Six Boston Ballet dancers will present premieres of their own choreography, featuring fellow Company members, at Dancer/Dance-makers, October 6, 2017, at 7:30 pm at Boston Ballet's South End headquarters (19 Clarendon Street).
Part of the BB@home series, Dancer/Dance-makers is an opportunity for audiences to see Boston Ballet perform in an intimate, black box theater setting. The program features works by Principal Dancer Paulo Arrais; Soloists Isaac Akiba, Roddy Doble, and Florimond Lorieux; and Company Artists Reina Sawai and Matthew Slattery. Following the performance, all choreographers will discuss their works, moderated by Artistic Director Mikko Nissinen, with an opportunity for questions and answers with the audience.
"I am thrilled we are able to nurture our dancers' choreographic talents by presenting their work at BB@home this season," said Artistic Director Mikko Nissinen. "Choreographing puts the dancer in the driver's seat. They get to make all the decisions-from music to staging, timing, and lighting. It can be daunting the first time, but also incredibly empowering."
The dancer-choreographers will present six short premieres, ranging from duets to ensemble works, that explore a variety of themes, including love, technology, unity, and relationships.
Set to Karl Jenkins' Adiemus Variations, Arrais' ensemble piece Castle is the first movement of a larger project he has in mind. Akiba's new work to Kodo, Taiko Performance Arts Ensemble's drum and vocal track "Burning" examines how we are fundamentally the same despite our differences. Doble, recently promoted to soloist with Boston Ballet, is choreographing on professional dancers for the first time, and will present a pas de deux titled Things We've Said to Takashi Yoshimatsu's Around the Round Ground: II. Slattery's new work is set to Six Drummers' "Kitchen," music created using everyday objects.
Lorieux and Sawai are choreographing for the first time as well. Lorieux's pas de deux to Chopin's Nocturne No. 20 was inspired by the music and choreographers who have influenced Lorieux's career, including Jerome Robbins, John Neumeier, and Rudolf Nureyev. With Sawai's contemporary work 54448 #5, set to Nosaj Thing's electronic track "Light #5," she hopes audiences will rethink other styles of dance.
BB@home is approximately 1 hour and 15 minutes with no intermission. Tickets are $55. For more information, visit bostonballet.org or call 617.695.6955.
All BB@home performances take place at 19 Clarendon Street, Boston, MA 02116:
Dancer/Dance-makers
Friday, October 6 at 7:30 pm
New Work
Choreography: Matthew Slattery
Music: Six Drummers, "Kitchen"
Dancers: Isaac Akiba, Hannah Bettes, Reina Sawai
Things We've Said
Choreography: Roddy Doble
Music: Takashi Yoshimatsu, Around the Round Ground: II Canticle played by Schin-ichi
Dancers: Rachele Buriassi, Roddy Doble
54448 #5
Choreography: Reina Sawai
Music: Nosaj Thing, "Light #5"
Dancers: Diana Albrecht, Daniel Cooper, Andres Garcia, Dalay Parrondo, Irlan Silva
New Work
Choreography: Florimond Lorieux
Music: Frederic Chopin, Nocturne No. 20
Dancers: Anaïs Chalendard, Alexander Maryianowsky
New Work
Choreography: Isaac Akiba
Music: Kodo, Taiko Performance Arts Ensemble, "Burning"
Dancers: Samivel Evans, Brett Fukuda, Seung Hyun Lee, Abigail Merlis
Castle
Choreography: Paulo Arrais
Music: Karl Jenkins, Adiemus Variations 1, 3, 4, 2
Dancers: Paul Craig, Matthew Slattery, Desean Taber, Junxiong Zhao
*Please note: all casting subject to change.
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