Oregon Ballet Theatre’s Grand Tour
Liberté, Egalité, Tour Jeté: OBT’s French accent
October 28th, 2009
Orphée (Portland Opera) | Into the underworld with Philip Glass.0 comments
October 21st, 2009
Hofesh Shechter Company (White Bird) | An Israeli-born dancemaker spars with Portland. 1 comment
October 14th, 2009
Fiction (Portland Playhouse) | Writer’s block got you down? Try adultery!0 comments
October 7th, 2009
Ben Franklin: Unplugged (Portland Center Stage) | Josh Kornbluth has (founding) father issues.0 comments
September 30th, 2009
La Bohème (Portland Opera) | Lush tales from urban Bohemia.0 comments
September 30th, 2009
Ragtime (Portland Center Stage) | A complete work of E.L. Doctorow, abridged.0 comments
September 23rd, 2009
Autumn at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival | Tilting at windbags.0 comments
September 16th, 2009
Ursula (Our Shoes Are Red/The Performance Lab) | Mother Superior jumps the gun.0 comments
August 26th, 2009
Jazz And Poetry And Other Reasons | Solo boho at the CoHo.0 comments
August 12th, 2009
The Bullet Round (The David Mamet School for Boys) | SPOILER: Somebody gets shot.0 comments
![]() Fauning: Artur Sultanov and Gavin Larsen of OBT. IMAGE: blaine Truitt Covert |
[February 20th, 2008]
What awaits us when Oregon Ballet Theatre’s globally themed Grand Tour season stops in France? Only one of the country’s best known—and most heavily freighted—compositions: Ravel’s Bolero, which, depending on your age, may stir up emotional memories of Bo Derek in 10, Torvill and Dean in the ’84 Winter Olympics or the Ford Escort circa 1991.
OBT Artistic Director Christopher Stowell, who likes the music’s recognition factor, persuaded choreographer Nicolo Fonte to create work to it for OBT’s forthcoming French program (the global theme refers to composers, not choreographers). But Fonte turned him down at first. “It has so many popular associations—I didn’t want to carry that baggage,” Fonte said. However, despite Ravel’s own assessment of Bolero (“There’s very little music in that music”), Fonte gave it a second chance; eventually he began studying the composer’s fascination with industry and machinery in a way that Bronislava Nijinska (who choreographed Bolero at the Paris Opera in 1928) had not. “Nijinska envisioned a Spanish tavern with a woman dancing on the table,” Fonte said. His own version reflects Ravel’s interests more the music’s Spanish-isms; it’s set against metal panels to convey a raw, industrial feel, and the choreography, Stowell says, is both tough and flattering for the dancers.
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Before Nijinska did Bolero, her brother Nijinsky did Debussy’s Afternoon of a Faun for the Ballets Russes; his scandalously sexual interpretation of the Mallarmé poem behind the music was a hit. In 1953, Jerome Robbins revisited the score after spying a young Edward Villella lazily stretching at the barre. Robbins’ Afternoon, which OBT tackles here for the first time, takes place in a dance studio, where the interest between a young man and woman relies more heavily on dramatic tension than technical fireworks.
Stowell’s own works round out the program. There is Pas de Deux Parisien, which excerpts Delibes’ Sylvia for what he calls a “slightly circus-y, slightly tongue-in-cheek” affair, and Zais, an ornate, full-company tribute to French baroque gardening and architecture with vocal embellishment by soprano Lisa Mooyman and the Portland State University Choir. The OBT Orchestra performs live.
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