The Mariinsky (Kirov) Ballet joins the previously-announced Royal Shakespeare Company and The Cleveland Orchestra, completing the trio of leading performing ensembles coming to New York this summer as part of Lincoln Center Festival 2011. Nigel Redden, Festival Director, today announced the complete Festival schedule, which runs from July 5 through August 14. In a co-presentation with the Metropolitan Opera, the renowned Mariinsky (Kirov) Ballet returns to the Festival for eight performances at the Met Opera House, dancing three programs. Highlighting the company's appearance are the U.S. premieres of Anna Karenina and The Little Humpbacked Horse, evening-length ballets by critically-acclaimed choreographer Alexei Ratmansky set to music by leading Russian composer Rodion Shchedrin. A third program pairs Alberto Alonso's Carmen Suite, to Shchedrin's arrangement of Bizet's score, and George Balanchine's neo-classical masterwork Symphony in C, also with music by Bizet. Artistic Director of the Mariinsky, Valery Gergiev will conduct the Mariinsky Orchestra.
Said Mr. Redden, "We are privileged to have three of the world's foremost performing ensembles-the Mariinsky Ballet, Royal Shakespeare Company and The Cleveland Orchestra-highlighting dance, theater, and music presentations, respectively at Festival 2011. At the same time, we are thrilled to present the Festival debuts of Peter Brook, Tom Zé and the Danish Royal Opera, and to welcome back Garry Hynes, Amon Miyamoto, David Michalek, and the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. This year's Festival is the longest running one in its fifteen-year history and once again offers New York a feast of innovative and compelling artists and performances from around the world."
Three leading stage directors will bring exciting new productions to Festival 2011. Legendary theater artist Peter Brook, whose last Lincoln Center production was La Tragédie de Carmen at the Vivian Beaumont Theater in 1983, brings his intimate A Magic Flute to the Festival for its U.S. Premiere with 16 performances at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater. The fully-staged adaptation of Mozart's opera, created for his Paris-based Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord, is performed by an ensemble of two actors and alternating casts of seven singers, with pianist. Tony Award-winning director Garry Hynes, whose DruidSynge was a high point of the 2006 Festival, returns with the Druid Theatre Company's production of Seán O'Casey's The Silver Tassie, a searing drama set during and after World War I. This rarely-staged O'Casey play will have eight performances at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater.Highlighting the music presentations at this year's Festival, The Cleveland Orchestra, led by its music director Franz Welser-Möst offers Bruckner: (R)evolution, an immersion in the symphonies of 19th-century giant Anton Bruckner. Symphonies Nos. 5, 7, 8 (the original 1887 version), and No. 9 will be juxtaposed with works by one of America's contemporary masters of minimalism, John Adams: Guide to Strange Places, Dr. Atomic Symphony and the Violin Concerto featuring Leila Josefowicz as guest soloist. A champion of Bruckner's music-a composer he feels has been unfairly neglected-Welser-Möst hopes to spark a re-awakening by showing these monumental works in a new light.
Music from opposite ends of the globe, and completely divergent traditions, is represented at Festival 2011 by The Royal Danish Opera and Tom Zé. The acclaimed Royal Danish Opera gives the U.S. Premiere of its production of Poul Ruders' riveting opera Selma Ježková, conducted by Michael Schønwandt, with a performance in the Rose Theater. The opera, with a libretto by Henrik Engelbrecht based on Lars von Trier's original screenplay for the film Dancer in the Dark, is directed by Kasper Holten, artistic director of the company. The Royal Danish Orchestra will also perform a concert program of works by Danish composer Carl Nielsen and Igor Stravinsky, also conducted by Schønwandt in Alice Tully Hall. And soloists of the Orchestra will be heard in an intimate chamber concert in the Stanley H. Kaplan Penthouse, in a program of works by Nielsen and Norwegian composer, Johan Svendsen. A rare New York concert by Brazil's influential pop surrealist Tom Zé will take place at Alice Tully Hall. A leading force in the Tropicalia movement of the 1960s, the socially/politically-conscious musician has been enjoying a career renaissance since the mid-1990s when David Byrne discovered and introduced his earlier recordings to a new generation of listeners. The Merce Cunningham Dance Company (MCDC) has been presented at the Festival on four previousVideos