Balanchine: Three Signature Works, Royal Ballet review - exuberant, joyful, exhilarating

★★★★★ BALANCHINE: THREE SIGNATURE WORKS Exuberant, joyful, exhilarating

A triumphant triple bill

Is the Royal Ballet a “Balanchine company”? The question was posed at a recent Insight evening to Patricia Neary, the tireless dancer who has helped keep the choreographer’s legacy intact since his death in 1983 and a living link with his teaching. Neary has been working with the RB as a coach, advisor and stager of Balanchine’s work for the past 57 years. “Oh yes!” was her emphatic answer.

theartsdesk Q&A: Nina Ananiashvili, founder of the State Ballet of Georgia

Q&A: NINA ANANIASHVILI Bolshoi superstar who made her name in London returns with a new generation, the State Ballet of Georgia

Bolshoi superstar who made her name in London returns with a new generation

Great ballet dancers who boldly turn away from a stellar international career to grow a national ballet company in their homelands are few, but legendary. Alicia Alonso did it in Cuba, Ninette de Valois did it in Britain. And, dancing across the cusp of even more perilous political weather than either, so did the brilliant Bolshoi Ballet star Nina Ananiashvili when 20 years ago she left the world stage to return to her broken and battered native Georgia and generate its own classical ballet company. 

The unexpurgated Clement Crisp - in memoriam

THE UNEXPURGATED CLEMENT CRISP The titan of ballet critics remembered in a scorching interview

The titan of ballet critics, who has died at 95, once agreed to be grilled - with scorching results

To the international world of ballet, Clement Crisp was the British critic to fear for half a century. Crisp's dance reviews for the Financial Times – "the pink 'un" – from 1970 until 2020 were legendary for their passionate fastidiousness about ballerinas and high style, their acuity about rising talents and the difficulties of creativity, and – often – their ferocity, when he saw something he thought a blight.

Balanchine and Robbins, The Royal Ballet review - style and substance

★★★★★ BALANCHINE AND ROBBINS, THE ROYAL BALLET  Style and substance

A dazzling company tribute to America's two greatest choreographers

People often ask why it is that in ballet there are different casts on different nights, a practice alien to opera, musicals and theatre. The most obvious reason is practical. Ballet companies keep a number of principal dancers on salary who need regularly to strut their stuff. Another reason is that dancers develop distinct individual qualities – technical, musical and dramatic – which imprint on the works they dance.

New York City Ballet 2021 Spring Gala online review - Balanchine and Robbins shine in a dark theatre

★★★★ THE NEW YORK CITY BALLET 2021 SPRING GALA Dancers return to the Lincoln Center in Sofia Coppola's quietly moving short film

Dancers return to the Lincoln Center in Sofia Coppola's quietly moving short film

It’s official. Masks are coming off across America while theatres remain dark. Over here, theatres are about to re-open and masks must be worn. An identical situation gives rise to different responses prompted by local preoccupations. Local preoccupations are at work in ballet too. Witness the 2021 Spring Gala performance put out digitally by New York City Ballet.

The Firebird triple bill, Royal Ballet review - generous programme with Russian flavour

★★★★ THE FIREBIRD TRIPLE BILL, ROYAL BALLET Something for everyone

Trio of substantial pieces offers something for everyone

You can’t accuse the Royal Ballet of lightweight programming: the three juicy pieces in the triple bill that opened at the Royal Opera House on Tuesday add up to a three-hour running time. That’s a lot of ballet for your buck. Whether they actually go together is another question.

The Unknown Soldier, Infra, Symphony in C, Royal Ballet, review - WWI ballet honours obscure tragedy

★★★ THE UNKNOWN SOLDIER, INFRA, SYMPHONY IN C, ROYAL BALLET WWI ballet honours obscure tragedy

The storyline goes missing, presumed dead, in this Armistice commission

Pity fatigue is a risk for any artwork marking the anniversary of the 1918 Armistice. There can’t have been a man or woman in the Royal Opera House on Tuesday night who hadn’t already read, watched, or otherwise had their fill of the horrors of the Western Front and the never-ending debate over the futility of it all.

Symphonic Dances, Royal Ballet review - a truly interesting creation

★★★★ SYMPHONIC DANCES, ROYAL BALLET New Scarlett creation shines in a musical mixed bill

New Scarlett creation shines in a musical mixed bill

Liam Scarlett must be worked off his feet. Just at the Royal Ballet, he made a full-length work, Frankenstein, last year and is currently working on a new Swan Lake; and now last night he has premiered a new abstract work, Symphonic Dances at the Royal Opera House.