Since Angel Corella took the directorship of Pennsylvania Ballet five years ago, he has hurled huge challenge after huge challenge at the company. It has been startling to watch the Intel-like turbo-burst speed with which PA Ballet has processed everything that Angel has thrown its way. It has evolved into a national contender in the classics, in contemporary, and in its core Balanchine rep seemingly overnight. This is a good, good, good company that is filled with talent and ambition.
This week PA Ballet opened its fall season in its 55th year with the company premiere of Kenneth MacMillan’s masterpiece Romeo and Juliet, a ballet in which Corella was devastatingly brilliant during his career with American Ballet Theatre. His love for this ballet shone through every performer on the stage Thursday night at the company's premiere. The staging by Julie Lincoln and Robert Tewsley was filled with crisp musical and theatrical details (when have we ever seen the Capulet women pose so uniformly and severely bent at their waists – not in New York). The scenery and costumes were by Paul Anderson whose designs MacMillan commissioned when the Birmingham Royal Ballet mounted its own production of MacMillan’s ballet in 1992. The original 1966 designs were by Nicholas Georgiadis and are still used by ABT and the Royal Ballet. Anderson’s designs included Early Renaissance columns and statuary. When MacMillan saw the new scenery on stage, he then changed some of the choreography to better adapt to it. So, the dancing sometimes looked a little different than what we are accustomed to seeing in New York. By the way, the ballerina who led the Birmingham Royal Ballet’s premiere performance in 1992 was Nina Ananiashvili.
A major difference between the Georgiadis and Anderson designs is the apparel for the Mandolin Dancers. Georgiadis costumed the men in salmon pink tights and strange little hats. The Anderson version is difficult to describe; so we’ll just dig out a photo (by Photo Roy Smiljanic) of the Birmingham Royal Ballet’s Lead Mandolin Dancer and his colorful streamers:
There were six of these guys on Thursday night including Peter Weil as the Lead Mandolin Dancer. By the time Weil finished dancing with his group, he had taken over our attention so completely that we thought that this ballet was about the Mandolin Dancers. In addition to Lead Mandolin Dancer, Weil will perform the role of Mercutio which we intend to see next week. We have raved about this dancer previously. He’s got charisma and electricity on the level of a young Corella. He also has squeaky clean technique and moves like lightning. Some readers may recall that when Corella first joined ABT in 1995, one of his early roles during that first Met Season was the lead Mandolin Dancer in Romeo and Juliet. Just sayin’ … Keep both eyes on this guy.
Sterling Baca and Lillian DiPiazza were captivating as Romeo and Juliet. The honesty in their portrayals made us believers, and their “deaths” hit us hard in the gut. As Juliet, DiPiazza spoke with soft supple feet, liquid port de bras, deeply arched arabesques, and a natural acting style that made us hear Shakespeare’s words. We fully felt her turmoil as she leaned against her bed motionlessly during Act III and contemplated her dilemma. By the way, the lighting design for this scene was brilliantly conceived by Brad Fields to show Juliet’s world turning dark around her stillness.
Any concerns that we may have had about whether the young Baca would be victorious over the impossibly difficult choreography in the balcony pas de deux were allayed at that first renversé into arabesque which began his first variation. Baca whipped it and then took off around the stage with force and energy that we had not seen from him before. This was a breakthrough performance for him in that he found a way to break free from Sterling to become his stage character. The very difficult partnering and lifts were seemingly done with ease. The "corpse pas de deux" was a realistic look at Romeo's desperation.
Ian Hussey was a fierce, menacing Tybalt. Mercutio and Benvolio were danced by Albert Gordon and Jack Sprance. Their trio dancing with Baca was clean and energetic. Pau Pujol probably never thought that his apprenticeship at PA Ballet would deliver a role like Paris to him. Despite his obvious youth, he managed the stifling sternness of the character along with some very fine partnering of DiPiazza’s Juliet.
Charles Askegard made Lord Capulet into a major figure on the stage throughout the evening. It has been so nice to see him evolve into such a fine and complete character actor since joining PA Ballet’s artistic staff.
The entire cast fully lived this Romeo and Juliet. No one was just standing around like they were filler. At any moment it was possible to pick out any performer in the background and see that he or she was actively involved in a side story or in a reaction to what was happening at center stage. Such a handsome production and a stunning achievement by PA Ballet.
The Orchestra of Pennsylvania Ballet under the direction of Beatrice Jona Affron, who is celebrating her 25th year as its conductor, played beautifully and with energetic spirit throughout the evening.
Our H.H. Pump Bump Award, a complexly designed jewel of a stiletto from Jimmy Choo, is bestowed upon Lillian DiPiazza for her honest, heartbreaking portrayal of Juliet.