Boston Ballet Brings 2012 Spring Season
with Simply Sublime
BOSTON, MA: Boston Ballet
presents Simply Sublime, February 9-19, at The Boston Opera House to begin the
2012 spring season of dance. The program features Florence Clerc’s world
premiere staging of Michel Fokine’s Les Sylphides, Christopher Wheeldon’s
Polyphonia, and George Balanchine’s Symphony in Three Movements.
“Simply Sublime is the perfect program to begin the spring season at Boston
Ballet,” said Boston Ballet Artistic Director Mikko Nissinen. “The program
presents three exquisite examples of the purest choreography on stage in one
evening. This program will be a rich experience for audiences.”
Simply Sublime includes three powerful works by three master choreographers
George Balanchine, Michel Fokine and Christopher Wheeldon. Symphony in Three
Movements is a large ensemble work, distinct in both its complexity and energy.
The work is set to a score by Stravinsky, Balanchine’s long-time collaborator,
and premiered in 1972 at the Stravinsky Festival at New York State Theater. The
choreography, marked by its turned in movements and athletic sequences, is set
to three movements originally composed by Stravinsky for three different films.
Florence Clerc’s world premiere staging of Michel Fokine’s Les Sylphides, is
also included in this program. This one-act romantic work follows a poet as he
dances with ghostly sylphs in a forest. The corps de ballet is integral to the
feeling and character of Les Sylphides and appears onstage throughout almost the
entire work. Les Sylphides first premiered at the Maryinsky Theatre in 1908,
under the title Reverie Romantique: Ballet sur la musique de Chopin. The work
received its U.S. premiere by Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes at the Century Theatre
in New York in 1916.
Polyphonia, Christopher Wheeldon’s playful romance for four couples, completes
the program. The New York Times has described the work as “[handling] the
classical vocabulary of Balanchine, Ashton and others without being inhibited or
retro… with a constant supply or inventiveness.” Wheeldon’s mastery is displayed
in his unique ability to weave classical and more contemporary dance movement in
to four pas de deuxs which exude distinct qualities. Polyphonia first premiered
in 2001 with New York City Ballet and has been in Boston Ballet’s repertoire
since 2007. The Company presented Polyphonia to critical acclaim on its 2008
tour to Korea.
Play with Fire continues the season with three cutting-edge works including
Jorma Elo’s Sharp Side of Dark, a revival of Jiří Kylián’s Bella Figura, and a
Company premiere of Christopher Bruce’s Rooster, featuring music of The Rolling
Stones, March 1-11. Rudolf Nureyev’s Don Quixote takes the stage next, April
26-May 6, and Fancy Free, featuring Jerome Robbins’ Fancy Free, Peter Martins’
Barber Violin Concerto, and Harald Lander’s Etudes, May 10-20, concludes the
season.
The 2011-2012 season marks Nissinen’s 10th anniversary season and presents
Boston Ballet’s signature range of classical, neo-classical and contemporary
works – a wide-ranging repertoire that Nissinen has curated during his decade
leading the Company.
In spring 2012, beyond Boston Ballet’s work on stage, the organization will
continue its extensive work in the studios and in the community with Boston
Ballet School. The largest ballet school in North America, Boston Ballet School,
reaches over 10,000 students annually through its classes and Boston Ballet’s
unparalleled community outreach programs, Citydance, Adaptive Dance, and Taking
Steps.
Boston Ballet celebrates Citydance’s 20th Anniversary this season. Citydance,
the largest provider of free dance education to Boston Public Schools, reaches
nearly 3,000 students each year and has touched the lives of more than 40,000
children in its 20 year history. The program will be held at Boston Ballet’s 19
Clarendon headquarters January 31-April 14. Through its education and outreach
initiatives, Boston Ballet continues to reach thousands of lives each year and
encourage access to the art form of dance for students of all backgrounds and
experience levels.
SPRING SEASON 2012
All performances are held at The Boston Opera House
SIMPLY SUBLIME
February 9 – 19, 2012
Les Sylphides
Music: Frederic Chopin
Choreography: Michel Fokine
Staging: Florence Clerc
Polyphonia
Music: Gyorgy Ligeti
Choreography: Christopher Wheeldon
Symphony in Three Movements
Music: Igor Stravinsky
Choreography: George Balanchine
PLAY WITH FIRE
March 1 – 11, 2012
Sharp Side of Dark
Music: Johann Sebastian Bach
Choreography: Jorma Elo
Bella Figura
Music: Lukas Foss, Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, Allessandro Marcello, Antonio
Vivaldi, and Giuseppe Torelli
Choreography: Jiří Kylián
Rooster
Music: The Rolling Stones
Choreography: Christopher Bruce
Play with Fire includes a trio of contemporary works by three of today’s most
noted choreographers Jorma Elo, Jiří Kylián, and Christopher Bruce.
Boston Ballet’s Resident Choreographer Jorma Elo premiered Sharp Side of Dark
with Boston Ballet in 2002. It was his first commission for the Company. The
work is choreographed to Bach’s Goldberg Variations and features large-scale
architectural sets and a haunting lighting design.
Elo, who danced with Netherlands Dans Theater for 15 years, became Boston
Ballet’s Resident Choreographer in 2005 where he has since created more than
seven new works. His works for Boston Ballet include Sharp Side of Dark (2002),
Plan to B (2004), Carmen (2006), Brake the Eyes (2007) In on Blue (2008) Sacre
du Printemps (2009), and his 2010 world premiere presentation Elo Experience. He
has also choreographed new works for New York City Ballet, American Ballet
Theatre, San Francisco Ballet, Royal Danish Ballet, Nederlands Dans Theater and
Finnish National Ballet, among others. In 2005, Elo won the Helsinki
International Ballet Competition choreographic prize and he is a recipient of
the Prince Charitable Trust Prize and the 2006 Choo-San Goh Choreographic Award.
Most recently, Elo was awarded the prestigious Benois de la Danse prize for best
choreography in 2010. The New York Times has written of Elo, “he knows classical
technique and how to use it in new ways, how to transform it. This is not modern
dance and ballet: it is modern ballet.”
Play with Fire also includes Jiří Kylián’s Bella Figura, a work Boston Ballet
gave its U.S. premiere by an American company in April 2010. The Los Angeles
Times wrote of it, “in an increasingly dark world, [Kylián’s] dancers are
beautiful enough to give almost anyone renewed faith.” Bella Figura will be an
addition to Boston Ballet’s Kylián repertoire, which includes the five-ballet
Black and White program presented by the Company in 2009 to rave reviews and
again in 2010. The work is tangibly sensual in its adoration and reverence
towards the human body and contains partial nudity.
Christopher Bruce’s Rooster completes Play with Fire. This distinct work, first
premiered in 1991 with the Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève, is set to music by
The Rolling Stones. The Brittish choreographer is known for his the unique
settings and concepts of his pieces and often pulls inspiration from literature
and more contemporary music. Rooster features eight well-known tunes from The
Rolling Stone’s song book, including Paint it Black, Ruby Tuesday, Lady Jane and
Not Fade Away. Rooster has taken international stages to both popular and
critical acclaim. When asked what he thought of Rooster after the London
premiere performance, The Rolling Stone’s front man Mick Jagger responded, "I
love it! It was great. I was looking at them and thinking 'that's a good move, I
must nick that.”
Don Quixote
April 26 – May 6, 2012
Music: Ludwig Minkus
Choreography: Rudolph Nureyev
Rudolph Nureyev’s acclaimed production of Don Quixote was last performed by
Boston Ballet in 2006. The production was originally staged on Boston Ballet by
Nureyev himself in 1982 when Nureyev danced the leading role of Basilo, first in
Boston and then on a tour of the U.S., Mexico and Europe. He first choreographed
his version of Don Quixote in Vienna in 1966 and it would later become one of
his greatest successes. Nureyev’s Don Quixote is based on the Marius Petipa-Alexander
Gorsky production familiar to him from his days with the Kirov. The focus is not
on Miguel de Cervantes’ hero but on the romance between two of the novel’s minor
characters, Basilo and Kirtri. The production is danced to the score by Ludwig
Minkus, arranged by John Lanchbery with sets and costumes by Nicholas Georgiadis.
FANCY FREE
May 10 – 20, 2012
Barber Violin Concerto
Music: Samuel Barber
Choreography: Peter Martins
Fancy Free
Music: Leonard Bernstein
Choreography: Jerome Robbins
Études
Music: Carl Czerny arranged by Knudage Riisäger
Choreographer: Harald Lander
Fancy Free is headlined by Jerome Robbins’ Fancy Free, and includes Peter
Martins’ Barber Violin Concerto and Harald Lander’s Études. Robbins’ Fancy Free
was the master choreographer’s first ballet, premiered on April 18, 1944. It
would become one of his greatest successes and be one of the most popular
ballets in American history. The work marked the emergence of both Robbins’
talent as a choreographer and the talents of a young composer, Leonard
Bernstein. Robbins, a member of American Ballet Theatre at the time, danced in
the ballet’s premiere. It would later become a musical comedy entitled On the
Town and then adapted for the screen sensation starring Gene Kelly. Fancy Free
follows the story of sailors on shore leave getting into a bit of romantic
mischief.
Martins’ Barber Violin Concerto continues the program. This work, set to Samuel
Barber, presents three movements for two couples in various pas de deuxs.
Barber’s masterful music evokes distinct styles of movement from each couple
from melancholy, to lyrical, to energetic. The dancers, dressed all in white,
provide a blank canvas for the distinct choreography and composition of this
work.
Danish dancer and choreographer Harald Lander’s Études completes Fancy Free.
Études is considered Lander’s most acclaimed and popular choreographic work. It
has an original score by Carl Czerny, arranged by Knudage Riisäger. The one-act
ballet has been referred to as “an homage to classical ballet training.” The
work begins simply with dancers at a barre and ends with a sequence of thrilling
choreography. The work, premiered in 1948 with the Royal Danish Ballet is
beloved for its adoration of the art form of ballet and its magnificent
culmination. Études is a fitting way to end the 2011-2012 season.
Individual tickets, subscriptions, and Group Sales tickets are on sale now.
Subscriptions and individual tickets are available online 24 hours a day at
www.bostonballet.org, by phone at 617.695.6955, and in person at the box office
at 19 Clarendon Street , Boston , Mon–Fri, 9:30am-5pm. Tickets start at $25 for
season ballets. Group Sales tickets for parties of 10 or more are available
through the box office at 617.695.6955.