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Serenades past and present — 7 Comments

  1. Neo, let me just say that I have absolutely NO interest in the ballet (or opera for that matter); But, you continue to amaze me with your knowledge and love of such.

    Okay, I’m going to date my self with this observation. But, you’re kind of like Johnny Carson in that you comment on so many different topics and keep it interesting for those of us who don’t know “about such stuff.”

    Johnny Carson, unlike today’s talk shows which tend to cater to one specific demographic, used to have a variety of guests on his show – from the latest pop star to someone from “higher culture”. I still remember the time he had Beverly Sills as a guest (did I mention I have NO interest in opera?) and asked her to show how to “stab” someone in opera. (I cannot find a YouTube clip; but it was all done very dramatically and also by slight “sleight of hand,” oh so very cool.)

    In that sense Johnny Carson was so very “diverse” long before that became the buzz word that it is today.

    Your blog seems to do the same – so thank you!

  2. While I do appreciate the beauty of the ballet, I can’t say that I’m a fan of it. I am a fan of classical music however and a similar situation exists with various conductors. One conductor’s interpretation can vary widely from another conductor’s performance. I have often heard a rendition that I personally found less than satisfying, despite being a fan of that particular piece of music. Tempo and emphasis are in the hands of the conductor for instance.

    Nor is it just classical music. Last night, while listening to the internet music service Pandora, I heard Tony Bennett’s cover of the song, “As Time Goes By”, one of my personal favorites from that genre and I was a bit disappointed in Bennett’s cover. As usual with Bennett (reportedly Sinatra’s favorite crooner) it was technically superb but IMO much too ‘upbeat’ and, to me eviscerated the lyric’s evocation of timelessness, that when all is said and done, the human condition remains unchanged in its basics.

    I suspect that just such a perception applies to the ballet as well and perhaps in every art.

  3. I remember seeing the NYC Ballet do the Serenade for Strings ballet at Saratoga Springs (outdoors theatre) as a teenager over 40 years ago. I was attending Marina Svetlova’s dance school in Dorset, Vermont, and the school arranged a field trip there for us. In addition to the ballet, the memory of the music wafting around in the open air (it was a fairly windy day) struck me as utterly fantastic—as poetic as the ballet itself. By the way, Alexis Dolinoff–who was 72 at the time, and who had danced with Pavlova, taught a class there (with his pipe in his mouth!).

  4. For me, Neo, your ballet posts are like fascinating dispatches from a mysterious distant country, in a beautiful language I can only half-comprehend. They remind me of the only other connection I’ve ever had to the world of dance — a childhood fascination with the “Shoes” books of Noel Streatfeild, and especially “Ballet Shoes.” As a little girl growing up deep in the country, impossibly far from theaters, live ballet performances or dance classes, I wore out the library’s copies of all of the books, but most especially “Ballet Shoes” — read it over and over again, tried my awkward, untutored best to replicate the five positions and the simpler steps described in the book and — in those pre-You-Tube days — to imagine what “Swan Lake,” “Coppelia” and the other ballets described in the books must be like. The words on the page couldn’t transmit the music or the dancers’ images but nonetheless conveyed the ballets’ powerful beauty, just as your posts do today.

    Maybe you, too, knew the Shoes books? Typing this post has caused me to track down a library copy of “Ballet Shoes” to reread. A treat!

  5. Mrs Whatsit:

    Of course, I knew and loved the books—and read them many times, both “Ballet Shoes” and “Theater Shoes.” But I was able to see so much real live ballet and theater I was very lucky.

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