New Zealand School of Dance Graduation Season 09

Te Whaea National Dance and Drama Centre, 11 Hutchison Rd, Newtown, Wellington

18/11/2009 - 28/11/2009

Production Details



 

The New Zealand School of Dance Graduation Season 09 promises to be a sleek, polished and exciting performance of classical ballet and contemporary dance.   From heritage pieces to brand new choreography this season will have something for all dance lovers.

In a major coup, the New Zealand School of Dance is presenting American choreographer Paul Taylor’s lyrical and uplifting work, Airs. Paul Taylor is frequently called the "world’s greatest living choreographer" and Airs is a cornerstone of twentieth century dance. It is performed to George Frideric Handel’s exquisite music.

Virtuosic gems from the classical ballet repertoire include the charming Pas de Quatre, which was choreographed in 1845 for the four most famous ballerinasof the day. The vivacious Paquita Pas de Trois will also be performed.

Full of energy and fizz, the production features several dynamic contemporary dance works.

X300 is a powerful workby Australian choreographer Frances Rings (Bangarra Dance Company). Some 50 years ago at the edge of the Great Victoria Desert in Maralinga, Southern Australia, Britain and Australia conducted nuclear experiments for more than a decade. The test site was code-named X300. South Australian-born Rings has created a powerful interpretation of the stories told to her by her family of the desolation of the land and its people.

Shona McCullagh’s stunning duet Love will also be performed at Graduation Season. This is an excerpt from the full-length work Quick which premiered at the New Zealand International Festival of the Arts in 1998.

Two fresh new works by prominent New Zealand choreographers have been commissioned by the NZ School of Dance especially for Graduation Season. Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete (Okareka Dance Company) have created a new work to be performed by an all-male group, whilst Cathy Livermore (Atamira Dance Collective) has choreographed on the female students.

The Graduation Season is adored by audiences and critics alike and heralded for its strong selection of works and brilliant performances by some of the finest young dancers in New Zealand.

VENUE:
Te Whaea Theatre, 11 Hutchison Road, Newtown, Wellington

DATES:
Evening shows: 7.30pm, 18 – 28 November
Matinee: 2.00pm, Sunday 22 November
No show Monday 23 November

TICKETS:
$10 children under 12 years old
$15 for students and seniors
$20 for adults

BOOKINGS:
Tickets available from www.nzschoolofdance.co.nz 
or at the venue.

PROGRAMME OF WORKS

/ PAS DE QUATRE 

Music: Cesare Pugni (1802 – 1870)
Choreography: Jules Perrot (1819 – 1899)
Choreography reconstructed by Anton Dolin (1904 – 1983)
Staged by: Lidiya Klymenko
Costumes: after the 1845 Pas de Quatre lithograph by A. E. Chalon and T. H. Maguire
World premiere: 12 July 1845, His Majesty’s Theatre, London, England
NZSD premiere: 13 November 1981, Opera House, Wellington, New Zealand

This short ballet served originally as a divertissement for four of the greatest ballerinas of the 19th century – Lucile Grahn, Carlotta Grisi, Fanny Cerrito and Marie Taglioni – to dance together on the same stage. The first performance sent critics into a frenzy. The man who acted with persistence in bringing the four rivals together was the enterprising manager of His Majesty’s Theatre in London, Benjamin Lumley. "The government of a great state was but a trifle compared to the government of such subjects as those whom I was supposed to be able to command," he recollected almost twenty years after the event. "These were subjects who considered themselves far above mortal control, or, more properly speaking, each was a queen in her own right – alone, absolute, supreme."

/ HAERE

Music: Dame Gillian Whitehead (b.1941), Hineraukatauri
Choreography: Cathy Livermore (b. 1976)
World premiere: 18 November 2009, Te Whaea Theatre, Wellington, New Zealand

"Ebbing and flowing, self-gratification to servitude to salvation, we are discoverers, creators and guardians and the knowledge keepers of life. We are our own and yet we belong to the purpose of our biology; with strength and courage we create, only to surrender what we have created to forces larger than our own; we are unique in the minute detail while being a continual replication of all those who have walked before us. Admiration, respect and aroha to all women on your journey, so different and yet the same."
– Cathy Livermore
/ LOVE

Music: Georgy Vasilye vich Sviridov (1915 – 1998), Sacred Love
Choreography: Shona McCullagh (b.1962)
World premiere: 1998, Soundings Theatre , Wellington, New Zealand
NZSD premiere: 18 November 2009, Te Whaea Theatre , Wellington, New Zealand

"This duet is an excerpt from a full length work entitled Quick about my grandmother’s brief marriage and her grief due to the death of her husband. The wedding night duet was originally created on New Zealand School of Dance graduate Raewyn Hill and Simon Ellis for the 1998 International Festival of the Arts."
– Shona McCullagh

– Interval –

/ PAS DE TROIS FROM PAQUITA, ACT I

Music: Ludwig Minkus (1826 – 1917)
Choreography: After Marius Petipa (1818 – 1910)
Staged by: Yuriy Klymenko
World premiere: 27 December 1881, Imperial Bolshoi Theatre, Russia
NZSD premiere: 30 November 1999, Bruce Mason Centre, Takapuna, Auckland, New Zealand

Paquita is a superb example of the French style as it was exported to Saint Petersburg in the late 19th Century. First performed at the Paris Opera in 1846, Paquita was originally a ballet-pantomime in 2 acts, choreographed by Joseph Mazillier, to music by Ernest Deldevez. The story had a Spanish theme, with Carlotta Grisi (creator of Giselle) as a young woman kidnapped by gypsies, who saves a young and handsome officer from certain death. In 1847 Paquita was staged for the first time in Russia for the Imperial Ballet of St. Petersburg by Marius Petipa. In 1881 Petipa produced a revival of the ballet for which he added a bravura pas de trois to music specially composed by Ludwig Minkus.

The performance of Pas de Trois from Paquita is made possible through sponsorship from LANtech. 

/ EXCERPTS FROM X300

Music: David Page (B. 1969)
Choreography: Frances Rings (b. 1970)
Rehearsal director: Paula Steeds-Huston
World premiere: 17 May 2007, The Arts Centre, Melbourne, Australia
NZSD premiere: 18 November 2009, Te Whaea Theatre, Wellington, New Zealand

In the 1950s a series of atomic explosions was conducted on Maralinga Tjarutja traditional lands. The code name for the test site was X300. This work explores a landscape cleared of occupation and assumed vacant but which, in reality, became a contaminated desert which poisoned the people.

The performance of X300 is made possible by a grant from the Australian High Commission.

/ CROSSED FINGERS

Music: Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710 – 1736), Stabat Mater Dolorosa
Choreography: Sarah Foster (b.1977)
World premiere: 18 November 2009, Te Whaea Theatre , Wellington, New Zealand

Sarah Foster would like to thank Katherine Grange and Loughlan Prior for their hard work, dedication and input to the process of making this work. She would also like to acknowledge understudies Alison Carroll, Sarah Watkins, John Murray and Kristian Pisano.

The performance of Crossed Fingers is made possible by a grant from the Nikau Foundation.

/ HE TAONGA – A GIFT

Music: Whirimako Black (b. 1961), Torete te Kiore; Aleksandra Vrebalov (b.1970), Hold me, neighbour in the storm
Choreography: Taiaroa Royal (b. 1961) and Taane Mete (b. 1967)
Rehearsal director: Helen Winchester
World premiere: 18 November 2009, Te Whaea Theatre, Wellington, New Zealand

"This piece of choreography has many deep meanings – of ritual, ceremony and energies coming together to give and share. But really this piece is our taonga, our gift, to this group of young, hard-working, energetic dancers who gave so much of themselves in the small time we spent together.
We thank them.
Kia kaha – be strong,
Kia toa – be warriors,
Kia manawanui – be full of heart."
– Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete

The performance of He Taonga – A Gift is made possible by a grant from the Les and Sonia Andrews’ Cultural Foundation

– Interval –

/ AIRS 

Music: George Friederic Handel (1685 – 1759), Excerpts from Concerti Grossi, Op.3, nos. 2, 3 4a & 4b, 6; Alcina, Ariodante, Berenice and Solomon
Choreography: Paul Taylor (b.1930) By arrangement with The Paul Taylor Dance Foundation , Inc.
Staged by: Richard Chen See
Rehearsal director: Garry Trinder
Costume design: Gene Moore
Lighting: Jennifer Tipton, re-created by Paul O’Brien
World Premiere: 30 May 1978, City Center Theater, New York City, New York, USA.
NZSD premiere: 18 November 2009, Te Whaea Theatre, Wellington, New Zealand

Paul Taylor’s dance works are, in his own words, "Food for the eyes." Dance critic Clement Crisp elaborates, "Taylor’s dances are dances, not messages or protests, or arid exercises in moving people over the stage. Taylor makes dances that are, first and foremost, and last and always, about what the human frame can do when inspired by music, when liberated by technical prowess, and then shaped in action by a master. His work has been a light in the world. His dances have fed our eyes in the most generous, grandest fashion."

The performance of Airs is made possible by a grant from the Embassy of the United States of America.


PRODUCTION CREDITS
Production Manager: Helena Coulton
Stage Manager: Janina Panizza
Lighting Designer: Paul O'Brien
Lighting Desk Operator : Wendy Clease
Costume Creation /Wardrobe Supervision: Jane Woodhall (classical) and Donna Jefferis (contemporary)
Costume Assistants : Jane Boocock and Michelle Bland
Marketing/Publicity: Rebecca Galloway
Photographer: Stephen A'Court
Graphic Design: The Church

STUDENTS

First Year
Katherine Baring-Gould, Rebecca Bassett-Graham, Tom Bradley, Tarrah Burns, Fleur Cameron, Levi Cameron, Jason Carter, Chua Bi Ru, Elizabeth Clarke, Emma Cullinan, Edward Dobinson, Du Yan Hoa , Rebekha Duncan, Zoe Dunwoodie, Danielle Finnie, Kimiora Grey, Dane Holland, Anna Ishii, Ella Joubert, Marcus Louend, Alice Macann, Daniel McCarroll, Andrew Miller, Isabelle Nelson, Grace Nichols, Naomi Norris, Sarah Pascoe, Travis Robertson, Jessica Rogerson, Yvette Sauvage, Jonathan Selvadurai, Liljana Stojan, Emma White

Second Year
Lauren Bartlett, Victoria Bennett, Stephanie Blumer, Lisa Brooker, Emma Coppersmith, Emmi Coupe, Charlotte Davies, Kyah Dove, Jemila Durham, Emmeline Eichmann, Michelle Henderson, Danielle Lindsay, Olivia McGregor, John Murray, Shaughn Pegoraro, Sophia Reppion, Rikki-Lee Ross, André Santos, Alana Sargent, Carl Smit, Carl Tolentino, Sarah Watkins

Third Year
Gina Andrews, Kathryn Botica, Alison Carroll, Jana Castillo, Robbie Curtis, Katherine Grange, Claire Hughes, Nicola Leahey, Lucy Marinkovich, Hayley Meek, Kristian Pisano, Loughlan Prior, Florian Teatiu, Haruka Tsuji, Alex Vivian-Riding, Xu Jingwen



End dance

Review by Deirdre Tarrant 25th Nov 2009

The end of year performances by the students of the New Zealand School of Dance are an opportunity to see the young dancers before they emerge into the profession.

The seven works culminated in Paul Taylor’s Airs (1978) restaged by Richard Chen See. Jana Castillo and Robbie Curtis stood out in a strong cast, and were so much fun to watch.

In the classical works Kathryn Botica as Marie Taglioni in Pas de Quatre and Andre Santos in the Paquita Pas de Trois displayed outstanding technical clarity.

The stand out work for me was Sarah Foster’s Crossed Fingers pas de deux. The choreography let Katherine Grange and Loughlan Prior indulge in unexpected and very demanding movement. Great to see a contemporary work made en pointe and danced with such assurance.
Haere by Cathy Livermore started strongly and Jana Castillo, Gina Andrews and Lucy Marinkovich gave compelling performances but needed to define their differences for more dramatic effect.

Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete made He Taonga – a gift and indeed it was a gift to the all male cast as an ensemble work with power and pulse. Shona McCullagh revisited her duet Love from Quick (1988) for Emmi Coupe and Florian Teatiu and this had moments of breathtaking beauty.
All credit to the staff of the school and director Garry Trinder for an adventurous programme and a real commitment to New Zealand choreography.
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A reminder of life’s good things

Review by Jennifer Shennan 22nd Nov 2009

Eight contrasting works performed by svelte and enthusiastic young dancers. Fit, strong, beautiful, musical, committed, spirited youngsters remind their audience of many good things in life.

Pas de Quatre, staged by Lidiya Klymenko, was most lyrically and musically danced, even if the interaction of dancers’ personalities was only lightly sketched. Haere, a new work by Cathy Livermore had a ceaseless flow of connecting movements themed for the stages of a woman’s life. A duo, Love, performed with feeling by Nicola Leahey and Robbie Curtis, an excerpt from Shona McCullagh’s choreography, Quick, made in 1998, brought back memories of that impressive narrative work.

The pas de trois from Paquita staged by Yuriy Klymenko, had élan and excitement, from Haruka Tsuji, Anna Ishii and Andre Santos. There was drama and atmosphere in X300, originally from Bangarra Aboriginal Dance Theatre, based on secret atomic tests in the 1950s Australian outback. Crossed Fingers, an astonishing duo by Sarah Foster, to Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater. was given an electric performance by Katherine Grange and Loughlan Prior.

Airs, by Paul Taylor, to music by Handel, staged by Richard Chen See, is indeed a classic from the prolific New York choreographer whose company still remembers the stellar career there of Douglas Wright. Airs’ many musical and technical challenges were met with courage and verve by these young dancers who seemed airborne and joyous throughout. A master dance-maker with such command of his craft, touches all our senses and lifts spirits.

In He Taonga, choreographed by Taiaroa Royal and Taane Mete, ten male performers moved from an ancient forest into movement of different life forms. To evocative sounds from Whirimako Black, Royal sourced the gravity and force of haka, though not its unison or aggression. In Mete’s section, to striking music by Vrebalov, individuals made natural, shall we say free, movements yet stayed within tight forms of traditional dance groups. By some alchemy, small motifs from Māori and contemporary dance combined into a powerful dance of great wairua / spirit.
Royal and Mete are to be saluted, Garry Trinder for commissioning the choreography, and the dancers for its burning bright performance. He Taonga could and should travel elsewhere – to the RNZBallet repertoire? onto film? into every New Zealand school classroom?
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Stupendous: a marriage made in heaven

Review by Lyne Pringle 22nd Nov 2009

There is great pleasure in seeing how the works of New Zealand choreographers shine brightly in the Graduation Season of the New Zealand School of Dance; their dances hold their own against the international heritage pieces on show in this uplifting performance.

Pas de Quatre was originally choreographed by Jules Perrot in 1845 and then reconstructed by Anton Dolin. Here it is delightfully staged by classical tutor Lidiya Klymenko. With great delicacy the dancers imbue the lovely choreography with the appropriate softness of the Romantic style. This work was created for the four great Romantic ballerinas Lucile Grahn (Emmi Coupe) Fanny Cerrito (Stephanie Blumer), Carlotta Grisi (Victoria Bennett) and Marie Taglioni (Kathryn Botica). It caused a sensation when it previewed in London. In 2009 on the other side of the world these beautiful young dancers evoke a bygone era with softly rounded arms, a demure tilt of the head, whispering bourrés, gentle arabesques and deep plies conjuring a tantalising mix of earth and air. I am not familiar enough with the work to pick who was who but Kathryn Botica gives a particularly authentic rendering of Marie Taglioni. A repeating circling motif draws the four dancers together and charming curtsies to each other lead into well executed solos.

Haere by Cathy Livermore is an homage to the Feminine and has an all female cast with solos from Lucy Marinkovich, Jana Castillo and Gina Andrews: all dance with commitment and grace. The music, Hinerukaturi by Gillian Whitehead, provides a strong framework and mobile flax screens are used to create an environment where the moving figure is concealed then revealed. Orange costumes with feathered accessories adorn bodies that swirl, support and sway into moments of caressingly lit form. As the music and dynamic energy builds, choreography for the chorus gives the work a stronger shape with interesting use of the floor and original torso movements. Overall the work needs more spatial and dynamic design with clearer definition of the roles and relationships of the central characters of Crone, Mother and Maiden. The final repeating sounds, made by the chorus of a thump to the floor and claps, were compelling.

Watching Shona McCullagh’s gorgeous duet Love,I am transported to the preview of Quick in 1998 (this duet is an excerpt from the larger work) and experience something akin to grief for all the marvellous works that are created in this country that only ever have one season. Here at least we get a taste of this choreographer’s repertoire again.

Emily Coupe lifts her fantastically arched foot then tips her partner Florian Teatiu into a startling upside down lift that seems to last forever before placing him in a shoulder stand that he suspends with great control. This is a huge statement and immediately we have equality between these two dancers – the tiny female and the tall male. This wedding duet has an exquisite spaciousness. It is a beautifully danced portrayal of love and expectation with stunning lifts and tender gestures.

Pas de Trois from Paquita Act 1 is staged by classical tutor Yuriy Klymenko after Marius Petipa and danced by Haruka Tsuji, Anna Ishii and Andre Santos, it premiered at the Bolshoi in 1881. This ‘bravura’ pas de trois is an appropriate vehicle for classical students to display their virtuosity in the French style. André Santos shows great balon in his variations and a cleanness of line. Haruka Tsuji meticulously executes her solo and with a little more relaxation Anna Ishii will find more flow and fullness in her steps.

Australian choreographer Frances Rings has staged Excerpts from X300 –Waterhole. The full version previewed in Melbourne Australia in 2007. The work explores the contamination by nuclear testing on the traditional lands of the Maralinga Tjarutja people and it is refreshing to see a political work and an indigenous work from Australia. Recently departed Head of Contemporary dance Tiina Alinen deserves mention here for her vision as the curator of the contemporary component of the 2009 programme.

A striking image opens the work and there is a satisfying build through a taut vocabulary to evoke the dusty expansive interior landscape with a sinuous solo from Gina Andrews. A solo from Shaughn Pegoraro is danced with commitment but the choreography is less successful here making it difficult for the dancer to find the weight and thrust of the movement. A lot of this section is laboured and overly derivative. Jana Castillo and Robbie Curtis shine in a duet that now portrays a land devoid of life and creatures/traditions struggling for survival. There is some pleasing symmetrical choreography with Lucy Marinkovich and Florian Teatiu as the other duet dancing with focus and skill. Here the work is most successful with some original partnering sequences, which lift it above the somewhat dated feel it generally has.

Sarah Foster goes from strength to strength as a choreographer and it is a brilliant move to have her choreograph a ‘classical’ duet. She really does remind me of Balanchine at times and this work is an absolutely original breath of fresh air. From the word go she engages us an audience with constant surprises, quirky use of arm phrases and devastating use of the strength of the Loughlan Prior and the jaw dropping extension and line of Katherine Grange. The school has made a commitment to Foster this year as an ‘artist in residence’ and hope this continues. She really should have the time and resources to make a large work on the students that could sit in pride of place where the imported works usually sit next year.

The evening lifts off with the next work from New Zealand dance royalty Tairoa Royal and Taane Mete – so fabulous to see another lot of graduates choreographing for the school. The dual authorship of the work is unique in itself and the result extraordinary. Here there is a payoff from the New Zealand School of Dance. Now with a ‘normalised’ practice of importing talent – currently with half its students from off shore – it means that Royal and Mete have the gift of working with a chorus of 11 strong males to create their gift to us: He Toanga.  

Arms uplifted in shadows form a butohesque forest as the bare-chested men in long black skirts converge on the solitary figure of Du Yan Hoa. To the sounds of tui and flute, intricate gestures are woven into a ritualistic prayer towards the light. The music, by Whirimako Black, is Torete Te Kiore. The dancers’ movements are strong and precise as the energy builds around this pulsating mass of bodies until they eventually explode into walking patterns with a fierce lightness. Figures like dynamos generate a force that catapults Du Yan Hoa into a frenzied solo thrashing his gorgeously extended limbs. The men disrobe, more flesh catches the light as two lines form at right angles to each other, creating an air of expectancy as one dancer moves in counterpoint to this. A beautiful sense of pace and form pervades the work; movements are unhurried in this middle section.

Bells ringing signify the beginning of the next piece of music by Aleksandra Vrebalov, Hold Me, Neighbour in the Storm. Arising from the provocation of this difficult yet satisfying music is a unique and fresh vocabulary as the dancers flail and thrust into the space, in flung jumps and full body grabs with the arms. As they gather together centre stage, once more at the end we are left breathless.  

Again I urge the decision makers to give these artists the time and resources to keep developing their work on students of this calibre; there is no denying the results are stupendous: a marriage made in heaven.

One of Paul Taylor’s seminal works, Airs from 1978 to music by Handel, concludes the evening; it is staged by Richard Chen See. A mixture of classical and modern students dance the work – they are wonderful. It is curious that this work now actually sits as a classical piece. With his characteristic walking and running patterns juxtaposed against conventional dance steps with surprising shifts of weight, this dance joyously makes love to the music as our eyes and ears feast on the precision, lightness and grace of the dancers. They give it themselves to it fully. It is a rare treat to see the work of this great modern choreographer.

Three elements distinguish this performance for me: as stated earlier, the strength of the New Zealand choreographers; how the modern/contemporary aspect of the performance is strongest; how the distinctions between classical and modern students is not so clearly defined these days.

The students deserve congratulations for their passion, one hopes for a long future for them in dance. The teaching staff also deserve congratulations for their commitment in staging and rehearsal direction, as do lighting designer Paul O’Brien and the entire production staff – it is a fine show. 
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