Feed Your Need for Performing Arts News in North Texas
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Facebook twitter
Youtube
RSS
Idina Menzel
Bocelli
Mama Mia
Advanced
Search
Keyword:    Presenter:   Start Date:   End Date: 
close

Select your search options below and click the SEARCH button
Article Author:
Article Category:
TheaterJones Section:
Keyword:
Published on or after:
Published on or before:


To search our listings, please click on "Listings" in the top menu and refine your options from there
Media Reviews
PERFORMING ARTS-RELATED FILM, TV, HOME MEDIA AND BOOKS
Printer Friendly Version
Printer
Friendly
Jennifer Homans discusses the history and future of ballet in \"Apollo\'s Angels\"

Book Review: Apollo’s Angels


Book Review: Apollo’s Angels


Jennifer Homans takes a vivid look at the ever-evolving yet constant art form of ballet.


by
published Friday, March 18, 2011


How many times have you heard that ballet is the foundation of all dance? Yes, modern, jazz, lyrical and contemporary dance are all rooted in ballet, but what about ballet’s roots? Where did it originate? Who were its patriarchs? And like any art form, how has ballet evolved throughout the centuries?

Jennifer Homans, dance critic for The New Republic, answers these questions and much more in her book Apollo’s Angels A History of Ballet (Random House). Well-researched and written with clear intent and vivid descriptions, including dances such as La Sylphide, Giselle and The Sleeping Beauty, this book is a page-turner for any avid dancer or dance lover.

Homans takes us on an eye-opening journey through time from King Louis the XIV’s court and the French Revolution to Peter the Great and Stalin’s Soviet Ballet to the British dance movement and the dance explosion here in America in the 1960s. Through all these economic and political changes ballet has not only survived but in many cases has thrived thanks to ballet pioneers and enthusiasts such as Jean-Georges Noverre, Marie Taglioni, Sergei Diaghilev, Vaslav Nijinsky, Frederick Ashton and George Balanchine and many more. I can’t thank them enough for dedicating their lives and risking everything to preserve the art form.

Unfortunately this isn’t the case today. Homans book ends on a kind of depressing note. As she bluntly puts it, all the masters of ballet are dead and gone. This leaves the new generation of choreographers and ballet dancers without a guiding light to follow. Because of this Homans says she believes the art form is dying out.

“I now feel sure that ballet is dying. The occasional glimmer of a good performance or a fine dancer is not a ray of future hope but the last glow of a dying ember, and our intense preoccupation with re-creating history is more than a momentary diversion: we are watching ballet go, documenting its past and its passing before it fades altogether.”

I don’t believe this. Or maybe I don’t want to believe this. Ballet has survived far worse throughout its history and I believe the next Balanchine is out there somewhere. We just have to wait. Until then, please continue to support ballet by going to performances and making donations. We can’t do anything about ballet’s past, but we certainly can play a role in its future.

Katie Dravenstott is a dance instructor and writer. This review originally appeared on her blog, KddanceThanks For Reading





Write your comment below.
Content may be edited, and while we welcome lively debate and criticism, inappropriate or offensive language will not be tolerated. We reserve the right to deny any comment.


*