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Members of Norwegian National Ballet (Oslo, Norway) performing Skew Whiff.
Choreography by Paul Lightfoot and Sol Leon
Photography: Erik Berg


                                   
2010  DANCE SALAD FESTIVAL  PROMISES QUALITY  INTERNATIONAL DANCE

HOUSTON, TX  (January 2010) - The next  Dance Salad Festival performances are scheduled for April 1, 2 and  3 at 7:30 pm at the Wortham Center, Cullen Theater. Now celebrating the 15th anniversary season in Houston and the 18th season  since its inception in Brussels, Belgium, Dance Salad Festival promises  another gathering of world-class performers. Famous in their own countries,  the dance companies have won praise from critics and audiences wherever they  have toured. For the latest information on the upcoming season and photos of  the dancers, visit www.dancesalad.org
Price  range of tickets is $17-$47. Buy tickets online at www.dancesalad.org        
Click:  Tickets and print out yourself!


Dancers and Artists from the following companies  have been confirmed for the 2010 Festival:

The Norwegian National Ballet (Oslo, Norway),  the country’s most prestigious dance company, is on their 3rd tour to  Dance Salad Festival. They will present Skew Whiff choreographed by the highly innovative choreographers’  duo Paul Lightfoot and Sol Leon, known as Lightfoot/Leon. Set to Rossini’s energetic The Thieving Magpie, the  piece is danced by four dancers, in white body paint and tight yellow suits.  Originally created for the Nederlands Dans Theater, it was performed by the Norwegian National Ballet when the new Oslo opera house officially opened with a Gala performance on April 12, 2008. Costumes created by Lightfoot/León, lighting design by Tom Bevoort. Several of the company’s best dancers are  coming to perform Skew Whiff. Maggie Foyer of Dance  Europe writes: “This Lightfoot/Leon work demands very special dancers…  Maiko Nishinio is one of the company’s most versatile dancers…[who] had good  company in Philip Currell, whose spine appears boneless, Gakuro Matsui and  Kristian Ruutu. Together they dealt with the fiendish coordination in a work that is raw, risqué and always very funny.”

The Norwegian National Ballet  is a part of The Norwegian Opera & Ballet, which was established in 1959  and is Norway’s largest music and performing arts institution. The Norwegian  National Ballet presents a rich repertoire of high quality, consisting of both  classics and modern works by contemporary choreographers such as Jirí Kylián,  Nacho Duato and Lightfoot/León. The Norwegian Opera & Ballet opened its  new opera house near Oslo harbour with its stunning architecture designed by  the Norwegian firm, Snøhetta. It is now the largest single cultural-political  initiative in contemporary Norway.

The Royal Ballet of Flanders (Antwerp, Belgium) makes another welcome appearance at the Dance Salad Festival with their US  premiere of The Return of Ulysses,(an abridged  version),of an episode of Homer’s The  Odyssey presented in a very special way by German choreographer Christian Spuck, set to an intriguing  combination of music by Purcell and Perry Como. The story of Penelope’s long  wait for Ulysses is one of the most enduring Greek myths. Left behind after  just one year of marriage, while her husband fights in the Trojan War, she  remains faithful for two long decades despite the amorous attention of seven  suitors. When Ulysses finally returns home, Penelope no longer recognizes him.  “It’s so tragic and absurd and somehow funny, says Spuck. I find it  fascinating that a person would wait their whole life for somebody to come  back, and when that moment actually happens, it doesn’t work... So although we  call the ballet The Return of Ulysses it’s really about the Waiting of  Penelope.” “Focusing on the psychology of waiting, Spuck brings a spare, Beckett-like atmosphere to the rituals that replace romance in Penelope’s  life…” writes Alice Bain in the Guardian, London.

The Royal Ballet of Flanders was founded in 1969 and is  Belgium’s classical ballet company. It is now flourishing under the artistic  leadership of Kathryn Bennetts. “The Return of Ulysses is a brave  addition to the repertoire of the Royal Ballet of Flanders, and sets the stamp  on Christian Spuck as a refreshing and welcome choreographic voice.” (Dance Europe).

Hungarian National Ballet Company (Magyar Nemzeti Balett),(Budapest), Hungary’s premier ballet troupe for 125 years and one of the oldest ballet  companies in Europe is making its debut in Houston with a grand Pas de Trois from the epic, two act ballet,The Karamazovs by legendary Russian choreographer, Boris Eifman, set to the music of Rachmaninoff, Wagner, Mussorgsky as well as Gypsy folk music. Boris Eifman is the founder, artistic  director and choreographer of Eifman Ballet of St. Petersburg, Russia’s  foremost contemporary ballet company, also the first and only Russian ballet company dedicated to performing works by a single choreographer. The  Karamazovs  is a dance drama based on Dostoyevsky’s novel, The  Brothers Karamazov, where Eifman explores extreme states of being and  pushes the limits of his own imagination creating a riveting spectacle ruled  by emotion. Over the past 33 years, choreographer Boris Eifman has developed  his own brand of contemporary ballet theater, earning acclaim in Russia and  abroad as quoted in the Star Tribune, Minneapolis-St.Paul. Another wonderful  piece of choreography brought by the Hungarian National Ballet is Way of  Words choreographed and danced by the company’s principal soloist Levente Bajári and company soloist Krisztina Pazár. 
 
Historically, ballet has been a very popular art form in Hungary. As early  as in the 18th century, ballet performances were held in the castle theatres  throughout the region. Ever since 1950’s the company has been evolving under  the strong influence of Russian classical ballet and has continued to promote  the Hungarian and Russian traditions while embracing the innovations in Europe  and the United States. Having a repertory with major works by Ashton, Ailey, Kylian, Van Manen, Balanchine and Béjart coupled with classical traditions and  renowned folk dancing has yielded a brand of ballet that draws large audiences  from all over the world to the Hungarian Opera House.

Ballet de Lorraine – Centre Choréographique  National (Nancy, France), Dance Salad Festival  is presenting a USA debut of one of the leading dance companies in Europe  today with the US premiere of Dominique Bagouet’s Les Petites Pièces de Berlin (1988) with music by Gilles Grand and costumes  by Dominique Fabregue and William Wilson, commissioned by Montpellier Dance  Festival and recreated in 2008. Les Petites Pièces de Berlin is a  wonderful choreographic fantasy inspired by Dominique Bagouet’s method of  virtuoso composition, which involves the direct creative input of its initial  performers, very innovative at the time. The comic and vibrant energy of the  piece, set against a brilliantly creative backdrop, takes an audience on a  delightful and exciting journey.
Dominique Baqouet (1951-1992) studied  classical ballet in Cannes at Rosella Hightower’s school and later worked with  Maurice Béjart in Brussels. In 1980, he was invited to found the Centre  Choréographique Regional de Montpellier and a year later took on the artistic  direction of the first Montpellier Dance Festival. Bagouet was a prolific  creator – almost 40 pieces in less than 15 years. His death in 1992 raised  starkly the problem of preserving and passing on a choreographic legacy that  was a landmark in contemporary dance.
Based in Nancy since 1978, in just a  few years, Ballet de Lorraine has become one of France’s leading dance  companies known for creating strictly contemporary works and giving on average  of 70 performances a year. In March 2000, Didier Deschamps was named general  manager of the company.
 
La Compañia Nacional de Danza (Mexico  City, Mexico) returns to Dance Salad Festival with Miroirs,  choreographed by Mark Godden with music by Maurice Ravel.
Founded in 1963, Compañia Nacional de Danza (National Ballet of  Mexico) represents Mexico with the best of classical and contemporary dance.  In 2007 Sylvie Renaud, a former principal dancer of the company for 26 years,  was appointed Artistic Director of CND.

Dance Salad Festival is an  official event of the nation wide, year long celebration of 200 years of  Mexican independence through the Consulate General of Mexico in  Houston.
Godden’s legacy work, Miroirs, is a sequence  of five short dances set to five poems for piano by Maurice Ravel . “Each  works well on its own terms, finding a distinctive dance personality: the  fluttering reticence of the night moths in Noctuelles; the spirited curiosity  of the Jester in Alborada del Gracioso; the deliberate irreverence of language  in La Vallée des cloches. Miroirs features Godden’s typically tricky  intertwinings, angular arms, and forceful floorwork, creating a  choreographically bewitching lyrical flow” (National Arts Center, Canada).  Mark Godden is Texas-born and now a Canadian-based choreographer who has received numerous international awards for creating musically astute ballets. 
 
Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genéve (Switzerland), one of  the best-known companies in Europe, will be presenting two magnificent  choreographies: the pas de deux from Blackbird by Jiri  Kylián, one of the greatest choreographers of our time, set to traditional  music from Georgia, and a curated montage from Loin choreographed by the outstanding Moroccan-Flemish choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui.

Loin set to of the 17th century ‘Mystery  Sonatas’ by Heinrich Biber, examines the distance between human beings, eras  and cultures and emerges as a plea for closer contacts. Roslyn Sulcas, writes  for the New York Times:”…Cherkaoui’s physical vocabulary is  contemporary in its supple, back-bending deployment of the upper body and the  extraordinarily fluid transitions between vertical and horizontal, the ground  and the air… Like Pina Bausch, he likes to take elements of the dancers’  everyday experiences and transform them into stylized vignettes...For  Mr.Cherkaoui, ordinary life is the stuff of art, and art is where individuals  can escape the constraints—physical, religious, cultural—of ordinary  life.”

“Jirí Kylián’s Blackbird, presented for the second time in DSF history, (the first by Nederlands Dans Theater) is a meditative duet full  of idiosyncratic tendus, sinuous torsos and arms that practically enable the body to levitate,” reviews Molly Glentzer of The Houston Chronicle. 

Jiri Kylián’s Toss of a Dice, will be performed by  dancers from the Netherlands Dance Theater, (Den Haag, Netherlands).  “Kylián’s exquisite choreography in his signature aesthetic is chillingly  heightened by the quietly suspenseful sound score by Dirk Haubrich. A voice heard softly reciting excerpts from Mallarmé’s poem Un coup de dés jamais n’abolira le hasard (A toss of the dice will not abolish chance) echoes  the philosophical theme of the work in a symbiosis of the aural and visual.”  (DansFestival, Esplanade, Singapore).

Since the early 1970s, the  celebrated Czech choreographer, 61, has created 100 works – three-quarters for  the Nederlands Dans Theater. Venerated for his choreographic work for dancers  of all age groups, Kylián has received many honors, including the Nijinsky  Award in Monaco, and the Legion d’Honneur of France and in 2008 he was  distinguished with one of the highest royal honors, the Medal of the Order of  the House of Orange given to him by Her Majesty, Queen Beatrix from the Netherlands.

NDT is one of the most widely recognized and admired modern  dance companies in the world. The company’s unprecedented recognition and  success came under the artistic leadership of Jiri Kylián from 1975 to  1999 and continues to expand and astound audiences all over the globe. Kylian  remained with the company as House Choreographer and Artistic Advisor until  last fall, 2009. Now he pursues independent projects worldwide. 
 
David Dawson’s choreographic version of  Faun(e), was commissioned by the English National Ballet (London, England), for the 100 years  celebration of Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. This choreography was originally created as the famous L’ Apres  midi d’un faun by Nijinsky, set to music by Debussy. Dawson’s Faun(e) became an international collaboration, created for two men:  Raphael Coumes-Marquet from Dresden SemperOper Ballet (Germany), and  Esteban Berlanga from the English National Ballet.

David Dawson uses the  two-piano version of Debussy’s music in his Faun(e). Dawson says: “It  is so much more masculine, more sober and more abstract…This version is  simpler and made it more intimate. There is the relationship between the two  men on piano reflecting the two men on stage.” This choreography was nominated  for a Critic’s Circle National Dance Award for Best Classical Choreography in  England. Dawson is admired for his skill in creating stunning stage patterns.  “Dawson’s off-kilter virtuosity sends sparks flying through the ensemble as if  determined to knock them all off their perch,” writes Debra Craine from The Times of London.

Gelabert Azzopardi Companya de Dansa  (Barcelona, Spain), one of the well known  modern dance companies in Europe, is debuting in Houston with Conquassabit, choreographed by Artistic Director, Choreographer/Dancer, Cese Gelabert. He is  also one of the founders of the company, along with Lydia  Azzopardi.
Conquassabit, set to Handel’s vocal and  instrumental music, is a study of acceleration and stillness, relating to the  baroque period. Rather than using complete pieces of Handel’s work, it mixes  vocal and instrumental fragments and subjects them to the demands of a growing  rhythmic pulse beating to an accelerating rhythm. The tempo shakes and ends up  in pieces: conquassabit tempus, “it will shatter the  tempo.”(GelabertAzzopardi.com) “Choreographed in Cesc Gelabert’s signature  blend of neoclassical ballet and modern dance…Conquassabit takes vocal and  instrumental fragments from the music of Handel to propel a cascade of pure  dance invention that accelerates from limpid beauty to furious energy and  speed,” writes Judith Mackrell of The Guardian.

Gelabert is one of  the most influential Spanish choreographers and dancers of the moment. An  emblematic and highly versatile artist, he has made a contribution towards the  creation of a dance culture in Spain and Europe. Gelabert has created In a  Landscape, a solo for Mikhail Baryshnikov. Other commissions have been for  David Hughes, Balletto di Toscana, Tanztheater Komische Oper, Ballet  Gulbenkian and Larumbe Danza among many others.

Jacoby&Pronk (New York/Amsterdam), are once again welcomed by Dance Salad Salad  Festival and later were featured in cover stories by both Dance  Magazine (New York) Festival. Drew Jacoby and Rubi Pronk made their  debut as a duet at the 2008 Dance and Dance Europe (London). Brought  together by artistic virtuosity and athleticism, Jacoby, a former dancer of  Alonzo King’s LINES Ballet and Pronk, coming from The Dutch National Ballet, have invited contemporary,and classically trained choreographers to create new work for them. As a duet they have danced two seasons with Christopher Wheeldon’s Morphoses, as well as with The Dutch National Ballet.
For Dance Salad Festival, they will perform Softly As I Leave You, yet another powerful and psychologically provocative choreography by Lightfoot/Leon, set to music by Bach and Arvo Part. “A captivating duet that  captures the importance of what’s not being said, this piece forces you to  look in between the lines to discover the meaning of the movement. Though a  duet, this piece is emotionally riveting as the action happens more through  solos, enhancing the subtlest interactions between the dancers,” writes Lea  McGowan of the iDANZ Critix  Corner.

                                                
                       Other  Important Events in Dance Salad Festival Week
 
Choreographers’  Forum: A Conversation, Wednesday, March 31, at the Museum of Fine Arts,  Houston, 6:30 pm, is a special opportunity to glimpse the creative process  from some of the Festival’s invited choreographers; to hear their points of  view and to see film clips of their work. This year we will feature Christian  Spuck and other outstanding artists. This highly anticipated event is  generously co-sponsored by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston,   lectures@mfah.org   .  There will be a reception following the Forum at the MFAH.

Classical,  modern and contemporary dance share the Dance Salad Festival stage to form a  mix of movement and compelling choreographic invention. Members of some of the  world’s best dance companies come to the city to participate in this week long  Festival. Each night’s production is uniquely curated and designed as a  coherent, expressive performance. To see the full range of the choreography  presented requires attending two of the three evenings.

This multicultural  presentation has received international recognition for its quality and  innovativeness and has consistently been a source of cultural pride for many  of the foreign communities that reside in Houston because of the Festival’s  broad international nature. Houston’s 83 member Consular Corps is a community  partner and many country members serve as sponsors and hosts. Director Nancy  Henderek strongly believes that through the arts, bridges can be built between  different countries and cultures.

During the Festival week, master classes  will be held in various locations throughout the city so that students and  professionals can learn from these invited master choreographers.

Dance  Salad Festival has been praised by local, national and international  publications. Dance Magazine said: “Producer Nancy Henderek’s eye for  some of the best international dance is unparalleled…(Dance Salad Festival)  could wind up as the premier contemporary dance festival between the East and  West coasts.” In a special section of The Houston Chronicle entitled  “Houston’s Ultimate People,” Nancy Henderek is described as a “one-woman  United Nations.”

Detailed information about the festival is continuously  updated and available on the web site at:
www.dancesalad.org
Dance Salad Festival 713-621-1461 (office)
PR/Assistant to the  Director, Christina Levin,
dsfassist@aol.com

 


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