Haglund knew if he sat through enough NYCB Nutcrackers that the thrill would finally rise above the humdrum. And so it happened this past week and yesterday.
At NYCB's Wednesday matinee, Miriam Miller and Alec Knight enjoyed spectacular debuts in the principal roles of Sugarplum Fairy and Her Cavalier. Seven or eight years ago when Peter Martins threw Miriam into a debut as Titania during her apprentice year, we sensed that she would be a slow-cooker who would need time to find her legs and feet and learn how to corral all that length. Her simmering over the past few years has been steady and mostly satisfying without being spectacular. But her two trials as Sugarplum Fairy over the past week were breakout performances that revealed a ballerina who has found faith in her own ability to dance the big ballerina roles with authority, calm, and unwavering concentration. It didn't hurt that she was a staggering beauty in both the long pink tutu for her solos and the green classical tutu for the pas de deux.
But Miriam didn't rest on her beauty. The full stretch of her feet and legs and the graceful flow of her port de bras combined for a commanding elegance. Statement-making arabesques, controlled pirouettes, sensitively placed pointes all served her well in both performances. Her telepathic communication with her Cavalier, Alec Knight - a requirement to get through Balanchine's most treacherous pas de deux successfully -- had few breaks. During the two performances, three out of the four step-over turns to arabesque where the Cavalier grabs the SPF's arm went smoothly; the one that went awry was rescued and covered nicely. The final promenade where they switch grips as they rotate had us holding our breath during each performance but they were both completed without incident. Yesterday's finishing arabesque was especially generous and bold. Patience has paid off.
Knight's partnering was strong and steady in both performances; his confidence grew measurably from the first to the second. His solo variations suggested that he hasn't fully recovered from injury. The very careful jumps had little height or propulsion, and his own arabesque was a limp 70 or 80 degrees. So, it seems we can't yet rest our worries about this developing artist.
The Dewdrops in the Miller/Knight performances were Olivia MacKinnon and India Bradley. Olivia's performance was a startling surprise in its stylishness and high energy. She hit all of her lines, all of her pirouettes, all of her tricky attitude moves, and all of her jumps with accelerating energy and joy. India, in only her third performance as Dewdrop, gave it her all but came up short on form and presentation. While most of the foot & leg technique was within her ability, her upper body was decidedly student-ish and unfinished.
Last week included outstanding performances by Emily Kikta & Gilbert Bolden III and Isabella LaFreniere & Aaron Sanz as SPF and Cavalier. Emily wore her determination a bit too obviously, but there was never any question that she would conquer every risk throughout the pas de deux (except for one of those pesky stepover turns to arabesque). The way in which she took possession of the space around her and attracted the light made it impossible to take one's eye off of her. Most noticeably, her feet, which have always been accurate, continue to become more pliable and articulate thereby making her lines more eloquent. Gilbert's progress in the past year and a half has been astonishing. Not only has he slimmed his legs and torso into marblesque sculpture but his determination to strengthen every aspect of his solo dancing has been admirable. Our patience again rewarded.
Isabella's SPF on Christmas Eve was breathtakingly beautiful. She was an IMAX ballerina whose command of the choreography and ability to demonstrate the beauty and value of pristine form were larger than life. Does the knuckling of the right foot still bother us? Yes, in fact it hurts to see it, but it seems to disappear during arabesques which is a good sign. Her Cavalier, Aaron Sanz, has had a tough few years dealing with injury. Our fingers are crossed for him. At this performance, there were partnering miscommunications with the stepover turn into arabesque and with the jumps to shoulder-sits -- although these matters are a shared responsibility with the ballerina. His solo of turns in a la seconde and the manège of coupé jeté were a notch below serviceable. Still and all, we invariably look forward to seeing Sanz on stage and hope that both he and Alec Knight can shake off what seems to be a persistent curse of injury.
Indiana Woodward was a sparkling Dewdrop in the Kikta-Bolden cast. Emma Von Enck's Dewdrop debut in the LaFreniere-Sanz cast made Christmas Eve especially magical. This obvious Aurora seemed never to touch the floor in her allegro.
Since her promotion to soloist, we have missed Emma's aculeate pointes in the opening moments of the Snow Scene. However, we did notice the special energy of Olivia Bell. And watching the lovely lines and warm stage presence of Zoe Bliss Magnussen in Snow and Marzipan made us eager to see more of her. Perhaps she could be posted permanently in front of Charlie Klesa to see what might come of that partnership.
David Gabriel and Spartak Hoxha were exceptional as Tea, both elevating their leaps in second position past circus stunts. Rommie Tomasini and Quinn Starner in the Tea section were competent; however, the persistent habit of Quinn in opening her hip to the side in order to increase the height of the battement to the back was rather shockingly bad form. The pants costume didn't hide anything.
In one performance we saw, KJ Takahashi failed to appear with his Candy Cane hoop for his jumps in the finale. Yesterday afternoon, the lead Flowers (Nieve Corrigan and Emily Kikta subbing for Olivia Boisson) blew off their whole bit except for their entrance during the early parade in Act II. They simply didn't show up on stage -- at all -- either of them.
The casts of kids were competent, if somewhat generic. The Nutcracker Little Princes' mime sequence where they re-told the harrowing story of the fight with the mice was absent any drama. It was a very perfunctory re-telling each time. Who could possibly forget the Oscar-worthy mime performance in 2012 of Little Prince Maximillian Brooking Landegger now known as "Brooks" at Miami City Ballet. SPF Lauren King flashed him one of those impossibly beautiful smiles of hers which unleashed a torrent of dramatic heroism like none this stage has seen before. Landegger, the grownup, will be back as a guest in Midsummer Night's Dream at the end of the season.
The Corps de Ballet works so darned hard during the Nutcracker season. Many dancers are assigned important solo and demi-solo opportunities during this time while also fully dedicating themselves to their corps responsibilities. Christina Clark and Olivia Boisson continued to grow their interpretations of the sultry, mysterious Coffee soloist. Lauren Collett and Gabriella Domini were charming and precise as Toys. Spartak Hoxha and David Gabriel were exceptional Soldiers, both with clear flex-footed entrechat six and neat sequences of 1-1/4 tours. We enjoyed focusing on Savannah Durham, Dominika Afansenkov, Jacqueline Bologna and Naomi Corti in Snow, Flowers, Hot Chocolate and wherever they appeared, and wished for more opportunities for them.
Our H.H. Pump Bump Award, a Louboutin seasonal stiletto, is bestowed upon Miriam Miller for her beautiful performances as the Sugarplum Fairy.