de bras movements that distinguished the swan from all other classical roles. We exited the stage and she courageously held-in screams as the orchestra played on. Her shoulder wouldn’t pop back in and it was a devastating sight. I ran back onto stage and somehow managed to improvise with the corps de ballet of swan girls as if I was looking for the swan queen who I had lost somehow. 5 whole minutes played out as I performed the ballet til the end while wishing I could somehow help my beautiful partner who was by now being taken to the hospital.

Thankfully no lasting damage was done to Linda’s body but mentally it was difficult for everybody invloved to have been a part of such a beautiful process that was abrubtly cut short. The newspapers carried the story in their headlines and there was an influx of well-wishing notes. Linda still needed time to recover so I was scheduled to dance with Anna, another of my frequent partners. I was sad to see Linda watch as I rehearsed with another soloist just a day later but the show HAD to go on. Luckily Anna and I have chemistry that matches the intensity of Linda and mine together. This is rare (the two ladies share the same birthday too) but I was happy to be dancing with her and glad to not have to try and manufacture any feelings that should come naturally. Our show went over well and I felt the confidence that only a second show can bring. My ballerina told me she had never had so much fun and I believed her.

Since that time the direction was kind enough to give Linda a chance to redeem herself in the role and we danced the ballet, in it’s entirety, on a Christmas tour of Spain. Due to the incedible emotional journey that the ballet inspired for me, I’d definitely put Swan Lake at the top of my personal 2007 ‘crucial moments’ list.


4th Act embrace with Anna Osadcenko in ‘Swan Lake’ with the Stuttgart Ballet. Galina Mezentseva as Odette.

As Stuttgart’s autumn season brought scattered flurries to the Schlossgarten outside the theatre, indoors there was a blizzard of different ballets being performed. ‘The CRANKO festival’ was underway. Infact it was all planned far in advance to celebrate the company’s founder. We all danced a long list of roles that Cranko had created for his star-personalities of the time and many of them came back to help us get into each individual role. I danced Lenski in Onegin and special parts in ‘Brouillards’, ‘Jeu de Cartes’ , ‘Holberg Pas de Deux’ and ‘Initials’. Infact, I just debuted over this past weekend for the final two shows of ‘Initials’ in the hauntingly beautiful pas de deux created for Marcia Haydee and Heinz Claus from the 3rd movement. ‘Initials’ is one of those rare ballet’s that demands a large company fueled by a sense of camaraderie. Four principals represent four seasons and the music by Brahms is so powerful and melodic that it is hard for me to imagine it without steps attached. The choreography is difficult and there are alot of leading roles so that everyone has their own personal responsability to the ballet. We were all in it together and every single person felt like an important ingredient that was required to bring this ballet to fruition. The Cranko festival was a ‘high’ for me because it afforded me with the chance to dance roles that I loved while being a part of a 3 month long seminar-like expereince where I was able to focus solely on what made Cranko, the choreographer tick. I saw footage that I had never seen before, saw roles that had been lost in ballet history and celebrated (night after night) the ballets and steps that made the choreographer so famous. There were gala events where guests were invited to come dance all of the most popular Cranko roles. How lucky for them to be able to dance such roles on the stage where they were first received and how lucky for us, here, to be able to see how other artists interpret the roles that we know so well. (Alina Cojucaru as ‘Tatiana’ from ‘’Onegin'’ was one of my favourites.) I also thouroghly enjoyed getting to know Polina Semionova while dancing ‘Lenski’ with her ‘Tatiana’ in a special gala performance of ‘’Onegin'’.


1st time Siegfried in ‘’Swan Lake'’. Flirting with Katja Wünsche’s ‘Olga’ in ‘’Onegin'’

I’ll leave it at that for now as the new year is well underway now and I want to go out and accomplish brand-new things to reflect on at a later date. Altogether, I feel good about celebrating the ups and downs that my career as a ballet dancer brought me in 2007 and I want to make sure to thank the people who have celebrated WITH me! Whether it’s european balletomanes, my family and colleagues, or original Stuttgart Ballet members (antiques) who encouraged me to keep writing here at the WINGER (.. ;) ..) I have recently been getting alot of attention in Japan aswell and am frankly quite baffled by it as I have only ever done ONE show there!..BUT I am always thrilled to receive the notes and extremely creative gifts from my friends in and around Tokyo. I don’t know what I did to deserve you but I am thankful and proud to have such a dance-educated group be interested in me! Thank you.

Let’s see what’s in store for ‘08. I promise to do my ballet-best :) !………

-Ev

Photos: The Stuttgart Ballet. (I am sorry I only have the few from recent while. The truth is I don’t have that many at my disposal!)
Artwork: a gift from the amazing Geraldine Georges
www.geraldinegeorges.be

Recent Posts by Evan McKie

Eleven more to go!

ANNE MARIE MELENDEZ
Ballet Austin
Austin, Texas USA
BIO | POSTS

Well, plus a couple of school shows…. But “technically” over here at Ballet Austin, we have 11 more Nutcracker performances to go and that’s including the performance we had to add December 21st because tickets are selling so well. Tickets really are selling well, my parents are subscribers and recently received an e-mail about how this upcoming weekend is completely sold out, and it’s only Monday.

I think it surprises some of us how well we’re selling this year in spite of the warm weather. I actually wore a tank top to and from the theatre the other night. So whereas our ads may say “It’s Snowing on Congress”, it’s not exactly snowing in all of Austin. Here’s a shot of Congress, the street where the Paramount Theatre is, just a few blocks away from the capital building. Since my husband, Paul, didn’t have a busy schedule opening night I sent him outside to take some pictures.

The Marquee:

When I get some action shots of this years production I’ll post those, in the meantime, here’s some from behind the scenes:

Just before Company Class, which currently we’re taking regularly at our studios instead of onstage, just a few blocks away from the theatre because of the tighter conditions at the Paramount Theatre. Let me explain a bit more: We’re in a transitional state this year at Ballet Austin. Our beautiful new studios are up and running, and yes, there’s more than one bathroom! (More photos to come…) But our usual theatre, Bass Concert Hall is closed for renovations, and our new home, the Long Center will not be open until March or April. We perform at the Paramount for some of our concert series, but generally do our full length and story ballets at a larger venue that more easily accommodates sets, a full orchestra and has more dressing rooms. We’re in tight quarters at the Paramount but with the huge effort put in by our staff and I think particularly our wonderful Production Staff it has gone incredibly smoothly.

Here’s a couple of Beth in the early stages of putting on her doll makeup for the first time as Michelle coaches her. The doll makeup had to be slightly adapted this year. Michelle and Beth would usually trade off doing the Dresden Doll while the other did Party Mom into Snow Corps, but due to a couple of injuries early on, both girls have to do Snow Corps, so one of them always has a VERY quick change from doll into snow corps.


And of course as with any of us ladies who wear pointe shoes and have endured the wear and tear a long production run can put on your toes. Here’s a “portrait” of the sore toes of Ashley, Melissa and myself:

I have lots more to share that I’ll eventually get around to, lots of exciting things are going on over here! In the meantime, Happy Nutcrackering!

Recent Posts by anne marie melendez

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