Tag Archives: Joffrey Ballet

ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE

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In one of the most artistically successful collaborations ever presented at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, the L.A. Opera has joined with the Hamburg Ballet’s John Neumeier and the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago to bring Gluck’s ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE to the stage.

Neumeier—who directed, choreographed, and designed the sets, costumes, and lighting—guides his singers and dancers across the dance studio (Orpheus is a choreographer in this production) and through the underworld to mesmerizing effect. Gluck’s 1762 piece was opera’s first Gesamtkunstwerk, and, with its expressive emotional through line, a precursor to the nineteenth-century’s great Romantic scores.

A full company of 43 dancers animates the stage throughout the performance, providing spectacular visual counterpoint to the story of a lost wanderer (Maxim Mironov, in complete command as Orpheus), for whom the concept of love (Liv Redpath, as Amour) is poor compensation for love in the flesh (Lisette Oropresa’s Eurydice).

 

ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE

Sundays, March 18 and 25, at 2 pm.

Wednesday, March 21, and Saturday, March 24, at 7:30 pm.

DOROTHY CHANDLER PAVILION, Music Center, 135 North Grand Avenue, downtown Los Angeles.

laopera.org/orpheus

Top: John Neumeier and Lisette Oropresa rehearsing a scene from the L.A. Opera production of Orpheus and Eurydice.

Below: Scenes from the opera at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, with Maxim Mironov among the dancers. All photographs by Ken Howard.

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ROMEO, JULIET, AND THE JOFFREY

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Choreographer Krzysztof Pastor set the first act of his ROMEO & JULIET during the Mussolini era, with Tybalt and his Capulets as black-shirted Fascists and Mercutio suggesting a resistance fighter. The second act moves to the bright, pastel 1950s—to a country released from the cares of war and deprivation, celebrating an economic boom with a West Side Story-style group dance. The final act is marked by a tenuous connection to the Brigate Rosse of the 1970s.

The Joffrey Ballet production of Pastor’s 2008 ballet was first staged in Chicago in 2014, and the Los Angeles premiere of the work this month brings all the principals west: Rory Hohenstein (Romeo), Christine Rocas (Juliet), Yoshihisa Arai (Mercutio), and Temur Suluashvili (Tybalt).

Dylan Gutierrez, Jeraldine Mendoza, Derrick Agnoletti, and Miguel Angel Blanco make up the alternate cast.

Sergei Prokofiev’s score will be performed by a live orchestra under the musical direction of Scott Speck.

 

ROMEO & JULIET—THE JOFFREY BALLET

Friday, March 9, at 7:30 pm, and Sunday, March 11 at 2 pm.

Saturday, March 17, at 2 pm and 7:30 pm.

DOROTHY CHANDLER PAVILION, Music Center, 135 North Grand Avenue, downtown Los Angeles.

musiccenter.org/romeo-and-juliet

Above: Rory Hohenstein as Romeo and Christine Rocas as Juliet.

Below: Temur Suluashvili as Tybalt, and Rocas. Bottom: Yoshihisa Arai as Mercutio, holding Suluashvili.

Original set and costume design by Tatyana Van Walsum. All photographs by Cheryl Mann.

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Christine Rocas

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Temur Suluashvili and Yoshihisa Arai

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