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Richmond Ballet, Jepson Theatre, George M. Modlin Center for the Arts, Richmond, September 4-7, 1997.


SEPTEMBER 4-7, 1997 REVIEWED BY JULINDA LEWIS

Streets and Legends, Colin Connor's new work for Richmond Ballet, is a witty and successful blend of the traditional and the contemporary. Charles Schoonmaker has dressed the dancers in a potpourri of little kilts layered over street wear such as shorts, leggings leg·ging  
n.
1. A leg covering usually extending from the ankle to the knee and often made of material such as leather or canvas, worn especially by soldiers and workers.

2. leggings
a.
, and shirts tied around waists. The dancers let down their hair, showing off tattoos and neck chains; they flaunt flaunt  
v. flaunt·ed, flaunt·ing, flaunts

v.tr.
1. To exhibit ostentatiously or shamelessly: flaunts his knowledge. See Synonyms at show.

2.
 bandannas and bare torsos while alternately strutting with deliberate coolness and rushing with carefree abandon in their hip new black dance sneakers sneakers
Noun, pl

US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles

sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl 
. One dancer dives from the top of a tall black box into a mosh pit of waiting arms.

On the surface, Streets and Legends is a foot-stomping ruckus. But underlying it all is an unseen aloofness, an invisible pull that serves as a metaphor for Connor's burgeoning in interest in his Scottish heritage. The appositional ap·po·si·tion  
n.
1. Grammar
a. A construction in which a noun or noun phrase is placed with another as an explanatory equivalent, both having the same syntactic relation to the other elements in the sentence; for example,
 theme is further carried out in the music, which juxtaposes haunting traditional fidle and bagpipe bagpipe, musical instrument whose ancient origin was probably in Mesopotamia from which it was carried east and west by Celtic migrations. It was used in ancient Greece and Rome and has been long known in India.  by Alisdair Fraser and the spunky spunk·y  
adj. spunk·i·er, spunk·i·est Informal
Spirited; plucky.



spunki·ly adv.
 urban folk style of Ashley Maclsaac.

A second new work, Complete Trust, by ballet master Malcolm Burn, is an expansion of last year's 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
, Trust. Sheer blue costumes for both men and women give the work a sensuous and contemporary look. The four sections, representing romance, regrets, reverie, and trust (identified in press materials but not in the program), are clearly delineated by changes in mood, movement, and music. The violin and piano score, from music by Johan Svendsen, Henri Vieuxtemps, and Richard Wagner, was played live by Weigang Li and John Walter.

Building upon a theme of snapshots or vignettes, the first section shows the dancers in repose, melting to the floor from bent knees or waiting, with hips cocked, torsos rotated in the opposite direction. The movement motif of the second section features a curiously disturbing retreat by the dark-haired Mateo Torres, who skitters backwards, holding his hands in front of his face, while in the third section he engages his partner, Mandy Phelps, in an intriguing series of encounters an entanglements. The ballet ends with a more traditional, romantic duet, predominantly warm and lyrical, although there is a certain rebelliousness and independence in the way Claire Taber perches on Gary Lenington's shoulder, then slides down just a tad faster than necessary.

Richmond Ballet opened its fourteenth season with a revival of Balanchine's 1956 classic Allegro Brillante staged by Bart Cook. Artist in residence Maria Calegari--a study in controlled expressiveness with her perfectly arched limbs and sculpted sculpt  
v. sculpt·ed, sculpt·ing, sculpts

v.tr.
1. To sculpture (an object).

2. To shape, mold, or fashion especially with artistry or precision:
 wrists--and partner Anton Kunikeyev gave a crisp and refreshing performance supported by an energetic corps de ballet corps de bal·let  
n.
The dancers in a ballet troupe who perform as a group.



[French : corps, corps + de, of + ballet, ballet.
.

The performances were staged in an elegant new venue, the Jepson Theatre on the University of Richmond campus. A richly appointed house, the theater has comfortable seating, good sight lines, and a spacious stage. It also boasts an open courtyard and such intriguing architectural features as winding passages and a moatlike main entrance.
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Article Details
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Author:Lewis, Julinda
Publication:Dance Magazine
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Dec 1, 1997
Words:487
Previous Article:Fringe Festival of Independent Dance Artists, Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, Toronto, August 15-24, 1997.(Brief Article)
Next Article:Requiem!!(Capitol Theatre, Columbus, Ohio)
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