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Attitudes.


THE YEAR 1904 was a very good year for dance: It was that prime vintage that saw the birth of both George Balanchine and Frederick Ashton, conceivably the two greatest classical ballet choreographers of the twentieth century. The dangerously amusing spell-check on my computer renders their names as Galantine gal·an·tine  
n.
A dish of boned, stuffed meat or fish that is poached and served cold coated with aspic.



[Middle English galauntine, a kind of sauce, from Old French
 and Asthenia asthenia /as·the·nia/ (as-the´ne-ah) lack or loss of strength and energy; weakness.

neurocirculatory asthenia
, and I am sure that one day someone's inadequate command of that "Ignore" key will immortalize im·mor·tal·ize  
tr.v. im·mor·tal·ized, im·mor·tal·iz·ing, im·mor·tal·iz·es
To make immortal.



im·mor
 those names in print. However, the Georgian Balanchine (originally Balanchivadze but never Galantine) arrived in St. Petersburg, Russia, in January, while the English Ashton (hardly Asthenia) arrived in Guayaquil, Ecuador, in September. They were both pioneers, Balanchine in the United Slates, and Ashton in Britain, and both regarded the nineteenth-century choreographer Marius Petipa as their master. They were cautiously aware of one another and, with a sometimes oblique politeness, respectful of each other's talent and position.

As far as Ashton is concerned, I am reminded of how the singer Bing Crosby, asked to comment on Frank Sinatra, reportedly replied, "Sinatra has a voice that comes once in a lifetime--too bad it had to come in mine." I got the impression that sometimes Ashton felt overwhelmed by Balanchine's fecundity fecundity /fe·cun·di·ty/ (fe-kun´dit-e)
1. in demography, the physiological ability to reproduce, as opposed to fertility.

2. ability to produce offspring rapidly and in large numbers.
 and brilliance. Yet Ashton, while living a little lazily in the Russian-American's shadow, had areas of choreographic eloquence that matched, and some would say surpassed, Balanchine's own.

THEIR DANCE backgrounds were markedly different. Balanchine's was traditional: a pupil of the Imperial Ballet School in St. Petersburg, then the Maryinsky Ballet, and early exposure to Moscow's experimental choreographer Kasyan Goleizovsky, before defecting from Soviet Russia to join Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1924. Impeccable credentials, you must agree. Ashton's early career was altogether dimmer. Brought up in Peru, he saw Pavlova dance there in 1917 and his future was determined. But he didn't start serious training until 1923 in London, studying first with Leonide Massine and later Marie Rambert. By 1926 he had made his debut as a choreographer with a work for the Rambert dancers, A Tragedy of Fashion. After a stint in 1928 as a dancer with the Ida Rubinstein company, where he came under the influence of Bronislava Nijinska, he returned to London to play a leading role in the foundation of British ballet, first at Rambert's Ballet Club and later with Ninette de Valois' Vic-Wells Ballet.

Ashton's influence on British ballet is--or at least should have been--as profound as Balanchine's is on American. The New York City Ballet New York City Ballet, one of the foremost American dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded by Lincoln Kirstein and George Balanchine as the Ballet Society in 1946.  has cherished and maintained Balanchine's repertoire. On the other hand, Britain's Royal Ballet, the company whose style Ashton virtually founded, has been far more casual in its husbandry of the Ashton repertoire. City Ballet's current Balanchine Celebration, organized by Peter Martins, dwarfs the plans of The Royal Ballet for its 2004/5 season--although these plans do include a welcome revival of Ashton's full-evening Sylvia.

SURPRISINGLY perhaps, this most English of choreographers has been more appreciated in the United States than in Britain. Quite a few of his major ballets, such as Daphnis and Chloe Daphnis and Chloe is the only known work of the 2nd century AD Greek novelist and romancer Longus.[1] Setting and style
It is set on the isle of Lesbos during the 2nd century AD, which is also assumed to be the author's home.
 (1951) and Ondine (1958), generally panned in London, were welcomed by the New York critics. Indeed, Ashton himself felt that American audiences were more appreciative of him. It is also perhaps revealing that the most concentrated homage during this centennial period is probably the two-week Ashton festival at Lincoln Center Festival (see page 40).

One of the tragedies of contemporary ballet is the number of Ashton works that have seemingly been lost. Some, such as Variations on a Theme of Purcell, were admittedly minor pieces. But other ballets are substantial losses. They include such masterpieces as Valses Nobles et Sentimentales Both Franz Schubert and Maurice Ravel composed noble and/or sentimentalWaltzes (Valses). Schubert
Schubert's piano music was slow in taking its place in the standard repertoire of piano literature.
, Madame Chrysantheme, Illuminations, and Homage to the Queen, and such important works as The Wanderer, Nocturne nocturne (nŏk`tûrn) [Fr.,=night piece], in music, romantic instrumental piece, free in form and usually reflective or languid in character. John Field wrote the first nocturnes, influencing Chopin in the writing of his 19 nocturnes for piano. , Don Juan, Apparitions, Picnic at Tintagel, and Rinaldo and Armida Rinaldo and Armida

virgin witch seeks revenge but falls in love. [Ital. Lit.: Jerusalem Delivered]

See : Lovers, Famous
, and even such early chamber pieces for Rambert as Les Masques. More could and should have been done to save this repertoire.

So, wherein lies the greatness of Ashton? Why worry what happens to his ballets? The loss of any major repertoire diminishes the art of dance. More than that, Ashton's feel for an intensely poetic form of neoclassicism neoclassicism: see classicism.  makes Symphonic Variations and Scenes de Ballet quite different from their Balanchine counterparts, the cool Concerto Barocco and the diamond-sharp Symphony in C Symphony in C may refer to a number of symphonies written in the key of C Major:
  • Symphonies referred to by their key exclusively
  • Symphony in C (Wagner) - Richard Wagner's Symphony in C
. There is also his wonderfully dramatic sense of character revealed in, say Enigma Variations, or La Fille mal gardee. Finally, quite simply, The Royal Ballet danced divinely under his artistic direction in the late 1960s. As Arthur Miller said, in a very different context, "Attention must be paid." In my view, despite the current and forthcoming festivities fes·tiv·i·ty  
n. pl. fes·tiv·i·ties
1. A joyous feast, holiday, or celebration; a festival.

2. The pleasure, joy, and gaiety of a festival or celebration.

3.
, not enough is being paid. Ashton was a rare genius of dance.

Senior Consulting Editor Clive Barnes, who covers dance and theater for the New York Post The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and the oldest to have been published continually as a daily.[3] Since 1976, it has been owned by Australian-born billionaire Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation and is one of the 10 , has contributed to DANCE MAGAZINE since 1956.
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Title Annotation:George Balanchine, Frederick Ashton
Author:Barnes, Clive
Publication:Dance Magazine
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Jul 1, 2004
Words:799
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