‘NUTCRACKER’ IN RITUAL FINERY“The Nutcracker” puts the company in ballet companies. The annual holiday juggernaut attracts the largest audience of potential customers for ballet troupes across the country, and the dependably sold-out weeks of performances pay for the more inspired and stimulating stuff they stage the rest of the season. The “Nutcracker” offered by Nevada Ballet Theatre at UNLV UNLV University of Nevada, Las Vegas ’s Judy Bayley Theatre is certain to bolster the troupe’s bottom line. It’s perfectly charming and cheering, generous with the eye and ear candy ear candy n. Informal Light popular music considered to be pleasing. . Bruce Steivel’s choreography offers a pleasantly traditional take on Tchaikovsky’s fairy-tale ballet, with an emphasis on pretty. Nevada Ballet augments its attractive ensemble with more than 20 adorable and admirably disciplined young dancers. Andre Vassiliev’s settings glow like pages from a children’s pop-up book Noun 1. pop-up book - a book (usually for children) that contains one or more pages such that a three-dimensional structure rises up when a page is opened pop-up , and his luxe luxe n. 1. The condition of being elegantly sumptuous. 2. Something luxurious; a luxury. [French, luxury, from Latin luxus. costumes will leave young girls (and maybe a few young boys) coveting sparkling tulle Tulle (t l, Fr. tül), town (1990 pop. 18,685), capital of Corrèze dept., S central France. Firearms and other goods are made there. Tulle was built around a 7th-century monastery. , tights and tiaras.
In a brief prologue, villagers frolic Frolic - A Prolog system in Common Lisp. ftp://ftp.cs.utah.edu/pub/frolic.tar.Z. on a snowy village street (which was amusingly familiar to Wednesday night’s opening crowd, which valiantly braved the surprise snowstorm to make the curtain). Don’t blink, or you’ll miss the entrance of a surprise celebrity. Different celebrity guests are scheduled for some of the shows — at Wednesday’s opening night it was singer Clint Holmes, and he sleighed ’em. Act One’s Christmas party scene is more mimed than danced, but there’s lots to look at as grown-ups gossip and gavotte gavotte (gəvŏt`), originally a peasant dance of the Gavots in upper Dauphiné, France. A type of circle dance characterized by lively, skipping steps, it was introduced at the court of Louis XIV and was used by Lully in his ballets and , young girls dance with their dolls, and a mischievous posse of little boys creates amusing disruptions. Enter Drosselmeyer, a caped man of mystery who conjures life-size dancing dolls and a toy soldier. Before the party ends, he presents Clara (on Wednesday, it was Natalie Zhang, poised and graceful) and her younger brother, Fritz (proud and impish imp·ish adj. Of or befitting an imp; mischievous. imp ish·ly adv.imp Ernest Constantine Reynolds), with gifts — a wooden nutcracker soldier doll for her and a stuffed Mouse King for him. After sneaking downstairs to preview their presents, the children fall asleep and enter a dream — a battle between the Nutcracker and the Mouse King, a rousing skirmish between order and chaos. The second act is where the ballet’s famous and familiar musical themes come in. A kitschy world tour of musical exotica ex·ot·i·ca pl.n. Things that are curiously unusual or excitingly strange: such gustatory exotica as killer bee honey and fresh catnip sauce. — Spanish, Arabian, Chinese and Russian — is personified by a pageant of dancing coffees, candies and flowers. The menu of divertissements includes pastel poppies in hues of peach and mint who whirl delicately through the Waltz of the Flowers; Cameron Findley earned the evening’s most enthusiastic cheers as the Russian (and as the first act’s Toy Soldier) with a series of heroic toe-touching leaps. The Nutcracker by this time has been transformed into the Cavalier, dashingly danced by Grigori Arakelyan. He partners with the Sugarplum Fairy, the always elegant Yoomi Lee, in a picturesque pas de deux pas de deux (French; “step for two”) Dance for two performers. A characteristic part of classical ballet, it includes an adagio, or slow dance, by the ballerina and her partner; solo variations by the male dancer and then the ballerina; and a coda, or . Steivel’s 25-year-old choreography has been capably staged by ballet mistress Clarice Geissel-Rathers, who knows her way around a “Nutcracker”: Before the show, she estimated she had herself danced more than 400 performances of the ballet. She brings out distinctive characters in the crowded first act party, and coaches impressive performances from the corps of children, some of whom are quite tiny. More than 80 children from across the valley perform in the rotating casts. A nibble Half a byte (four bits). (data) nibble - /nib'l/ (US "nybble", by analogy with "bite" -> "byte") Half a byte. Since a byte is nearly always eight bits, a nibble is nearly always four bits (and can therefore be represented by one hex digit). of a quibble QUIBBLE. A slight difficulty raised without necessity or propriety; a cavil. 2. No justly eminent member of the bar will resort to a quibble in his argument. : Act Two is an extended dream of coffee and candy, but the dancing was occasionally somewhat less than crisp and exuberant — it could use another shot or two of all that sugar and caffeine. Perhaps the dancers’ energy and momentum were constrained by Bayley’s relatively small stage (which, on the other hand, ensures that everyone has a good seat); certainly they were missing the extra jolt of warmth that live musicians would provide. Still, children who visit this “Nutcracker” will be enchanted en·chant tr.v. en·chant·ed, en·chant·ing, en·chants 1. To cast a spell over; bewitch. 2. To attract and delight; entrance. See Synonyms at charm. by the imagery and action onstage and by watching their peers perform, while grown-ups can look forward to relaxing, non-taxing entertainment. That’s not to say that parents will get away with the mere price of a ticket: Nevada Ballet cannily provides an intermission with plenty of time for patrons to pose for photos with ballerinas, shop the cleverly-stocked boutique, and visit the bar, set up with hot chocolate, coffee and spiked eggnog. IF YOU GO What: “The Nutcracker” performed by Nevada Ballet Theatre; choreography by Bruce Steivel When: Through Dec. 28 (see Web site for dates and times) Where: Judy Bayley Theatre, UNLV campus Admission: $45-$85; www.nevadaballet.com Running time: Approximately two hours, with intermission Online: See a photo gallery at www.lasvegassun.com. Joe Brown can be reached at 259-8801 or at joe.brown@lasvegassun.com.
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l, Fr. tül)
ish·ly adv.
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