Paris Opera Ballet Triple Bill
A triple bill by the Paris Opera Ballet (France), featuring Blake Works I by William Forsythe, In The Night by Jerome Robbins and The Seasons’ by Crystal Pite.
Performed at Esplanade Theatre; Watched on 23 June 2019
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Blake Works I by William Forsythe
This was a modern ballet set to soft pop ballad music by James Blake. The dancers are clad in simple blue ballet class-wear - the men in light blue unitards and the women in a blue leotard and a short skirt - and they dance to segments of different songs by Blake in groups, then in a trio, then a duet and soon after it gets hard to keep track. The choreography seems very Forsythe-esque - or at least similar to what little I’ve watched of Forsythe. Like In the Middle, Somewhat Elevated, the choreography of Blake Works I twists ballet technique into something more modern, all the while retaining the strength of the technique as well as some bouts of classical ballet peeking through here and there, such as a sudden entrechat six or a balance in arabesque on pointe in the showy, Classical ballet style.
I skimmed through the programme book before the performance, but somehow missed the portion where it stated that Blake Works I aimed to present the fugue, which is a form of music composition, through the physical body. However, I doubt it would have mattered even if I did. Any musical implications of the choreography was lost on me, a stranger to musical composition or theory.
Moreover, I’ve always thought that it’s hard to find meaning or to see the concepts that the choreographer intended to show in abstract choreographies that involve ballet technique, especially with little to no explanation on the choreographer’s part. I’ve never really liked Balanchine nor any modern ballet I’ve watched, so I guess my dislike for modern ballets also add to my coldness towards Blake Works I. I just feel that ballet, right from its birth in the French courts, was meant to tell a story - an actual narrative - as well as to show off power, and using ballet technique in an abstract choreography makes it hard for concepts to shine through. Moreover, most ballet movements are already so closely associated to older ballets that I can’t help but relate these movements to other ballets when I see them in newer choreographies, even when there isn't really any connection. (Feel free to fight me or agree with me on this, my dislike for modern and contemporary ballets has always been something that I struggled with as I couldn't find a reason for it and it’s nice to hear other opinions.)
In The Night by Jerome Robbins
This was definitely my favourite piece out of the three works. The curtains came up to reveal a backdrop of stars, and a piano in the corner. Three duets were performed to live music by Chopin, each duet presenting the relationship of each couple.
The first couple is completely engrossed with each other, and the tenderness is obvious in the choreography. They seem to revolve around each other, their bodies rotating around each other in the lifts, and their movements mirroring each other even as they turn away, only to face each other again. The couple holds each other close, the intricate lifts requiring their torsos to be pressed against each other. Even when they stand apart, their gaze shows the connection between them as clear as day as they mirror each others’ movements.
The second couple seems to be at the stage of courtship, the woman and the man holding each other at arms’ length. Even during the partner work, the man holds the woman by the hand, the wrist or at the waist, a contrast to the torso-on-torso contact of the previous couple. I think the music adds a lot to the presentation of the couple, as the piano notes go lower and sound more suggestive.
The third couple is a mess of desperate, passionate declarations of love and angry rejections of one another. One moment, the woman leaps into the man’s arms and the next, she is walking off stage. The choreography here is definitely a lot more energetic, a lot wilder and unrestrained; they separate and come together forcefully, and the man almost seems to haul the woman into the air sometimes during lifts.
Eventually, the three couples appear on stage and greet each other, as if they met by coincidence while walking in the park or the gardens at night. It was very 19th-century historical romance novel: almost as if there was a ball going on and these 3 couples snuck off for some one-on-one time in the dark of the gardens. Interestingly, they split off into duos, different from their original partner, and look intently at each other, before the spell breaks and they go back to their original lover. After the presentations of 3 different couples in 3 differing relationships, them going back to their partner seems to present a faith in love: there isn’t any one “perfect” relationship. Each character sees another potential partner, or another potential type of relationship, but chooses to go back to the one they have because it’s theirs. I might be reading too much into this love thing, but this idea really came to the forefront of my mind whilst watching the piece.
Also, the MUSIC really added so much to the piece. Each piece of Chopin’s music was so beautiful and delicate and reflected the choreographic situation, whilst the choreography paired beautifully with the music.
The Seasons’ by Crystal Pite
This piece was a contemporary dance piece that made use of lighting to reflect the choreographic situation, namely which season the section was about. To be honest, I didn't like this piece, but some of my friends loved it. I guess it was down to personal preference.
Pite made use of a lot of canons, and whilst the effect was beautiful at first, the constant, constant, constant use of canons made it predictable and honestly, after seeing canons so many times, the novelty of its beauty wore off. Moreover, I felt that the choreography didn’t flow well in the sense that because the piece made use of a lot of canons, and the piece having made use of 54 dancers, it seemed as if there was a lot of waiting for each dancer. Waiting for the canon to be over or waiting at a spot onstage for the rest of the dancers that were halfway across the stage to catch up.
Also, perhaps it was because I couldn’t see the full extent of the lighting from my seat, I felt that some of the ideas she used were difficult to see. Whilst images of whirling tornadoes, or perhaps the hairs (?) of a sea anemone floating in the current were clear, it was hard to find significant images in most of the choreography? Of course, it’s most probably because the choreographer wanted the audience to interpret some images for themselves, but for me, it mostly felt like a lot of movement with no obvious concept.
My favourite part in this piece, though, was a section with an all-male cast. The males of the Paris Opera Ballet performed intricate leaps and jumps, and then I can’t remember much, only that they were incredibly grounded yet exuded such power and force with their movements that it took my breath away.
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Overall, I think that my biggest takeaway from this performance is that dancers from the Paris Opera are phenomenal. Their ballet technique is ridiculously strong, and they presented a pretty strong showing in Crystal Pite’s contemporary piece. Somehow, this surprised me because the idea of dancers from the Paris Opera, the cradle of the Romantic ballet and the tutu-and-tights ballerina, being fantastic at moving their body in weird and unorthodox ways, seemed crazy, but this triple bill showed that at the heart of the Paris Opera Ballet were dancers who were great movers.








