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FOR RELEASE SEPTEMPER, 2010
CONTACT: SHAUNA TYSOR
KIM ESPINOSA
713 535 3226
pr@houstonballet.org

 

HOUSTON BALLET LAUNCHES THE 2010-2011 SEASON
WITH BODY, SOUL & GERSHWIN

Featuring Jiří Kylián's Forgotten Land and Stanton Welch's Tu Tu and The Core: Gershwin, The Heart of the Big Apple
In September 2010 

HOUSTON, TEXAS - From September 9-19, 2010, Houston Ballet launches its 41st season with a mixed repertory program entitled Body, Soul & Gershwin, featuring Stanton Welch's lively and colorful neo-classical work Tu Tu, Jiří Kylián's emotionally charged abstract ballet Forgotten Land,  and  The Core: Gershwin, the Heart of the Big Apple, Mr. Welch's Broadway-style ode to 1930s New York City glamour. Houston Ballet will give six performances of Body, Soul & Gershwin at Wortham Theater Center in downtown Houston. Tickets may be purchased by calling 713 227 2787 or by visiting www.houstonballet.org.

A lavish, crowd-pleasing blockbuster inspired by the movie musicals of Hollywood's golden age, Mr. Welch's The Core: Gershwin, the Heart of the Big Apple is a highly theatrical depiction of the Big Apple, incorporating archetypal New York characters with plenty of Broadway flash and dazzle in a work featuring the full company. The Core: Gershwin, the Heart of the Big Apple is set to George Gershwin's Piano Concerto in F, and was premiered by Houston Ballet in 2008.

Houston Chronicle dance critic Molly Glentzer noted when reviewing the world premiere of The Core: Gershwin, the Heart of the Big Apple, "Welch's choreography - a hyperdriven blast of showbizzy arms, sweeping lunges and classic Broadways steps - moves deftly." (February 23, 2008)

"Tu Tu is a large ensemble work in three movements featuring 22 dancers. Tu Tu reflects the different aspects of ballet technique and what it means to be a dancer. The ballet moves through an adagio focusing on the dancers' balance and line, to powerful and energetic soubrette, to pas de deuxs highlighting each couple," explains Mr. Welch. "It is a playful, humorous look at classical ballet. Tu Tu is tart and very tongue-in-cheek."

Originally created for San Francisco Ballet in 2003 and set to Maurice Ravel's Concerto for Piano in G major, the dancers are outfitted in brilliantly colored tutus and briefs. Designed by Holly Hynes, the stunning costumes were inspired by Gustav Klimt's gold-hued paintings. Austrian-born Klimt (1862-1918) was a well-known Art Nouveau painter who became famous for his sensual depictions of women. The tutus and briefs worn by the dancers feature a dazzling array of colors: gold, turquoise, red and orange. Bare midriffs and striped retro-fashioned shorts ramp up the sex appeal. "I tried to capture the luscious feeling of Klimt's work in the costume design and choreography," Mr. Welch notes.

Arts Houston Magazine dance critic Nancy Wozny noted in April 2007 that "Tu Tu revealed the mighty talents and distinct personalities of its dancers in a shimmering display of technical bravado and gripping choreography." Houston Press critic Marene Gustin observed, "They knock out double fouettés en pointe and attack the floor with lightning steps while flexing supple backs and wafting arms in the most amazing port de bras to Ravel's lyrical Piano Concerto in G Major. Both women and men use their arms to sublime effect, with rippling back muscles and long limbs." (March 1, 2007)

Created in 1981 for Stuttgart Ballet, Jiří Kylián's Forgotten Land is a somber and soulful work for 12 dancers. In creating the piece, Mr. Kylián was inspired by a painting by Norwegian expressionist artist Edvard Munch and English composer Benjamin Britten's Sinfonia da Requiem, with its images of the sea engulfing the land. John Macfarlane's painterly scenic design and Mr. Kylian's movements suggest the rising waves of a grey sea, the ebb and flow of life, and themes of metamorphosis central to human existence. 

In September 2006, Houston Ballet's company premiere of Forgotten Land was cut short by the impending arrival of Hurricane Rita, and eerily the story behind the ballet paralleled this event: of a community under siege from nature. "Forgotten Land has great emotional resonance for Houston and other Gulf Coast cities that regularly face devastating storms," Mr. Welch points out.

Houston Ballet's performances of Body, Soul & Gershwin are made possible from the generous support of Cooper Industries.

About Houston Ballet

On February 17, 1969 a troupe of 15 young dancers made its stage debut at Sam Houston State Teacher's College in Huntsville, Texas. Since that time, Houston Ballet has evolved into a company of 53 dancers with a budget of $18.4 million, a state-of-the-art performance space built especially for the company, Wortham Theater Center,  and an endowment of just over $50.7 million (as of December 31, 2009), making it the United States fourth largest ballet company by number of dancers. Under the administrative leadership of managing director C.C. Conner since 1995, the company has maintained a strong financial position.    

Houston Ballet has toured extensively both nationally and internationally. Over the last decade, the company has appeared in London at Sadler's Wells, at the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow, in six cities in Spain, in Montréal, at The Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., in New York at City Center, and in cities large and small across the United States. 

Houston Ballet has emerged as a leader in the expensive, labor-intensive task of nurturing the creation and development of new full-length narrative ballets. The company has also commissioned new one-act ballets from some of the world's most respected choreographers, including Julia Adam, Christopher Bruce, James Kudelka, Trey McIntyre, Paul Taylor, Glen Tetley, Natalie Weir and Lila York.

Writing in The Financial Times on March 6, 2006, dance critic Hilary Ostlere praised Houston Ballet as "a strong, reinvigorated company whose male contingent is particularly impressive, a well-drilled corps and an enviable selection of soloists and principals." Dance Europe editor Emma Manning observed of the company in November 2004, "One of the first things that hits you about this company is the technical strengths not just of the principals, but throughout the ranks. Watching artistic director Stanton Welch take class on a Sunday morning before a matinee, one could not help but marvel at the multiple turns tossed off by the young women in the corps....The three new works shown in this program will be followed by no fewer than four more Houston premieres. Can any other major ballet company in the world match that?"

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HOUSTON BALLET
BODY, SOUL & GERSHWIN
FACT SHEET

 

WHAT: BODY, SOUL & GERSHWIN (Fall Mixed Repertory Program)
Featuring:

TU TU (2003)
Music by Maurice Ravel (1875-1937), Piano concerto in G major
Choreography by Stanton Welch
Costume Designs by Holly Hynes
Lighting by Lisa J. Pinkham

FORGOTTEN LAND (1981)
Music by Benjamin Britten (1913-1976), Sinfonia da Requiem, Opus 20
Choreography by Jiří Kylián
Scenic and Costume Designs by John F. Macfarlane
Lighting by Joop Caboort

THE CORE: GERSHWIN, THE HEART OF THE BIG APPLE (2008)
Music by George Gershwin (1898-1937), Concerto in F for piano and orchestra
Choreography by Stanton Welch
Scenic Designs by Thomas Boyd
Costume Designs by Holly Hynes
Lighting by David Grill

Houston Ballet Orchestra conducted by music director Ermanno Florio

Piano concertos in Tu Tu and The Core: Gershwin, the Heart of the Big Apple played by Katherine Burkwall-Ciscon

Generously underwritten by: Cooper Industries

ABOUT THE PROGRAM:
Inspired by a painting by Norwegian expressionist painter Edvard Munch and English composer Benjamin Britten's Sinfonia da Requiem with its  images of the sea engulfing the land, Jiří Kylián's Forgotten Land suggests the rising waves of a grey sea, the ebb and flow of life, and themes of metamorphosis central to human existence. A lavish, crowd-pleasing blockbuster inspired by the movie musicals of Hollywood's golden age, Mr. Welch's The Core: Gershwin, The Heart of the Big Apple is a highly theatrical depiction of the Big Apple, incorporating archetypal New York characters with plenty of Broadway flash and dazzle.  Set to Maurice Ravel's Concerto for Piano in G major and featuring 22 dancers in brilliantly colored tutus and briefs, Stanton Welch's Tu Tu takes a sensuous, playful look at classical ballet.

WHEN: At 7:30 pm on September 9, 11, 17, 18, 2010
At 2:00 pm on September 12, 19, 2010

WHERE: Brown Theater, Wortham Theater Center
501 Texas Avenue in downtown Houston

TICKETS: Start at $18. Call (713) 227 ARTS or 1 800 828 ARTS
Tickets are also available at www.houstonballet.org and
Houston Ballet Box Office at Wortham Theater Center, 501 Texas Ave. (at Smith St.)

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Visit Houston Ballet online at www.houstonballet.org