
#9
Christian Science Monitor
June 7, 2002
Russian ballet dances from coast to coast
By Gloria Goodale | Arts and culture correspondent of The Christian
Science Monitor
LOS ANGELES – The Russians are coming.
Next week, dance lovers on both coasts will be able to sample the yin and the
yang of Russian dance.
While Washington plays host to the well-known Bolshoi Ballet, the
passionately athletic embodiment of everything that the West has come to expect
from that country's rich dance traditions, Los Angeles will be entertaining the
company that Muscovites know as "the other ballet company in town,"
the Moscow Stanislavsky Ballet.
This lesser-known company was created in 1941 when Konstantin Stanislavsky,
the famous Russian acting teacher, merged his music theater with another one run
by a Stanislavsky disciple. This background in theater is what has given the
company its distinctive profile.
"The art of dancing is what is in between the lines," says Dmitry
Bryantsev, artistic director of the Moscow Ballet. "This is not written, it
must be danced and felt in the whole body."
In Shakespeare's "Hamlet," "You cannot dance 'To be or not to
be.' But you can dance the state of his soul when he says those words," he
says. "It's what Stanislavsky would call acting."
That, he adds, is the connection between Stanislavsky and his company today.
"When ballet is just illustration, it's not interesting. We do not want to
merely illustrate the story."
In 1998, New York Times dance critic Anna Kisselgoff called the Moscow
Stanislavsky Ballet, then touring the US, "a cozy foil to the more
spectacular Bolshoi. Its dancers ... communicate on a direct, human level."
This is most evident in the troupe's signature work, a reinterpretation of
the ballet classic "Swan Lake," created by choreographer Vladimir
Burmeister in 1953. This version returns to the original score by Tchaikovsky
and details Princess Odette's bewitchment into a swan and her return from that
state. The story line makes more sense psychologically and is easier for the
dancers to perform, says artistic director Mr. Bryantsev, who is also the
company's choreographer.
This interpretation is at odds with the one performed by most classical
companies, including the Bolshoi. But Bryantsev is concerned more about the
future of ballet and its appeal to younger audiences than with tradition.
"Ballet technique is only a means for expressing an idea," he says.
"There is no reason for the idea to be unclear." His task, he says,
"is to make classic ballet exciting and accessible to the young, and not be
boring."
Beyond that, Bryantsev says, the company has its roots in the technique that
is widely known as "Method acting," but the influence of the
well-traveled Russian acting teacher stretches across the globe.
"Everyone sees themselves as an actor or a performer now,"
Bryantsev says. "Stanislavsky was just studying people and showing them how
to re-create themselves. Everyone is so aware of this state of
self-consciousness ... that it is no longer just the theater. Stanislavsky
influenced the entire world."
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