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Dancing in a new direction

Notes from 'Ballets Russes 2009'
By JEFFREY GANTZ  |  January 14, 2010

090522_picasso_main
PULCINELLA (1920) Imagine having Picasso to do your curtain design.

Setting the Wang on fire: Boston Ballet's "Ballets Russes 2009." By Jeffrey Gantz.
The 100th birthday of Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes — which flourished in (mostly) Paris and London but also toured to cities that included New York — prompted the expected centennial tributes in Boston: a "Diaghilev's Ballets Russes 1909–1929: Twenty Years That Changed the World of Art" symposium and exhibition at Harvard University in April, and a "Ballets Russes 2009" festival this month that centered on a conference at Boston University but also included a Ballets Russes program from Boston Ballet (my review was in the May 22 Phoenix), a selection of films at the Museum of Fine Arts, Ballets Russes nights from the Boston Pops and the New England Conservatory Youth Philharmonic, an homage to Feodor Chaliapin at BU Concert Hall, and shows at BU's 808 Gallery and the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford. What was less expected, perhaps, was the reminder emerging out of all this that Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes did change the world, and not just in the company's 20 years of existence. What exists today as dance, and as art (Picasso, Matisse, Gris, Braque, and Rouault all designed for Diaghilev), would be very different without them.

Here are some notes from "Ballets Russes 2009."

The movie
BU's "The Spirit of Diaghilev" conference opened with a movie screening, a 1968 Diaghilev documentary from the BBC and Bavarian TV that's not available on video. The two-hour film was presented by Bob Lockyer, who produced along with John Drummond. It's narrated by Peter Ustinov, who turns out to be a grandnephew of one of Diaghilev's original designers, Alexandre Benois, and thus more than just a celebrity talking head.

You could think of Diaghilev as a prequel to the invaluable 2005 Ballets Russes documentary, which starts with Diaghilev's death. We get reminiscences from dancers including Tamara Karsavina (Diaghilev's original Firebird, opposite Vaslav Nijinsky), Lydia Sokolova (the Chosen One in Léonide Massine's 1920 reworking of Le Sacre du Printemps), Marie Rambert (who worked with Diaghilev and Nijinsky on the original Sacre), Massine (who took over Nijinsky's dance roles and became one of the century's leading choreographers), Ninette de Valois (who went on to found what would become the Royal Ballet), and Serge Lifar (the original Prodigal in George Balanchine's Prodigal Son, he went on to head the Paris Opera Ballet for nearly 30 years). Sokolova's pronounced British accent might puzzle you if you didn't know (something the film doesn't reveal) that she started out life as Hilda Munnings — as his supply of actual Russian dancers began to run out, Diaghilev would "nationalize" his English dancers, so that Lilian Alicia Marks became Alicia Markova and Sydney Francis Patrick Healey-Kay turned into Anton Dolin.

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  Topics: Dance , Culture and Lifestyle, New England Conservatory of Music, Bronislava Nijinska,  More more >
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[ 06/03 ]   Always, Patsy Cline  @ Ogunquit Playhouse
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 See all articles by: JEFFREY GANTZ



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