Oracle.An intellectual giant among choreographers, Glen Tetley has set himself the personal challenge of rendering weighty abstract concepts in pure movement. In Oracle, his fourth original work set on the National Ballet of Canada National Ballet of Canada, the leading Canadian ballet company. Based in Toronto, it was founded (1951) by Celia Franca (1921–2007) and modeled on Sadler's Wells (now the Royal Ballet). , Tetley has taken on no less a theme than the universal feminine principle as embodied in the White Goddess of matriarchal ma·tri·arch n. 1. A woman who rules a family, clan, or tribe. 2. A woman who dominates a group or an activity. 3. A highly respected woman who is a mother. mythology. Five women and five men, representing various aspects of the Goddess and a supplicant In an authentication system, supplicant refers to the client machine that wants to gain access to the network. See 802.1x. poet-hunter, respectively, form five couples who collectively explore the shifting relationships between the universal matriarch and humankind. Utilizing his trademark ebb and flow the alternate ebb and flood of the tide; often used figuratively. See also: Ebb of energy, Tetley keeps the ballet in constant motion with dense footwork and tricky partnering that is both inventive and challenging, yet moves effortlessly between 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 and ensemble stage pictures. Longtime Tetley collaborators Nadine Baylis (design) and John B. Read (lighting) have created an arresting, otherworldly aura. Clothed in pristine white unitards and bathed in surreal pools of blue-white light, the dancers are set against a backdrop of ever-changing cloud formations that mirror the lush emotional shifts imbedded in the neoromantic Symphonies No. 1 and 2 of Australian composer Carl Vine. Two couples dominate the ballet, with the other three taking on the aspects of a Greek chorus. Magnificent lead dancers Margaret Illmann and Robert Tewsley portray granite strength that is as lyrical as it is heroic. In direct contrast are the agitated ag·i·tate v. ag·i·tat·ed, ag·i·tat·ing, ag·i·tates v.tr. 1. To cause to move with violence or sudden force. 2. , angst-filled movements of Gizella Witkowsky and Roberto Campanella, a kinetic turmoil always dispelled by the tranquillity of Illmann and Tewsley. An artist can, perhaps, unconsciously manifest an idea beyond his original intentions. Oracle seems to me to be a sequel to Tetley's Voluntaries (1 973). The latter was created for Stuttgart Ballet in the wake of director John Cranko's untimely death and was designed to give the dancers courage for the future. In recent years, cancer has given Tetley his own brush with mortality. Where Voluntaries, with its upward movement, indicates hope, Oracle, with its earthbound earth·bound also earth-bound adj. 1. Fastened in or to the soil: earthbound roots. 2. a. decisiveness, points, perhaps, to affirmation. In Oracle, the White Goddess has become a metaphor for the joy of being alive. |
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