The Sarasota Ballet's second production of the Season, Metropolitan, will open on December 1 at the Sarasota Opera House, with a triple bill by Sir Frederick Ashton, Marcelo Gomes and George Balanchine. For these performances The Sarasota Ballet will be accompanied by the Sarasota Orchestra under the baton of American Ballet Theatre Music Director Ormsby Wilkins.
Opening the program is Sir
Frederick Ashton's Illuminations, choreographed on New York City Ballet in 1950; followed by a World Premiere by
Marcelo Gomes, Principal Dancer with American Ballet; and closing the program is the Company premiere of
George Balanchine's Theme and Variations. "New York has long been the center of dance in America," says
Iain Webb, Director of The Sarasota Ballet. "These three ballets and choreographers, each with their own special connections to New York, and together they create a performance just as diverse, beautiful and astonishing as the city that never sleeps."
Sir
Frederick Ashton's dark and enigmatic Illuminations; performed to
Benjamin Britten's settings for tenor and string, of selected poems
B. Arthur Rimbaud, the enfant terrible of French poetry; portrays the poet's infatuation with his sacred and profane loves. Esteemed Dance Historian
David Vaughan wrote in his book titled
Frederick Ashton And His Ballets that "Illuminations may well be the most 'literary' of his ballets" and
John Martin, America's first major dance critic, wrote during Illuminations' 1950 premiere that "The more one knows about its cruel and turbulent hero, Arthur Rimbaud, the more vivid are Ashton's images, and the more brilliant is his weaving together of the poet's life and the fantasy and voyance [sic] of his poetry."
Marcelo Gomes' World Premiere, choreographed to the music of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, marks the first time Gomes will choreograph on The Sarasota Ballet. While the ballet is still in its beginning stages, Gomes reveals the inspiration behind the upcoming premiere "The loose narrative of the piece is centered on a man who's about to lose his life and decides to write a letter expressing his thanks for the years he has lived. I see the dancers as his memories, with the performance playing inside his head. I see dancers symbolizing important elements of his life, from his greatest love to his youth and childhood."
Closing Metropolitan is the Company premiere of George Balanchine's Theme and Variation, an intensive development of the classic ballet lexicon, and intended, as Balanchine wrote, "to evoke that great period in classical dancing when Russian ballet flourished with the aid of Tchaikovsky's music." With its glittering costumes the ballet transports audiences to the heyday of the Russian Imperial Ballet at the Maryinksy Theatre. Brian Seibert of the New York Times wrote that Theme and Variations is "a scintillating encapsulation of imperial Russian classicism. The palatial architecture of the choreography is built not to fail; in tandem with its Tchaikovsky score, the dance rises regally, majestically, transportingly."
Metropolitan is dedicated to the renowned Dance Historian
David Vaughan-Author of The Royal Ballet at Covent Garden, Merce Cunningham: Fifty Years,
Frederick Ashton and His Ballets, and co-edited with Mary Clarke The Encyclopedia of Dance and ballet-who passed away Friday October 27. David was a dedicated and passionate dance lover, whose contributions to the art form as a historian have been instrumental in keeping the legacies and knowledge of ballet alive. "David was a dear friend and someone who I have always respected and looked up to greatly," says Webb. "His passing is a great loss to the dance community and it is now the responsibility of all of us to continue his great work in keeping the histories of dance thriving."
Metropolitan is sponsored by the Observer Media Group and the live music for Metropolitan is sponsored by BMO Private Bank.
Performance Schedule and Ticket Information
1 - 2 December 2017
Sarasota Opera House
Friday, 1 December 2017 at 7:30pm
Saturday, 2 December 2017 at 2:00pm
Saturday, 2 December 2017 at 7:30pm
Subscription Tickets
Packages to The Sarasota Ballet's 2017 - 2018 Season are on sale now, beginning at $100. For information, please visit
www.SarasotaBallet.org or call the box office at
941.359.0099, Monday through Friday, 10am to 4pm.
Single Tickets
Individual tickets for The Sarasota Ballet's 2017-2018 Season, starting at $30, are on sale now at
www.SarasotaBallet.org or by calling
941.359.0099.
About The Sarasota Ballet
Since 1990, the mission of The Sarasota Ballet has been enriching lives, captivating emotions and strengthening the community through the art of dance. Under the leadership of Director
Iain Webb and Executive Director
Joseph Volpe, the company's expanded repertoire includes works by world-renowned choreographers such as Sir
Frederick Ashton,
George Balanchine, Sir
Matthew Bourne, Dame Ninette de Valois,
Michel Fokine,
Sir Kenneth MacMillan,
Rudolf Nureyev,
Jerome Robbins,
Paul Taylor,
Twyla Tharp, Antony Tudor and
Christopher Wheeldon. The Sarasota Ballet has received national and international recognition for its diverse repertoire of rarely performed ballets, as well as the integrity and artistry of its performances. In the last five years, The Sarasota Ballet has been invited to perform twice at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC and the Fall for Dance Festival at New York
City Center, as well as week-long residencies at the Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival and
The Joyce Theater in New York. The Company performed in May 2017 at the inaugural National Choreographic Festival in Salt Lake City.
Photo credit: Emma Kauldhar
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