20 June 2020
David Plumpton and Friends
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David Plunpton was due to visit the stage door on 17 May 2020 but that was the day that Zoom broke down. Many people would not have bothered to return but David agreed to do so on the 7 June, That was typical of the man. One of the kindest and most generous persons that I have ever met as well as one of the most talented. Zoom behaved itself on 7 June. We had a great discussion with plenty of contributions from the audience.
My first question to David was how he came to take up the piano. He replied that his mother had been a pianist and that his sister was also musical. They were his first piano teachers. His mother taught him until she fell ill with multiple sclerosis. Then his sister taught him. She worked as a primary school teacher in London and gave him lessons on her visits home. He remembers trying the different keys after each lesson. He found he had an affinity for the instrument. The more he practised the better he became. His passion for music snowballed from there.
I asked David whether he had attended a conservatoire. He said that he did but this was where things became pearshaped. He was admitted to Leeds College of Music but left almost immediately after his course began to take up a job touring with a musical. I pointed out that Bill Gates had done very much the same thing and it did not seem to have done him any harm.
It must have been about that time that David began his career as an accompanist. When he was 18 he had a friend called Trevor who was a classical pianist. Trevor used to play in a cocktail bar in an hotel in Darlington. Knowing that David had just finished his "A" levels and was looking for work Trevor invited David to cover one of his classes at a local dance school. David was reluctant at first but accepted the invitation. He found that he enjoyed the work. He got on well with the teacher and she liked him, Trevor never came back so David was given his job. He stayed at that school for about three years.
The dance teacher in Darlington introduced David to Suzanne Whitworth of Northern Ballet Theatre as Northern Ballet was then known. Christopher Gable was then Artistic Director and Suzanne Whitworth worked in Learning and Access. She was teaching a BTech course in Newcastle and she arranged for David to play for her class. David made a number of connections at that time one of whom arranged for him to play at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance. Afterwards, Suzanne Whitworth introduced David to the company. He played for the company's classes and rehearsals as well as for their outreach activities.
David said that a number of people had asked him why he had never worked for Northern Ballet full-time. He had received two offers to work for the company over the years.
"Because they could never afford you?" I suggested.
David denied that was the reason. He relished variety and different experiences which would not be possible if he played only for one company.
At this point, David spoke about his family life. He was a Yorkshireman by birth and upbringing. He had always lived in the family home in a small village between Darlington and Northallerton. He lost his mother when he was in his twenties and he stayed at home to look after his father. His father had died quite recently and for the last years of his life, his father required a lot of care. David had been close to both of his parents and was devastated after each of them died. It is only now that he is recovering from his father's death.
David added that his attachment to home was another reason why he was reluctant to take a Jon in Leeds. He had made several tours but these were always for finite periods.
He had often played in the orchestra pit in pantomimes and musicals. He particularly liked musical theatre which is why so many of his CDs incorporate tunes from musicals. However, he also liked classical composers, particularly Mendelssohn. Also, Tchaikovsky, he added.
"And Khatchucharian?" I said remembering the music he had played in the classes that I had attended.
"But show tunes" work well for class, David explained.
I asked David whether he had played for Gable.
Two or three times when he conducted class", David replied.
Some of the rehearsals included "A Simple Man" which is not only one of my favourites, but also one of David's too. "Carl Davis's music is wonderful" David added. I suggested that "A Simple Man" was the company's best work ever. David agreed but then added that he also admired David Nixon's "Wuthering Heights" Another of Nixon's works that we both admired was "Madam Butterfly". I opined that it was Nixon's best ballet Also "Midsummer Night's Dream" I suggested.
"An interesting mix of music" replied David, "Mendelssohn with Prokofiev. "
"Northern Ballet is a great company," said David, "I have many friends there."
"And they hold you in great affection", I replied, "as do audiences/"
Earlier in the conversation about Suzanne Whitworth, he mentioned the name of Annemarie Donoghue. I told him that she had been my main teacher. He observed that she was lovely as was Jane Tucker one of my other favourite teachers, whom he described as "a lovely friend,"
Suzanne Whitworth introduced David to Marion Tait at the Birmingham Royal Ballet who in turn introduced him to others at the Birmingham Royal Ballet and the Royal Ballet. He had played for both companies. One of Marion Tait's introductions was to David Bintley. Our guest had played for several of David Bintley's classes.
An engagement of which David Plumpton is particularly proud is his work for the Yorkshire Ballet Seminars. He was proud that it was in Yorkshire but also proud of some of the students for whom he had played including Xander and Demelza Parish. He had met some great teachers at those seminars including Kevin Hagan of the Hamburg Ballet from whom he had learned a lot.
I asked him about his sound recordings which seem to be used by every teacher who had ever taught me. He said that he had not set out to make CDs but he relented to requests from teachers. He had been reluctant because there were already great recordings by American pianists and he wondered what he could possibly add to their work. The recordings proved to be very successful and their unexpected popularity makes him feel very humble. His audience expects a lot from him and he has always to think of something new. Each recording has to be better than the last He is something of a perfectionist, He spends ages choosing tunes and recording them. He practises each tune up to 30 times. It is all very hard work. His biggest market is the USA followed by Japan, South Korea, the UK and Australia, His recordings are on sale in all the world's opera houses including the Salle Garnier in Paris, a city that he loves.
The first question from the floor came from Sarah Lambert who noted that it was one thing to be a good pianist but quite another to be a good accompanist. David seemed to know exactly what was in the teacher's mind as if by telepathy. Sarah asked how that was achieved. David replied that it came through practice.
Yvonne Charlton, a teacher from the Dolstra Dance Centre in the Netherlands who had worked with David last September spoke of the rapport that she had developed with him in just one class. Hr was able to anticipate hee instructions before she had delivered them. The experience had been great. David congratulated Yvonne and Yvonne David, I suggested to Yvonne that she should invite David to IJsselstein. She readily agreed.
Yvonne told us that the lockdown regulations in the Netherlands permitted her to teach children in the school playground but they had to wear trainers which were quite unsuitable for classical ballet. The studio hoped to open in July but social distancing restricted how many students could take class, where they could stand, where they would enter snd where they would leave, Yvonne mentioned that National Ballet had been allowed to return to its studio. However, the Dutch government had cut off funding to the Scapino Ballet and another company in the Hague and there was a lot of concern for the National Ballet.
Janet McNulty asked David how he obtained permission to play his works. She had heard that some composers like Andrew Lloyd Webber simply refused permission. David explained that he could usually obtain permission from the collecting society but he had to approach Andrew Lloyd Wenner's separately. He was glad to say that his request for a licence had been granted.
Helen Brewer of Harpenden reminded David that she had met him at the Yorkshire Ballet Seminars and had bought all his CDs. David said that he remembered the meeting. Helen said that she employed 5 pianists in her school but kept the CDs in reserve. She agreed with David about the importance of live music. The pandemic had put a lot of strain on ballet school proprietors. Her son had been a great help[ in recording bits of the syllabus and preparing the studio for social distancing. David acknowledged the difficulties. He was happy that Helen and her students were safe and well and that their school was still in business.
Sarah Stewart asked David whether he had any advice for an adult on learning an instrument. He replied that they would need inner passion, practice, patience and perseverance. It might take a long time but their efforts would eventually be rewarded.
Christine Longster expressed her appreciation and how much she longed to return to the studio. She reminded David that he played the piano when she took her first class after 30 years.
Bo Zhang asked David whether he was a movie fan. He replied that he was but not so much for action films. Part of his enjoyment came from the theme tune. Examples included "Out of Africa", "Dances with Wolves" and "Harry Potter". In answer to a written question from Sarah Lambert, he said that he composed his own music.
David's chosen charity is the Yorkshire Ballet Seminars. You can donate here using PayPal. I have started the ball rolling. I urge everyone who appreciates David and his music to did deep.
3 June 2020
Sarah Kundi at the Stage Door
It was a particular pleasure to welcome Sarah Kundi last Sunday as I have been following her for as long as I have been blogging on ballet. I admire her line as a dancer but also her ability to tell a story. She is an actor as much as she is a dancer and excels at both. Although Sarah comes from London she launched her career in Leeds. As a result, she has many friends in this region several of whom joined our Zoom meeting.
My first question to her was how she found living with us north country folk. Quite a lot so it seems though she spent a lot of time on tour. She already had a connection with Northern Ballet in that she trained at Central School of Ballet which had been founded b its director Christopher Gable. She joined Northern Ballet a few years after David Nixon had become artistic director. He was building up a portfolio of narrative ballets that suited her. It was not a foregone conclusion that she would come to Leeds. She also auditioned for Birmingham Royal Ballet. One of her favourite works is Scottish Dances by David Bintley. Happily, she chose us though our audience included three ballet goers from Birmingham who could not have shared our delight.
Though Sarah had enjoyed her time with us she wanted new challenges which she found with Ballet Black. That had been a very successful move for she was nominated for the National Dance Awards and features as "Dancer of the Month" in the Dancing Times. I was taking her through some of the roles she had danced when Gita Mistry unmuted herself exclaiming ."War Letters". That work by Christopher Marney had also been one of my favourites. Gita and I saw it for the first time at the Bernie Grant Centre in Tottenham. It was then and there that we met her mother and father.
Sarah's parents told us quite a lot about her early life and career on that occasion. They mentioned that their other daughter had a talent for dancing but she did seek a career on stage. However, Sarah did. She trained with some excellent teachers,. "Carole Gable?" I suggested. "Yes," she agreed but then listed several more. While she was at Central that she met Paul Chantry who partnered her in pas de deux classes. Paul went on to found Chantry Dance and Chantry School of Contemporary and Balletic Arts of which Sarah is a patron.
Sarah told is that she has always had an interest in education. She did some teaching for a few months after she left Ballet Black. I told her about my shock when the company visited Leeds and we found that she was no longer with them. Gita found that Sarah had joined MurleyDance. The very next day I wrote Something to brighten up your Friday - MurleyDance is coming to the North 8 Nov 2013 in Terpsichore. That company did indeed visit Leeds at the end of November ad I met a whole new set of talented young artists including David Murley.
Sarah moved again in 2014 and this time we thought we had lost her for good. She had been taken on by English National Ballet for their Romeo and Juliet in the round at the Albert Hall. We feared that this would be the last time we would ever see her as she had a job offer in Spain. Fortunately, she was offered a full-time contract by ENB which saved her for the nation.
She has been with ENB for nearly 6 years in which she has been cast in some really meaty roles. These include Madge in La Sylphide, Myrtha in Akram Khan's Giselle and my favourites Lady Capulet in Romeo and Juliet (see Manchester's Favourite Ballet Company 29 Nov 2015 Terpsichore) and Hortensia in Christopher Wheeldon's Cinderella in the Albert Hall where she literally stole then show.
Questions from the audience included "How she found working with Akram Khan". Sarah was full of praise, particularly at the speed at which she worked. Sarah Lambert asked Sarah Kundi about her music. The answer is that she enjoys the piano and is getting on very well. I asked her about her remaining ambitions. She would love the opportunity to dance to Juliet and I think she would dance it well. In the longer term, she is interested in teaching and she has already taught at a high level. Gita asked Sarah for some advice on planking. Sarah gave Gita a target time to hold the position and suggested that she should add an extra 5 second to her time every so often. Gita shared one of her recipes with Sarah which I shall post to the Powerhouse Ballet website.
I explained that although we don't charge for the Zoom meeting we do invite participants to contribute to a dance charity. Sarah's is her company and I invite all Sarah's many friends to dig deep to support that cause.
This week we welcome the internationally acclaimed accompanist, David Plumpton who was supposed to visit us on 17 May 2020. We now have a backup plan if Zoom plays up again. We look forward to seeing you at the Stage Door on 7 June at 15:00.
1 June 2020
David Plumpton is Back
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Fiona Noonan led me back to the barre after a gap of nearly 50 years and I shall always be grateful to her for that. But if she had not been playing one of David Plumpton's recordings that evening that first class back might well have been my last. That class had not been easy for all sorts of reasons, but one thing that drew me back was David's music. It drew me back a second time. And then again. And again. Until I began to perform some of the exercises more or less as they are supposed to be performed and I began to enjoy class for its own sake.
I doubt if I am the only person in the world with a story like. If I am right David has probably launched more than a few principals on their careers as well as inspiring thousands of ordinary students such as me. Although I had admired David's music for a long time I never thought that I would ever have the opportunity of meeting him. However, that opportunity came through Terence Etheridge who had invited him to play for his audition for the cast of Aria. That class was one of the most thrilling ever.
Last year David played for our anniversary class with Jane Tucker The most delicious moment in that class was when Jane exclaimed just before the ronds de jambe: "Oh David, I missed you so much!" and we all burst into applause. As I wrote in Our Anniversary Company Class 26 May 2019 Powerhouse Ballet, "from then on, the rest of the afternoon was magic." And there was even more magic the next month when David played for us in Studio 2 of The Dancehouse on the Hottest Day of the Year.
David is an extraordinarily kind man as well as an extraordinarily gifted artist. Next Sunday is your opportunity to meet him over Zoom. You can book your place by clicking here,
31 May 2020
Shannon Lilly at the Stage Door
Shannon Lilly and Mark Pace in the Ballet du Rhin's production of The Nutcracker
Shannon Lilly has enjoyed a remarkable career. She was a principal ballerina in the San Francisco Ballet, America's oldest and arguably most prestigious ballet company. She then joined Christopher Gable's Northern Ballet Theatre and later Bertrand D'At's Ballet du Rhin in Alsace. She then began a second career as a freelance teacher and choreographer creating among other things a critically acclaimed production of The Nutcracker for Manchester City Ballet, the performing company of the Northern Ballet School. Some years later she and Peter Parker burst onto the nation's TV screens in Britain's Got Talent where they reached the final. She is now with Chantry Dance in Grantham.
Borm in Alexandria, Virginia where the US Patent and Trademark Office is located, Shannon grew up in Nevada. Several members of her family had been on the stage, so she was drawn to the arts naturally I asked her what drew her to ballet in particular. I had expected her to mention a Christmas performance of The Nutcracker or some other ballet. She replied that it had been the film, The Turning Point which has inspired her to make a career in ballet. That surprised me as the film does not glamourize ballet in the least. Nevertheless, it spurred here to train at the Contra Costa Ballet School in Walnut Creek near San Francisco.
She had attended performances of the San Francisco Ballet while she was growing up because an aunt who lived near San Francisco had been one of the company's subscribers. I should mention at this point that American companies obtain much of their revenue from subscriptions or season tickets for a block of shows which are marketed before the start of each season. Whenever Shannon visited her aunt she was treated to a performance at the War Memorial Opera House. Shannon auditioned for the company and was taken on as an apprentice. She was laid off for a while but continued to attend class. A member of the company was indisposed one day and Shannon was asked to dance her role. This time she was noticed by the new director, Helgi Tomasson who cast her in many of his productions, including The Sleeping Beauty in which she danced the bluebird solo and Princess Aurora.
Shannon progressed quickly through the company and became a principal at the age of 23. She danced leading roles in many of Tomasson's ballets as well as works by Balanchine, Morris, Robbins Tetley and many other choreographers. I asked her whether there was a particular work where everything clicked. She replied "Who Cares" and showed me a photo of her dancing in that production. I replied that I had seen two wonderful performances of that work by the Dutch National Ballet at their gala in Amsterdam in September and also in the Hague.
One of the choreographers with whom she had worked in San Francisco was David Bintley. She had enjoyed working with him. She was attracted to England and joined Northern Ballet Theatre just at the time it was building a very strong following among critics and audiences. She danced lead roles in all the company's productions including Odette-Odile in Michael Pink's Swan Lake and Kitri in his Amazing Adventures of Don Quixote.
Shannon spent the last years of her first stage career with the Ballet du Rhin in Mulhouse. Like Northern Ballet it was based a long way from its national capital. Just as the Leeds company had a towering genius in Christopher Gable the Mulhouse company had a similar figure in Bertrand D'At. She appeared in all D'At's works including most memorably his Swan Lake. Shannon also danced the title role in Maina Gielgud's Giselle as well as works by Forsythe, Jiri Kylian and Hans van Manen.
After leaving the Ballet du Rhin she began to inspire coming generations of dancers as a teacher. One of her pupils was Conor Walmsley whom I first met at the Dutch National Ballet's Junior Company's fifth-anniversary performance in Amsterdam in April 2018. When Conor heard that I was to interview Shannon, he told me that she had taught him in Hull and York. "I loved her classes," said Conor, "and I loved her." It is easy to see why. Shannon will give Powerhouse Ballet an online class on 11 July. We look forward to it very much.
Earlier I mentioned Shannon's "first" stage career. I used that adjective advisedly because she has had another first on television when she and Peter Parker were invited to take part in Sky TV's Got to Dance and ITV's Britain's Got Talent. As I have never had time or much incentive to update my telly when the analogue system was switched off I missed those programmes when they were first broadcast but I have recently seen them on YouTube, The reaction of the audience and judges was extraordinary, Shannon and Peter seem to have introduced ballet to a massive new audience.
I asked Shannon how the lockdown was affecting her. A major disappointment has been the postponement of Chantry Dance's autumn tour until next year. But she is keeping very busy with online classes and other activities,
Her chosen charity is Cancer Research UK, She lost her father to the disease as I did mine. We both ask you to support that cause generously.
Our next guest at the Stage Door will be Sarah Kundi of English National Ballet. This is a very special weekend for us as it marks the second anniversary of Powerhouse Ballet. We have therefore invited a very special guest and we hope our members will share our celebrations.
29 May 2020
A Really Special Guest for a Really Special Celebration
This is the second anniversary of the formation of Powerhouse Ballet and we have invited a very special guest to help us celebrate. Sarah Kundi will be our guest at the "Stage Door" at 3pm this Sunday.
Sarah began her career with Northern Ballet in Leeds where she has many fans. They continued to follow her when she joined Ballet Black. They packed the Stanley and Audrey Burton Theatre whenever Ballet Black performed in Leeds. It was while she was with Ballet Black that she first came to the London critics' notice. She was nominated for the National Dance Awards and featured as the "Dancer of the Month" in the Dancing Times. She did some of her best work with Ballet Black including Depouillage which is one of my favourite clips on YouTube. After a short spell with MurleyDance which brought her back to Leeds, Sarah joined the English National Ballet in 2014. She has been cast in some important roles such as Madge in La Sylphide, Myrtha in Akram Khan's Giselle and my particular favourite Hortensia in Wheeldon's Cinderella in the round at the Albert Hall.
Sarah's chosen charity as the English National Ballet and we ask you to dig deep as the company has a special link with our region. It gave its first performance at the Opera House in Manchester. Dame Beryl Grey herself told me about the company's affection for Manchester when I met her over drinks at the London Ballet Circle's anniversary reception in 2016.
If you want to speak to Sarah you need to register here before 3pm on Sunday.
As we have had problems with Zoom in the past we have a backup plan if Zoom plays up again. Google Meet is a similar platform which can be set up very quickly. If we have not let you by 3 pm check this website and your email for joining instructions.
Have a great weekend. See you all on Sunday,
21 May 2020
Poppy, Rose and Lilly - Our Next Guest at the Stage Door
Balanchine analogized different styles of dance with gems. I prefer flowers. Shannon Lilly who is our guest at the Stage Door this Sunday started her career in California, Its state flower inspired Pavlova's Californian Poppy. one of her loveliest ballets. She has however spent much of her life here which qualifies her to be an English rose. She spent the finale of her first career as a performer in France, aux fleurs de lys or lilies. And she is, of course, a Lilly.
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The oldest and one of the most prestigious companies in the USA is the San Francisco Ballet, Shannon entered that company in 1986 after learning her art at Contra Costa Ballet. A question that I shall put to Shannon is whether she would agree that California has its own style that is as distinct from that of American Ballet Theatre and New York City as English ballet is from French or Danish from Russian. The West Coast companies have their own schools and as they showed on last year's visit to London a very exciting repertoire (see San Francisco Ballet in London 2 June 2019 Terpsichore).
Shannon did very well in San Francisco progressing to principal by the age of 23. She danced Princess Aurora and Bluebird in Helgi Tomasson's production of The Sleeping Beauty, the ballerina in Jerome Robbins's Concert. and many other leading roles that had been created by some of the world's leading choreographers.
In 1994 she came to England. Christopher Gable was artistic director of Northern Ballet Theatre as Northern Ballet was then called. The company had grown to a point when it could stage full-length classical ballets such as Swan Lake, Cinderella, The Wonderful World of Don Quixote and Romeo and Juliet. Shannon joined the company and danced in all of the lead roles in those ballets.
The last part of her first stage career was spent in Mulhouse with the Ballet du Rhin. There she danced Odette-Odile in Bertrand d'At's Swan Lake as well as works by Forsythe, Tetley, Gielgud. van Manen and many other choreographers.
I saw first stage career for Shannon emerged on the TV programme "Britain's Got Talent", Largely because I have never got round to replacing my TV or configuring a digital signal adapter when the analogue signal was switched off I missed her performances when they were first broadcast but I have seen them on YouTube and they are impressive. Classical ballet cannot be an easy sell on prime time telly but she and her partner seem to have appeared week after week to thunderous applause.
Shannon has built up yet another successful career as a teacher and choreographer. One work that I particularly admired was her production of The Nutcracker for Manchester City Ballet, the performance company of the Northern Ballet School. She was due to tour the UK this Autumn in Chantry Dance's production of The Little Mermaid but that has had to be postponed for a year owing to the pandemic.
If you want to talk to this remarkable artist you can register here if you would like to speak to her over Zoom. If Zoom lets us down as it did last Sunday I shall transfer the meeting to Google Meet. If you have a Gmail account you will already have this application, I shall ask Shannon a few questions to start the ball rolling and then invite questions from the audience. We are not charging for this service but we will invite members of the audience to contribute to a ballet or dance education charity or good cause of Shannon's choice.
Next Sunday, that is to say, 31 May at 15:00, we shall meet Sarah Kundi of English National Ballet who is one of my very favourite artists. Sarah's charity is her company which has just celebrated its 75th anniversary. It gave its first performance at the Opera House in Manchester in 1950 so has a very special link with the North. A connection that Dame Beryl Grey told me the company values very highly. I, therefore, invite all attendees to dig deep for that cause,
David Plumpton will be back on 7 June 2020 and this time you will hear him one way or another. On 14 June we shall say "Gooday" to Lachlan Monaghan of Birmingham Royal Ballet who will join us from Australia. He is a wonderful dancer but he is also an excellent photographer and I hope he will want to discuss both art forms.
Next Saturday Jane Tucker will give us our second-anniversary class (albeit online) on 30 May at 11:00. She and David will also lead us back triumphantly back into the Dancehouse the first Saturday after it reopens, Sophie Richardson has kindly agreed to give us an online class on 13 June at 11:00.
Looking slightly further ahead Shannon has already agreed in principle to give us an online master class on a day to be fixed and a conventional class in a studio as soon as we are allowed back into one.
So there is a lot to look forward to despite the lockdown. Our art form has survived Russian and Spanish flu, the Russian Revolution, Stalin's purges and two world wars. This multicoloured microscopic Scotch egg of a bug won't win,
See you on Sunday folks.
17 May 2020
Apologies for the Cancellation of the Zoom Meeting with David Plumpton
My sincere apologies to David Plumpton and everybody who registered to meet him over Zoom.
I do not yet know the reason for the glitch but I can tell you what I saw.
I held a rehearsal with David shortly before the meeting. I noticed that David was in the waiting room and clicked the "Admit" button. The word "joining" appeared in the dialogue box but he did not appear. I clicked the "Admit" button again but nothing happened. A few minutes later David sent me a picture of his screen that indicated that he was waiting for me to let him in.
As David had only recently installed Zoom and was using a phone whereas I had a powerful PC that I bought for work I suggested that we should start again, I exited the screen and re-entered using the IP and password rather than the "Start Meeting" button. This time I was able to admit David. We chatted for a while and we agreed to meet at 14:45.
I re-entered the chatroom just before the meeting and waited for someone to arrive. Nicola came first. I clicked the "Admit" button and the dialogue box indicated that she was "joining". Shortly afterwards several other people appeared and I clicked "Admit all". Against each word appeared the word "joining". However, nobody came.
I tried to exit the meeting and re-entered only to find two icons of myself. I found 22 participants in the waiting room. Again I pressed the "Admit all" button and again received the "Joining" message but nothing happened.
At about that time I was getting phone calls on my mobile and landline and messages and emails which I tried to answer as quickly as possible. David promised to wait for a few minutes. I searched the "Support" database but could find no relevant article. Zoom does not offer customer support in real-time.
I bought the Zoom package primarily for work and have used it satisfactorily throughout the lockdown. I have held client meetings, meetings with colleagues, delivered two lectures, hosted three online classes and two "Stage Door" meetings without incident.
I do not claim any special expertise in computing but I was taught to code in Basic and COBOL as part of my research at UCLA and my first job at the Economist Intelligence Unit many years ago. I have been a member of the British Computer Society for nearly 40 years and part of my job as a patent lawyer is to cross-examine software engineers My guess is that this problem is caused by a recent software upgrade to address security. Since one of the complaints against Zoom has been unauthorized entry, the "Admit" function is exactly the sort of thing that a maintenance programmer would look at.
I have just received a message from Maria Chugai who says that others have had problems with Zoom all day. Bo said she had to wait for 30 minutes to get into a class. Wendy reported problems with Jane's class yesterday. All that would be consistent with a bug in the "Admit" function caused by the software upgrade.
I shall try to find out what happened over the next couple of days. If it is a software maintenance bug then it should be fixed soon. If not then I shall replace the package. The courts use Skype for Business in this country. Hangouts has worked well for meetings in the past and Google has recently added a webinar function to Hangouts. Nicola has suggested Cisco. The WIPO and EU use "GoToWebinar".I will spend the rest of the day looking into all those possibilities.
In order not to waste any more of your valuable time I shall not run any more classes or hold any more events until I am satisfied this will not happen again with Zoom or we have a robust alternative webinar product.
Once again, my abject and sincere apologies.
Post Script
Zoom application is down today. I experienced a problem while conducting a meeting where more than 100 attendees were expected and only few were able to join. There was problem with chat, voice and screen share. I had to abort meeting@zoom_us #zoomdown #zoom pic.twitter.com/9m2yRRNExg— Pawan Dhera (@pawandhera) May 17, 2020
Zoom issues and crashes at 12:17PM 05/17/2020 UTC! Website shows ~1,500 error reports! Retweet if you're having problems too!— Website Glitches/Crashes (@WebsiteCrashes) May 17, 2020
Site i used: https://t.co/8ykpZRYkeO#zoom#zoomdown pic.twitter.com/TznfMXlPUW
— Mkshsjgx (@Mandedelights) May 17, 2020
Post-post Script
Zoom seems to have fixed the problem. I set up a new meeting just now and was able to admit Bo and Sarh without any difficulty.
We can run future events as planned with Zoom but I will use Google Hangouts Meet as a backup. We shall reschedule David's talk to come on as soon as possible.
13 May 2020
Meet David Plumpton - Truly a National Treasure
© 2019 Jane Lambert: all rights reserved |
There can be few dancers, dance teachers or dance students anywhere in the world who have not trained to the music of David Plumpton. Here he is at The Dancehouse in Manchester with artists of Powerhouse Ballet and their choreographer Yvonne Charlton of Dolstra Dance Centre at IJsselstein in the Netherlands who were lucky enough to hear him play for them in person. Many more know him through his DVDs Modern Melodies, New Classics and West End to Broadway.
David will meet some of his many friends over Zoom at 15:00 this Sunday. If you want to hear him speak and maybe ask him a question or show your appreciation, register through Eventbrite. Click that green button marked "Register" and follow the instructions.
As in previous Stage Door events, I shall ask David a few questions about his early life and career and then invite questions from the floor. So if you have ever wanted why we do glissés to the Muppet Show or whether he has plans for another recording this is your opportunity to find out.
As this is still an experimental service we are not charging for setting this up but we would ask you to contribute to Yorkshire Ballet Seminars.
12 May 2020
Maria Chugai at the "Stage Door"
Maria Chugai, 10 May 2020
© 2020 Gita Mistry: All Rights Reserved
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Last Sunday afternoon, we entertained Maria Chugai of the Dutch National Ballet to the "Stage Door". She was a perfect guest. She answered my questions about her education and career with infinite patience.
Maria is a graduate of the Vaganova Ballet Academy, formerly known as the Imperial Ballet School which Tamara Karsavina described so memorably in Theatre Street The Reminiscences of Tamara Karsavina. When Maria attended the Vaganova she featured in a television documentary on the Academy by Russia Today entitled The Best Ballet School in the World. In that programme, Maria's mother recalled Maria's first taste of ballet. It was a performance of The Nutcracker in Donetsk, her home town, which happens to be Sheffield's twin city. Maria's mother said that Maria had been enchanted by the show. She would not stay still. She was always dancing imagining herself in the role of Princess Masha.
I reminded her of that clip in my first question. Maria explained that her parents, though well-educated and cultured, had no background in the performing arts. Her father is a civil engineer who had imagined his clever daughter following him into his profession. She was given ballet lessons and she must have shown promise because she was sent to a ballet camp in Norway with teachers from the Vaganova on the faculty. They invited her to consider applying to their Academy. Up to that point, she had not considered the possibility of studying there.
In my feature Meet Maria Chugai of the Dutch National Ballet, 8 March 2019 Terpsichore I had described her audition and her first term at the Academy. As I am interested in the education of exceptionally gifted children I wanted to learn how the Academy copes with prodigies from all parts of the enormous Russian Federation, the Commonwealth of Independent States and beyond. She answered by speaking of her own experience. The demands on the students were so great that it was necessary to develop a single-minded determination to succeed. Maria's mother noticed that determination on her first exeat home which her mother found difficult to accept at first. It is a characteristic that I have found in successful people in every field but particularly in ballet. It is one of the qualities that I admire most in dancers and other performing artists.
Maria must have needed that determination for life was far from easy in the early days. There was no hot water in her first boarding house. Students had to leave their building and walk to the studio to take a shower. They were not allowed to leave the residence on their own but had to form a crocodile. Even though the cold was intense, leg warmers were not allowed in class. The regime was rigorous There were ballet classes like the one that featured Maria in the documentary but also lessons in the arts and sciences. One of those subjects must have been English because Gita Mistry complimented Maria on her command of our language. As I mentioned in my previous article there are clips in that documentary of the language lab, the children singing Jingle Balls and cards with idioms like "Think on your feet" and "To get cold feet". As in all boarding schools, the children had to learn to look after themselves. For example, it was their job to maintain their kit. Life got easier for Maria when she moved to a new residence with hot running water but, even there, the students still had to wash their clothes by hand.
I asked Maria about the teachers whom she had mentioned in my previous article and how she came to be chosen for the lead role in The Nutcracker a year before her graduation. She replied that one of the Academy's traditions is to stage several performances of that ballet in the Mariinsky Theatre around Christmas every year. She had been one of several students chosen to learn the lead role when she was only 16. I was interested to learn that the Vaganova has a mentoring system where a senior member of staff guides the student through to graduation. If the mentor thinks the student is good enough she may put her mentee's name forward to a committee of senior teachers who select the cast. It was obviously a singular honour to be cast in the leading role at that stage of her training.
I could have spoken to Maria all day about her education but time was pressing and we had not even begun to discuss her career. We touched briefly on her awards in two important competitions: the International Ballet Competition in Tallinn where she won the second prize in the Junior Group in 2000 and the Vaganova Prize in St Petersburg in 2006 which was judged by Natalia Makarova. No first prize was awarded that year but Maria and another competitor shared the second. Maria mentioned the pressures of competing and the relative importance of such competitions in Russia and Western Europe.
The Vaganova competition was the first time that Maria had met Makarova though of course there was no opportunity for Maria as a competitor to speak to Makarova then. However, Makarova visited Amsterdam occasionally. I am aware that at least on one occasion Makarova visited that city to stage La Bayadère for the Dutch National Ballet (see Dutch National Ballet's La Bayadere - the Highlight of my World Ballet Day 5 Oct 2016 Terpsichore). It was on one of Makarova's visits that Maria met the great ballerina and recalled their previous encounter.
Maria had caught my attention as The Lilac Fairy in The Sleeping Beauty (see The Dutch National Ballet's "The Sleeping Beauty" - I have waited nearly 50 years for this show 20 Dec 2017 Terpsichore), the older swans' duo in Swan Lake (see Van Dantzig's Swan Lake 25 March 2019 Terpsichore) and above all as Myrtha in Giselle (see Mooie 10 Nov 2018 Terpsichore). As Maria had recently posted a video of one of her performances of Don Quixote in California when she was at the Mariinsky to her YouTube channel I had assumed that her interest lay primarily in those 19th-century works. I was fascinated to learn that one of her favourite ballets with the Mariinsky was the Rite of Spring. She explained some of the reasons why she admired that work. She added that artists from the UK had collaborated in that work. Another work in that company's repertoire that she enjoyed was Grigorovich's Legend of Love, a ballet that I have never seen live. Although the Mariinsky and Bolshoi make frequent visits to Covent Garden they rarely include it in their season. The only time we get to see it in the UK is when it is live-streamed from Russia.
The last part of my interview focused on Maria's work with the Dutch National Ballet. Maria spoke of the contrasting cultures of the Dutch National Ballet and the Mariinsky. Nearly all the dancers of the Mariinsky had trained in Russia. many at the Vaganova. The artists of the Dutch National Ballet, on the other hand, come from all parts of the world and had trained in many different traditions and styles at different ballet schools
In the National Ballet, she had the opportunity to work with Hans van Manen which must have been a formidable but also very memorable experience. She had also worked with Christopher Wheeldon in Cinderella. I interjected that I would love to see her dance Hermione in The Winter's Tale. She admired Ashton's Dream notwithstanding its technical challenges which made me think of the mechanicals on pointe. One British choreographer whose work she particularly likes is Sir Kenneth Macmillan. She would love to dance in Manon. We would love to see her in that work. As far as we know, there do not seem to be any immediate plans to stage that work in Amsterdam. Yet another choreographer with whom she would like to work is Crystal Pite.
At this point, Sarah Lambert asked whether Maria had tried contemporary or other styles of dance. Maria replied that she had been trained and made her career in classical dance but had danced in works that had referred to other styles. Gita, who is a famous chef, asked how she was coping with lockdown and what she was eating, Maria said she was coping well. The Dutch National Ballet had arranged online classes over Zoom and she was teaching some of her own online classes. She was eating healthily and well and keeping herself in good shape.
My last question was whether there was a good cause that she wanted to support. She thought for a moment and mentioned her school. She then said that she would particularly like to support a British student's scholarship fund. From time to time there are appeals by the families and friends of British students to support their studies in Russia. I promoted one some years ago in Two Ballet Appeals 7 July 2013 Terpsichore. I am not aware of any such appeals right now but I will make enquiries. If I can't find any at the Vaganova or elsewhere in Russia I certainly know of some here including one promising young man who began to teach himself ballet from a book.
As Elaine Berrill had written a lovely appreciation for Maria on "Chat" I invited her to propose a vote of thanks. Elaine's speech was gracious and eloquent. Although most audience members' microphones had been muted we burst into a round of applause. Had we flowers in a theatre we should have thrown them on stage for her just as you can see here
We had several distinguished guests at the Zoom meeting including our guest choreographer and ballet mistress from the Netherlands (see Yvonne Charlton 25 July 2018 Terpsichore). Yvonne teaches at the Dolstra Dance Centre in IJsselstein and works very closely with the Dutch National Ballet. She has visited us three times, given us some wonderful classes in Leeds, Liverpool and Manchester and taught us two of her pieces. We also welcomed Alena Panasenka, one of the pianists at Northern Ballet who plays for us at Powerhouse Ballet. Alena very kindly translated my article Maria Chugai in Conversation with her Friends into Russian. It was good to hear Maria and Alena greet each other in their mother tongue. Last but not least, we welcomed Janet McNulty, one of the moderators of BalletcoForum, who encouraged me to set up "Stage Door" when I first canvassed support for the project.
Our next event will be our online class with Jane Tucker on 16 May 2020 ay 11:00. Our next guest at the "Stage Door" will be the world-famous accompanist, David Plumpton, on 17 May 2020 at 15:00.
Translated by Yvonne Charlton |
Zondagmiddag 10 mei 2020 hebben wij bij de “Podium Deur” een interview gehad met Maria Chugai, danseres bij het Nederlands Nationale Ballet. Zij was een fijne gast. Zij beantwoorde heel geduldig en rustig vragen over haar opleiding en carrière.
Maria is afgestudeerd aan de Vaganova Ballet Academy, voorheen bekend als de Keizerlijke Ballet School, welke Tamara Karsavina zo memorabel heeft beschreven in haar boek “Theatre Street De Herinneringen van Tamara Karsavina”. De moeder van Maria herinnert zich de eerste kennismaking van Maria met ballet. Dat was een televisie documentaire/programma van Vaganova dat zij volgde genaamd “op de academie” door Rusland Vandaag getiteld “De beste school van de wereld”. Daarna een voorstelling van “De Notenkraker”, opgevoerd in haar eigen geboorteplaats Donetks,. Maria’s moeder zei dat Maria betoverd was van de voorstelling, zij kon niet stil blijven zitten. Daarna was zij
altijd aan het dansen en verbeelde zichzelf in de rol van prinses Masha.
In mijn eerste vraag herinnerde ik haar hieraan. Maria legde uit dat haar ouders hoewel goed opgeleid en ontwikkeld, geen achtergrond hadden in de culturele/uitvoerende kunst. Haar vader is van beroep burgerlijke ingenieur, die had gedacht dat zijn knappe dochter hem zou opvolgen in zijn vak. Zij volgde ballet lessen en haar talent moet daar zijn opgevallen, want zij werd uitgezonden naar een balletkamp in Noorwegen waar ook docenten van Vaganova aanwezig waren. Deze docenten nodigden haar uit om te overwegen auditie aan te vragen voor hun Academie. Tot op dat moment had ze niet aan de mogelijkheid gedacht om daar te studeren.
In mijn profielschets “Ontmoet Maria Chugai van het Nationale Ballet van Nederland”, 8 maart 2019 Terpsichore, heb ik haar auditie en eerste termijn aan de Academie beschreven. Omdat ik geïnteresseerd ben in de opleiding van buitengewoon begaafde kinderen, wil ik graag weten hoe de Academy omgaat met deze buitengewoon begaafde leerlingen uit alle delen van de enorme Russische Federatie, Europa en andere landen van de wereld. Maria antwoord hierop door uit eigen ervaring te spreken. De eisen die aan de studenten werden gesteld waren zo groot dat het noodzakelijk was om je doorzettingsvermogen, doelbewustheid en vastberadenheid te ontwikkelen om te slagen. Deze veranderingen viel de moeder van Maria op de eerste keer dat Maria thuis kwam en in het begin vond zij het moeilijk deze veranderingen te accepteren. Het zijn kenmerken die ik terugvindt in succesvolle personen in elk beroep maar vooral in ballet. Het zijn deze kwaliteiten die ik bewonder vooral in dansers en andere uitvoerende artiesten.
Maria moet dat doorzettingsvermogen nodig hebben gehad want in het begin was het leven op de Academie verre van makkelijk. In haar eerste pension was er geen warm water. Om te douchen moesten de studenten naar de studio lopen, dit mocht echter niet alleen maar in een groep, in een rij gevormd. Ook al was het intens koud, tijdens de ballet lessen waren beenwarmers niet geoorloofd. Het regiem was streng. Naast de ballet lessen zoals uitgelicht in de documentaire waren er ook vakken zoals lessen in kunst en wetenschappen. Een van de vakken moet ook de Engelse taal zijn geweest, waardoor Gita Mistry, Maria complimenteerde met de beheersing van onze Engelse taal. Zoals ik al vermelde in mijn vorige artikel, zijn er clips in eerder genoemde documentaire van kinderen zingende Jingle Bells en ook kaarten met taaluitdrukkingen zoals “Think on your feet" ("denk aan je voeten”) en “To get cold feet" ("koude voeten krijgen”). Zoals gebruikelijk op een kostschool leerden de kinderen zelfstandig te worden. Voorbeeld zij dienden zorg te dragen voor hun eigen kleding, voorzieningen etc. Het leven van Maria werd makkelijker toen zij verhuisde naar een nieuw pension met warm stromend water, maar zelfs daar dienden de leerlingen hun kleding nog met de hand te wassen.
Ik vroeg Maria naar de docenten die zij had genoemd in mijn voorgaande artikel en hoe zij werd gekozen om de hoofdrol in de Notenkraker te dansen in het jaar voorgaande aan haar diploma uitreiking. Haar antwoord hierop was dat een van de tradities van de Academie is om ieder jaar tijdens Kersttijd meerdere voorstellingen van dat Ballet in het Mariinksy Theater uit te voeren. Zij (net 16 jaar) was een van aantal andere leerlingen die uitgekozen waren om de hoofdrol te leren. Ik vond het interessant om te weten dat Vaganova een mentor systeem heeft, waarbij een senior lid van de docenten een leerling begeleidt tot aan haar afstuderen. Indien de mentor denkt dat de leerling goed genoeg is, kan zij de naam van de leerling voordragen aan het comité van senior docenten die de cast selecteren. Het was duidelijk een eer om op dat moment van haaropleiding gecast te worden voor de hoofdrol.
Ik had de hele dag wel met Maria over haar opleiding kunnen praten maar de tijd drong en we waren nog niet eens over haar carrière begonnen. We haalden kort haar behaalde prijzen aan van twee belangrijke competities:
- 2000 de Internationale Ballet Competitie in Talinn, waar zij de tweede prijs won in de Junior Groep;
- 2006 de Vaganova Prijs in St. Petersburg, die gejureerd werd door Natalia Makarova.
Bij de Vaganova competitie was het de eerste keer dat Maria Makarova heeft ontmoet, echter als deelneemster was het toen onmogelijk om met Makarova te praten. Echter Makarova bezoekt af en toe Amsterdam. Ik ben mij ervan bewust dat minstens bij een gelegenheid Makarova de stad heeft bezocht om het ballet La Bayadère in te studeren bij het Nationale Ballet van Nederland (zie Dutch National Ballet's La Bayadere - the Highlight of my World Ballet Day (Nationale Ballet Nederland La Bayadère – de hoogtepunten van mijn Wereld Ballet Dag 5 oktober 2016 Terpsichore). Het was op een van Makarova’s bezoeken dat Maria de grote ballerina ontmoette en zich aan hun eerdere ontmoeting herinnerde.
Maria trok mijn aandacht als de Seringenfee in het ballet De Schone Slaapster (zie The Dutch National Ballet's "The Sleeping Beauty" - I have waited nearly 50 years for this show "(Nederlands Nationale Ballet "De Schone Slaapster' – Ik heb bijna 50 jaar gewacht om deze ballet voorstelling te zien") op 20 december 2017 Terpsichore), het oudere zwanen duo in het Zwanenmeer (zie Van Dantzig's Swan Lake (Van Datzig’s Zwanenmeer) 25 maart 2019 Terpsichore) maar vooral als Myrtha in Giselle (zie Giselle 10 november 2018 Terpsichore). Maria heeft recentelijk een video van een van haar voorstellingen van Don Quichotte, welke dateert uit haar Mariinsky periode op haar YouTube kanaal gezet. Ik ging ervan uit dat haar interesse voornamelijk bij de 19 e -eeuwse werken lag. Ik was gefascineerd om te horen dat een van haar favoriete balletten bij het Mariinsky de “Rite van de Lente” is. Zij legde enkele van haar redenen hiervoor uit waarom zij dit ballet bewonderd. Zij voegt toe dat artiesten van het Verenigd Koninkrijk samenwerkten in dat stuk. Een ander ballet uit het repertoire van Mariinsky is Grigorovich’s Legend of Love, een ballet dat ik zelf nog nooit heb gezien. Alhoewel het Mariinsky en het Bolshoi regelmatig optreden in Covent Garden, zij deze stukken zelden in hun programma opnemen. De enige keer dat wij dit kunnen zien in het Verenigd Koningrijk als het wordt
gestreamd van Rusland.
Het laatste deel van mijn interview focust zich op Maria’s werk bij het Nederlands Nationale Ballet. Maria vertelde over de contrasterende culturen tussen het Nationale Ballet en het Mariinsky. Bijna alle dansers bij het Mariinsky zijn getraind in Rusland waar daarentegen de dansers van het Nederlands Nationale Ballet uit alle delen van de wereld komen en zijn getraind in vele verschillende tradities en stijlen op verschillende ballet academies.
Bij het Nationale Ballet heeft zij de mogelijkheid gehad om te werken met choreograaf Hans van Manen, wat naast een geweldige ook een zeer gedenkwaardige ervaring moet zijn geweest. Zij heeft ook gewerkt met choreograaf Chirstopher Wheeldon in zijn ballet “Assepoester”. Ik onderbrak haar om te zeggen dat ik haar graag zou zien in de rol van Hermione in ballet “Het Winter Verhaal”. Zij bewonderd Ashton’s “Droom” ondanks de technische uitdagingen. Een Britse choreograaf van wiens werk zij houdt is Sir Kenneth Macmillan. Zij zou graag in Manon willen dansen. Voor zover wij weten lijkt het er niet op dat er plannen zijn om dit werk in Amsterdam ten uitvoer te brengen. Nog een andere choreograaf met wie zij graag zou willen werken is Crystal Pite.
Op dit punt Sarah Lambert vroeg aan Maria of zij hedendaagse of andere dansstijlen heeft geprobeerd. Hierop antwoorde Maria dat zij is getraind en haar carrière heeft gemaakt in de klassieke dans, maar daarnaast heeft gedanst in werken met andere stijlen.
Gita, die een beroemde chef is, vroeg haar hoe zij met de lockdown omgaat en wat zij zoal at. Maria vertelde dat ze er goed mee omgaat. Het Nationale Ballet heeft via Zoom on-line balletlessen geregeld en zij gaf enkele van haar eigen lessen on-line. Zij eet gezond en houdt zichzelf goed in vorm.
Mijn laatste vraag of er een goed doel was welke zij wilde ondersteunen. Zij dacht hier een moment over na en noemde haar Vaganova school. Zij zou graag een studiebeurs willen voor een Engelse student aan de Vaganova academie. Van tijd tot tijd wordt er door familie en vrienden van Engelse studenten een verzoek gedaan om de kosten van hun studie in Rusland te ondersteunen. Ikzelf was enige jaren geleden een donateur voor het ballet Two Ballet Appeals 7 juli 2013 Terpsichore Op dit moment ben ik niet op de hoogte van dergelijke verzoeken/oproepen, maar zal hierover navraag gaan doen. Indien ik bij de Vaganova of ergens anders in Rusland hier niets over kan vinden zal ik zeker in Engeland iemand kunnen vinden die hier meer over weet waaronder een veelbelovende jonge man
die zichzelf ballet aanleerde vanuit een boek.
Elaine Berrill heeft mooie woorden van waardering en respect aan Maria uitgesproken en deze dankbetuiging op Chat geschreven. Hoewel de microfoons van de meeste deelnemers waren gedempt, gaven we Maria een groot applaus. Als we in het theater bloemenhadden gehad zouden we die naar haar op het podium hebben gegooid.
We hadden verschillende voorname gasten bij deze Zoom bijeenkomst waaronder onze gastchoreograaf en balletmeester uit Nederland (zie Yvonne Charlton 25 juli 2018 Terpsichore). Yvonne geeft balletles bij Dolstra Dance Centre in IJsselstein en werkt regelmatig met de educatieve afdeling van het Nationale Ballet. Zij heeft ons 3 keer bezocht, heeft ons een aantal fantastische
lessen gegeven en leerde ons twee van haar stukken in Leeds, Liverpool en Manchester. Ook verwelkomden wij Alena Panasenka, een van de pianisten van het Northern Ballet, zij speelt voor ons bij Powerhouse Ballet. Alena was zo vriendelijk mijn artikel Maria Chugai in Conversation with her Friends (Maria Chugai in Conversatie met haar vrienden) in het Russisch te vertalen. Het was goed om te zien en te horen hoe Maria en Alena elkaar in hun moedertaal begroeten. Tenslotte verwelkomden we Janet McNulty, een van de bemiddelaars van BalletcoForum, die mij steunde en aanmoedigde bij het opzetten van dit project "Podium Deur."
Ons volgende evenement zal zijn onze on-line balletles met Jane Tucker op 16 mei 2020 om 11:00. Onze volgende gast bij de Podium Deur zal zijn de wereld beroemde balletbegeleider, David Plumpton, op 17 mei 2020 om 15:00.
Het laatste deel van mijn interview focust zich op Maria’s werk bij het Nederlands Nationale Ballet. Maria vertelde over de contrasterende culturen tussen het Nationale Ballet en het Mariinsky. Bijna alle dansers bij het Mariinsky zijn getraind in Rusland waar daarentegen de dansers van het Nederlands Nationale Ballet uit alle delen van de wereld komen en zijn getraind in vele verschillende tradities en stijlen op verschillende ballet academies.
Bij het Nationale Ballet heeft zij de mogelijkheid gehad om te werken met choreograaf Hans van Manen, wat naast een geweldige ook een zeer gedenkwaardige ervaring moet zijn geweest. Zij heeft ook gewerkt met choreograaf Chirstopher Wheeldon in zijn ballet “Assepoester”. Ik onderbrak haar om te zeggen dat ik haar graag zou zien in de rol van Hermione in ballet “Het Winter Verhaal”. Zij bewonderd Ashton’s “Droom” ondanks de technische uitdagingen. Een Britse choreograaf van wiens werk zij houdt is Sir Kenneth Macmillan. Zij zou graag in Manon willen dansen. Voor zover wij weten lijkt het er niet op dat er plannen zijn om dit werk in Amsterdam ten uitvoer te brengen. Nog een andere choreograaf met wie zij graag zou willen werken is Crystal Pite.
Op dit punt Sarah Lambert vroeg aan Maria of zij hedendaagse of andere dansstijlen heeft geprobeerd. Hierop antwoorde Maria dat zij is getraind en haar carrière heeft gemaakt in de klassieke dans, maar daarnaast heeft gedanst in werken met andere stijlen.
Gita, die een beroemde chef is, vroeg haar hoe zij met de lockdown omgaat en wat zij zoal at. Maria vertelde dat ze er goed mee omgaat. Het Nationale Ballet heeft via Zoom on-line balletlessen geregeld en zij gaf enkele van haar eigen lessen on-line. Zij eet gezond en houdt zichzelf goed in vorm.
Mijn laatste vraag of er een goed doel was welke zij wilde ondersteunen. Zij dacht hier een moment over na en noemde haar Vaganova school. Zij zou graag een studiebeurs willen voor een Engelse student aan de Vaganova academie. Van tijd tot tijd wordt er door familie en vrienden van Engelse studenten een verzoek gedaan om de kosten van hun studie in Rusland te ondersteunen. Ikzelf was enige jaren geleden een donateur voor het ballet Two Ballet Appeals 7 juli 2013 Terpsichore Op dit moment ben ik niet op de hoogte van dergelijke verzoeken/oproepen, maar zal hierover navraag gaan doen. Indien ik bij de Vaganova of ergens anders in Rusland hier niets over kan vinden zal ik zeker in Engeland iemand kunnen vinden die hier meer over weet waaronder een veelbelovende jonge man
die zichzelf ballet aanleerde vanuit een boek.
Elaine Berrill heeft mooie woorden van waardering en respect aan Maria uitgesproken en deze dankbetuiging op Chat geschreven. Hoewel de microfoons van de meeste deelnemers waren gedempt, gaven we Maria een groot applaus. Als we in het theater bloemenhadden gehad zouden we die naar haar op het podium hebben gegooid.
We hadden verschillende voorname gasten bij deze Zoom bijeenkomst waaronder onze gastchoreograaf en balletmeester uit Nederland (zie Yvonne Charlton 25 juli 2018 Terpsichore). Yvonne geeft balletles bij Dolstra Dance Centre in IJsselstein en werkt regelmatig met de educatieve afdeling van het Nationale Ballet. Zij heeft ons 3 keer bezocht, heeft ons een aantal fantastische
lessen gegeven en leerde ons twee van haar stukken in Leeds, Liverpool en Manchester. Ook verwelkomden wij Alena Panasenka, een van de pianisten van het Northern Ballet, zij speelt voor ons bij Powerhouse Ballet. Alena was zo vriendelijk mijn artikel Maria Chugai in Conversation with her Friends (Maria Chugai in Conversatie met haar vrienden) in het Russisch te vertalen. Het was goed om te zien en te horen hoe Maria en Alena elkaar in hun moedertaal begroeten. Tenslotte verwelkomden we Janet McNulty, een van de bemiddelaars van BalletcoForum, die mij steunde en aanmoedigde bij het opzetten van dit project "Podium Deur."
Ons volgende evenement zal zijn onze on-line balletles met Jane Tucker op 16 mei 2020 om 11:00. Onze volgende gast bij de Podium Deur zal zijn de wereld beroemde balletbegeleider, David Plumpton, op 17 mei 2020 om 15:00.
9 May 2020
Беседа Марии Чугай с Друзьями.
Мария Чугай завоевала сердца многих участниц нашего проекта Powerhouse Ballet, проведя онлайн занятие 21 апреля 2020. И теперь, 10 мая 2020, мы невероятно рады возможности узнать её лучше, пообщаясь с Марией в рамках нашего нового проекта «Дверь на сцену».
Невзирая на то, что в настоящее время мы имеем доступ к просмотру многих балетов на канале ютуб, они не могут передать ту сакральную взаимосвязь, которая возникает между артистом и зрителем во время представления. Наша платформа «Дверь на сцену» является
альтернативой этой взаимосвязи, соединяя нас с артистами через Zoom.
7 May 2020
Maria Chugai in Conversation with her Friends
Photo Rob Becker © 2020 Maria Chugai: All rights reserved |
Maria Chugai won a lot of hearts on 21 April 2020 with an unforgettable online class for the members of Powerhouse Ballet. On the 10 May 2020, we have an opportunity to get to know her better for she will be our next guest at the Stage Door.
Just as an online class is the next best thing to a class in a studio, Stage Door is the next best thing to the theatre. Some people are surprised when I say that because ballet on film is still available on YouTube and television and some of those films are recordings of real performances. But watching ballet on film is a little like encountering a stuffed animal in a museum. Ballet, like all theatre, is an interaction of artist and audience. Unless the artist can sense the crowd of living, breathing humans beings a few feet away it's just like class or another rehearsal.
With Stage Door, you get this interaction because you are connected over Zoom. When we interviewed Gavin McCaig and Kevin Poeung last Sunday the conversation flowed like water. They could see us on screen and we could them and it was magic.
When I interviewed her for the feature article she attributed much of her success to her training. She is a graduate of the school that trained Pavolva, Preobrajenska, Nijinsky, Karsavina, Ulanova, Nureyev, Makarova, Baryshnikov and Vishneva. A year before her graduation she was chosen for the lead role in The Nutcracker which was a singular honour. Her preparation for that role is featured in a TV documentary on her school entitled The Best Ballet School in the World. This is the school that Karsavina described in Theatre Street. Maria can tell us all about life in Theatre Street now.
To meet Maria you have to click this link. That will take you to the registration page where you should click the green button marked "Register". Easy, peasy, lemon, squeezy. A senile monkey nursing a hangover couldn't get it wrong. In case you are calling from the Netherlands or Russia, I have posted telephone numbers in your countries as well as the UK on the invitation. There is no charge for this service but we should appreciate a donation to a dance charity or good cause of Maria's choice. I shall try to find a donate button for Facebook.
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