Archives de Tag: Romeo and Juliet ballet

Paris Opera’s Romeo and Juliet : leave the studio, fill the stage!

Roméo et Juliette, Paris Opera Ballet, Opera Bastille, April 7, 8, and 17, 2026. Choreography by Rudolf Nureyev, Music by Sergei Prokofiev, Sets and Costumes [sort of] by Ezio Frigerio

Not one of the three evenings I attended was “bad.” But not one couple pierced me to the core, either. I realize I made a weird note during one performance: “Why is this ballet just not happening?”

Perhaps I could not concentrate because another tragedy was playing out on stage at the same time. What has the Paris Opera management done to Ezio Frigerio’s claustrophobically textured and vivid scenic environment? I thought I was hallucinating. No fountain? All the rich backcloths and detailed carvings replaced by what were basically sky templates enlarged off the internet? A cheap showroom bed plonked in the middle of an empty warehouse is now the crypt? Speaking of cheap, the regilt mobile flies were way too flashy.

The lighting design remains unchanged, yet the sets that the lighting refracted off have now mostly disappeared, along with about half the extras. The downstage “alea jacta est” dice players were rendered invisible both at curtain up and curtain down. The Duke of Verona, who appears upstage to force the warring clans to put down their swords was literally invisible all three nights. On the other hand, the guests entering the Capulet doors, who once had become shadows behind a scrim, are painfully visible as they head for the wings obscured by…nothing. Can it get worse? Yes. During the balcony scene, a spot hits the couple. Without the fountain, it lofts the shadow of their heads onto the bland backdrop that now only consisted of an out-of-focus polaroid moon. The result look exactly like an upside down “wow” emoticon.  Do better next time, guys.

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April 7th

Paul Marque and Sae Eun Park Performance on April 7th.

I have come to like Sae Eun Park, the performer. I have come to like Paul Marque in the same vein. I continue to dislike seeing them dance together. When Park/Marque is cast they continue to radiate the calm of their clearly pleasant rehearsal room relationship. When they are alone or with others they can glow, they react. Germain Louvet catalyzed a striking vulnerability in Park’s Giselle.  In Sylvia, you just yearned for the wildly ardent Marque to end up happily ever after with Bluenn Battistoni…

They are very much “in like,” but their chemistry lacks radiance, abandon. There is no electric “spark” between them, only a comfort zone. Yet they continue to be scheduled as dramatic leads together …

Maybe something was off from the start because the first real potential girlfriend you had already seen — Sylvia Saint-Martin’s icy, dry, and monotone Rosalind — made you already wonder what was wrong with this Romeo. Why would any young man in his right mind waste time trying to flirt with a humorless poppet? Overheard during intermission: “there was no Rosalind tonight, just a bunch of identical girls.” Ouch.

Sae Eun Park’s Juliet was light and quick and warm, but soon you could see how she was always being carefully managed by Tybalt and Romeo – and even her father — when it came to sliding her down or manipulating her in any way whatsoever. The fact that she offered up the same gracious smile to each and every person quickly started to bore me. There was no sense of shock in her first encounter with Romeo in the Ball Scene, which came off as more of a hello. Park does lean into Marque with soft grace, but even when his mask falls off Park’s Juliet remains the same well-bred girl. His first kiss doesn’t light her up with more than a “that was nice.” Nor did the second.

In the balcony scene Marque’s Romeo was full out at first, open-bodied and visibly inspired to impress Juliet (that recklessly precise manège of double tours)… and then he reversed gears and became the “I won’t break this glass unicorn” careful partner.  Why? Honestly, Park looks as if she is in perfectly fine shape and uninjured. Despite the restraint, a certain soft charm did manage to evolve. Was I moved? No. Act Three just seemed endless until Marque’s Romeo, alone, began to storm his way unto his death. Park’s death scene was moving in equal measure. How odd, isn’t it, that both their most passionate moments occurred while the other was inert?

All the more pity as so many on stage April 7th had energy and wit to spare:

Jack Gasztowtt, aware and alert, fully present on stage as Benvolio.

What’s not to like about Francesco Mura’s bouncy and sly Mercutio, except for a terrible hairdo?

Jérémy Loup-Quer’s observant and actually likeable Tybalt definitely knows how to swish and slash his sword with relaxed authority. He was very much amused and reactive in the early scenes. Never a villain in the making. And that proved interesting: his courtly restraint as bad guy made Mercutio’s (and his own) fate all the more surprising.

Andrea Sarri’s Paris quickly evolved from fatuous plot device into husband material early on.  He gave this dead-end role heft and elegance.

Sara Kora Dayanova’s Lady Capulet was a vortex of emotions, born out of the wisdom distilled by her years of on-stage experience. Most haughtily Shakespearian whilst she handed out swords during the ball scene, Dayanova’s later howl of desperation, not anger, stilled the house. Splendid and deeply alive on stage even when just walking – Dayanova doesn’t get a picture or a bio in the illustrated program. As if she were an extra? That’s just wrong. I heartily wish the Paris Opera Ballet would show more respect for those soloists who have given their lives to this company as they age gracefully and evolve more fully into character roles.

A young friend, who saw exactly the same cast a week later, hesitated when I interrogated him. “Oh it was excellent, so well-performed, the couple was really nice and then…At the end when he threw her body around, it was very aesthetic.” Alas he used code words for: your brain is on, not your heart. You are observing the process. He spoke too much about how he loved the costumes, bad sign. He was more captivated by the chemistry between Gastowtt’s Benvolio, Mura’s Mercutio, and Quer’s Tybalt. Now there he saw sparks flying, now there bloomed a galvanizing subtext he couldn’t shake out of his head.

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April 8th

Bleuenn Battistoni and Thomas Docquir. Performance on April 8th

The next night, after another impeccably danced performance, again I left the theater hungry for more. Unlike American critics, I have not so far felt I’d experienced what they sneeringly call the “too perfect” performances of the Paris Opera Ballet. But on the second night I started – for the first time ever – to muse that the principals just might have been over-rehearsed. Is that possible?

Even before Juliet’s entrance, I’d been tempted by what Hohyun Kang’s fluffy and flirty Rosalind had to offer. Kang is one of those soloists who keeps catching the light. Pablo Legassa’s limber and graphic Tybalt could have been naughtier (on the 17th, Nicola di Vico will carve out a splashily dashing silent movie villain who really has the ear of Katherine Higgins’s chillingly ambitious Lady Capulet). Andrea Sarri’s Mercutio had joyous energy to spare. Keita Bellali used the role of Paris to display his silky control and gorgeous lines as a peacock would. Bellali even managed to indicate that he might have some secret passions simmering just below the surface, too.

Everything Bluenn Battistoni’s Juliet does flows so naturally that you take her unforced – but powerfully developed — technique for granted. Her Juliet on April 8th accelerated, decelerated, nuanced little flicks of leg or hand, slowly loosened up. Her dance is beautifully silky…but it wasn’t until the third act that she took over the narrative and made it impossible not to watch her.

Her Romeo was Thomas Docquir. His trajectory in this company has been awkward. Every time I’ve seen him over the years he’s clearly been concentrating on extending his lines and technique, especially in the service of the tricky syncopations and changes of direction in Nureyev’s ballets. But something never quite happened. Endlessly cast as a perfectly acceptable Rothbart “de service” one season, then miscast as a mild Frollo, with a Prince Desiré in between (where he seemed petrified by imposter syndrome). And here? …here he was deeply sweet and finally relieved from whatever it was that had been holding him back. So I was rooting for him.

Docquir’s Romeo is very much in the vein of Tony in West Side Story, a passionate pacifist. He really draws in the audience when he pleads “I don’t, I won’t, I can’t” when prodded by his friends or by Tybalt. But with his Juliet, alas, once again, sparks just didn’t happen until the last act. Thomas Docquir – like Paul Marque the night before – kept disappearing into partner mode.

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April 17th

Romeo & Juliet. Performance on April 17th.

And then, unexpectedly, Thomas Docquir was thrust into a new partnership with Valentine Colasante on April 17th due to Guillaume Diop cancelling due to injury. And maybe this wasn’t such a bad idea.

While this couple also didn’t make me cry, the fact that they had been working in different directions with equal intensity in rehearsals gave their interactions a spontaneity that had been lacking in the other pairings.

Colasante’s playful “don’t worry, I won’t break” Juliet just wants to dance with her besties and no one, not even this rather cute Paris (Bellali again) was going to make her simply smile at everyone and obey. I sighed along with her easy loping pensive walk out onto the terrace and into the Balcony Scene. Docquir’s “Maybe Tonight” attitude made her visibly brighten. The duet on the 17th had an amplitude that was lacking on the 7th or 8th, perhaps due to the fact that when a new partner comes at you with a different center of gravity, then you are forced to concentrate on getting through the moment, rather than perfecting the look. So what if a few landings are hard, some lifts a bit short, and maybe timing is sometimes half a beat away from in-sync? In a dramatic ballet is partnering supposed to be predictably pretty?  Imperfection creates a sense of spontaneity. When Docquir’s Romeo struggled both intentionally and unintentionally with Colasante’s drugged body near the end, it felt raw. This drama was happening here and now on stage, not copy-pasted from a rehearsal studio.

Empty backdrops and over-guilded decor for this revival…

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Pas de deux at the Paris Opera Ballet : Baby Can YOU drive my car?

The extended apron thrust forward across where the orchestra should have been gave many seats at the Palais Garnier – already not renowned for visibility — scant sightlines unless you were in a last row and could stand up and tilt forward. Were these two “it’s a gala/not a gala” programs worth attending? Yes and/or no.

Evening  Number One: “Nureyev” on Thursday, October 8, at the Palais Garnier.

Nureyev’s re-thinkings of the relationship between male and female dancers always seek to tweak the format of the male partner up and out from glorified crane operator into that of race car driver. But that foot on the gas was always revved up by a strong narrative context.

Nutcracker pas de deux Acts One and Two

Gilbert generously offers everything to a partner and the audience, from her agile eyes through her ever-in-motion and vibrantly tensile body. A street dancer would say “the girlfriend just kills it.” Her boyfriend for this series, Paul Marque, first needs to learn how to live.

At the apex of the Act II pas of Nuts, Nureyev inserts a fiendishly complex and accelerating airborne figure that twice ends in a fish dive, of course timed to heighten a typically overboard Tchaikovsky crescendo. Try to imagine this: the stunt driver is basically trying to keep hold of the wheel of a Lamborghini with a mind of its own that suddenly goes from 0 to 100, has decided to flip while doing a U-turn, and expects to land safe and sound and camera-ready in the branches of that tree just dangling over the cliff.  This must, of course, be meticulously rehearsed even more than usual, as it can become a real hot mess with arms, legs, necks, and tutu all in getting in the way.  But it’s so worth the risk and, even when a couple messes up, this thing can give you “wow” shivers of delight and relief. After “a-one-a-two-a-three,” Marque twice parked Gilbert’s race car as if she were a vintage Trabant. Seriously: the combination became unwieldy and dull.

Marque continues to present everything so carefully and so nicely: he just hasn’t shaken off that “I was the best student in the class “ vibe. But where is the urge to rev up?  Smiling nicely just doesn’t do it, nor does merely getting a partner around from left to right. He needs to work on developing a more authoritative stage presence, or at least a less impersonal one.

 

Cendrillon

A ballerina radiating just as much oomph and chic and and warmth as Dorothée Gilbert, Alice Renavand grooved and spun wheelies just like the glowing Hollywood starlet of Nureyev’s cinematic imagination.  If Renavand “owned” the stage, it was also because she was perfectly in synch with a carefree and confident Florian Magnenet, so in the moment that he managed to make you forget those horrible gold lamé pants.

 

Swan Lake, Act 1

Gently furling his ductile fingers in order to clasp the wrists of the rare bird that continued to astonish him, Audric Bezard also (once again) demonstrated that partnering can be so much more than “just stand around and be ready to lift the ballerina into position, OK?” Here we had what a pas is supposed to be about: a dialogue so intense that it transcends metaphor.

You always feel the synergy between Bezard and Amandine Albisson. Twice she threw herself into the overhead lift that resembles a back-flip caught mid-flight. Bezard knows that this partner never “strikes a pose” but instead fills out the legato, always continuing to extend some part her movements beyond the last drop of a phrase. His choice to keep her in movement up there, her front leg dangerously tilting further and further over by miniscule degrees, transformed this lift – too often a “hoist and hold” more suited to pairs skating – into a poetic and sincere image of utter abandon and trust. The audience held its breath for the right reason.

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Manfred

Bewildered, the audience nevertheless applauded wildly at the end of this agonized and out of context solo. Pretending to themselves they had understood, the audience just went with the flow of the seasoned dancer-actor. Mathias Heymann gave the moment its full dose of “ah me” angst and defied the limits of the little apron stage [these are people used to eating up space the size of a football field].

Pas de deux can mostly easily be pulled out of context and presented as is, since the theme generally gravitates from “we two are now falling in love,” and “yes, we are still in love,” to “hey, guys, welcome to our wedding!” But I have doubts about the point of plunging both actor and audience into an excerpt that lacks a shared back-story. Maybe you could ask Juliet to do the death scene a capella. Who doesn’t know the “why” of that one? But have most of us ever actually read Lord Byron, much less ever heard of this Manfred? The program notes that the hero is about to be reunited by Death [spelled with a capital “D”] with his beloved Astarté. Good to know.

Don Q

Francesco Mura somehow manages to bounce and spring from a tiny unforced plié, as if he just changed his mind about where to go. But sometimes the small preparation serves him less well. Valentine Colasante is now in a happy and confident mind-set, having learned to trust her body. She now relaxes into all the curves with unforced charm and easy wit.

R & J versus Sleeping Beauty’s Act III

In the Balcony Scene with Miriam Ould-Braham, Germain Louvet’s still boyish persona perfectly suited his Juliet’s relaxed and radiant girlishness. But then, when confronted by Léonore Baulac’s  Beauty, Louvet once again began to seem too young and coltish. It must hard make a connection with a ballerina who persists in exteriorizing, in offering up sharply-outlined girliness. You can grin hard, or you can simply smile.  Nothing is at all wrong with Baulac’s steely technique. If she could just trust herself enough to let a little bit of the air out of her tires…She drives fast but never stops to take a look at the landscape.

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As the Beatles once sang a very, very, long time ago:

 « Baby, you can drive my car
Yes, I’m gonna be a star
Baby you can drive my car
And maybe I’ll love you »

Evening Two: “Etoiles.”  Tuesday, October 13, 2020.

We were enticed back to the Palais Garnier for a thing called “Etoiles {Stars] de l’Opera,” where the program consisted of…anything and everything in a very random way.  (Plus a bit of live music!)

Clair de lune by Alistair Marriott (2017) was announced in the program as a nice new thing. Nice live Debussy happened, because the house pianist Elena Bonnay, just like the best of dancers, makes all music fill out an otherwise empty space.

Mathieu Ganio, sporting a very pretty maxi-skort, opened his arms sculpturally, did a few perfect plies à la seconde, and proffered up a few light contractions. At the end, all I could think of was Greta Garbo’s reaction to her first kiss in the film Ninochka: “That was…restful.”  Therefore:

Trois Gnossiennes, by Hans van Manen and way back from 1982, seemed less dated by comparison.  The same plié à la seconde, a few innie contractions, a flexed foot timed to a piano chord for no reason whatever, again. Same old, eh? Oddly, though, van Manen’s pure and pensive duet suited  Ludmila Paglerio and Hugo Marchand as  prettily as Marriott’s had for Ganio. While Satie’s music breathes at the same spaced-out rhythm as Debussy’s, it remains more ticklish. Noodling around in an  absinth-colored but lucid haze, this oddball composer also knew where he was going. I thought of this restrained little pas de deux as perhaps “Balanchine’s Apollo checks out a fourth muse.”  Euterpe would be my choice. But why not Urania?

And why wasn’t a bit of Kylian included in this program? After all, Kylain has historically been vastly more represented in the Paris Opera Ballet’s repertoire than van Manen will ever be.

The last time I saw Martha Graham’s Lamentation, Miriam Kamionka — parked into a side corridor of the Palais Garnier — was really doing it deep and then doing it over and over again unto exhaustion during  yet another one of those Boris Charmatz events. Before that stunt, maybe I had seen the solo performed here by Fanny Gaida during the ‘90’s. When Sae-Un Park, utterly lacking any connection to her solar plexus, had finished demonstrating how hard it is to pull just one tissue out of a Kleenex box while pretending it matters, the audience around me couldn’t even tell when it was over and waited politely for the lights to go off  and hence applaud. This took 3.5 minutes from start to end, according to the program.

Then came the duet from William Forsythe’s Herman Schmerman, another thingy that maybe also had entered into the repertoire around 2017. Again: why this one, when so many juicy Forsythes already belong to us in Paris? At first I did not remember that this particular Forsythe invention was in fact a delicious parody of “Agon.” It took time for Hannah O’Neill to get revved up and to finally start pushing back against Vincent Chaillet. Ah, Vincent Chaillet, forceful, weightier, and much more cheerfully nasty and all-out than I’d seen him for quite a while, relaxed into every combination with wry humor and real groundedness. He kept teasing O’Neill: who is leading, eh? Eh?! Yo! Yow! Get on up, girl!

I think that for many of us, the brilliant Ida Nevasayneva of the Trocks (or another Trock! Peace be with you, gals) kinda killed being ever to watch La Mort du cygne/Dying Swan without desperately wanting to giggle at even the idea of a costume decked with feathers or that inevitable flappy arm stuff. Despite my firm desire to resist, Ludmila Pagliero’s soft, distilled, un-hysterical and deeply dignified interpretation reconciled me to this usually overcooked solo.  No gymnastic rippling arms à la Plisetskaya, no tedious Russian soul à la Ulanova.  Here we finally saw a really quietly sad, therefore gut-wrenching, Lamentation. Pagliero’s approach helped me understand just how carefully Michael Fokine had listened to our human need for the aching sound of a cello [Ophélie Gaillard, yes!] or a viola, or a harp  — a penchant that Saint-Saens had shared with Tchaikovsky. How perfectly – if done simply and wisely by just trusting the steps and the Petipa vibe, as Pagliero did – this mini-epic could offer a much less bombastic ending to Swan Lake.

Suite of Dances brought Ophélie Gaillard’s cello back up downstage for a face to face with Hugo Marchand in one of those “just you and me and the music” escapades that Jerome Robbins had imagined a long time before a “platform” meant anything less than a stage’s wooden floor.  I admit I had preferred the mysterious longing Mathias Heymann had brought to the solo back in 2018 — especially to the largo movement. Tonight, this honestly jolly interpretation, infused with a burst of “why not?” energy, pulled me into Marchand’s space and mindset. Here was a guy up there on stage daring to tease you, me, and oh yes the cellist with equally wry amusement, just as Baryshnikov once had dared.  All those little jaunty summersaults turn out to look even cuter and sillier on a tall guy. The cocky Fancy Free sailor struts in part four were tossed off in just the right way: I am and am so not your alpha male, but if you believe anything I’m sayin’, we’re good to go.

The evening wound down with a homeopathic dose of Romantic frou-frou, as we were forced to watch one of those “We are so in love. Yes, we are still in love” out of context pas de deux, This one was extracted from John Neumeier’s La Dame aux Camélias.

An ardent Mathieu Ganio found himself facing a Laura Hecquet devoted to smoothing down her fluffy costume and stiff hair. When Neumeier’s pas was going all horizontal and swoony, Ganio gamely kept replacing her gently onto her pointes as if she deserved valet parking.  But unlike, say, Anna Karina leaning dangerously out of her car to kiss Belmondo full throttle in Pierrot le Fou, Hecquet simply refused to hoist herself even one millimeter out of her seat for the really big lifts. She was dead weight, and I wanted to scream. Unlike almost any dancer I have ever seen, Hecquet still persists in not helping her co-driver. She insists on being hoisted and hauled around like a barrel. Partnering should never be about driving the wrong way down a one-way street.

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