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- <text id=91TT1036>
- <title>
- May 13, 1991: The Dawn of The Martins Era
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 13, 1991 Crack Kids
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DANCE, Page 64
- The Dawn of the Martins Era
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By waking up a Sleeping Beauty, Balanchine's protege establishes
- his pre-eminence
- </p>
- <p>By MARTHA DUFFY
- </p>
- <p> It's a brisk, bold spectacle, a radical new look at a
- beloved full-length classic, The Sleeping Beauty. It's not
- perversely set in a Paris slum or Sherwood Forest, as an
- avant-gardist might have done. The sumptuous fairy-tale
- illusion, as well as almost all Petipa's choreography, has been
- retained. But The Sleeping Beauty is usually a dozy night at the
- ballet--a prologue and three acts with three intermissions.
- Peter Martins' $2.8 million version, unveiled at New York City
- Ballet in the past two weeks, is in two acts, with several smart
- cuts and breathtakingly fast transitions between scenes
- requiring set changes.
- </p>
- <p> For Martins, 44, the production is a triumph, establishing
- him as the premier figure in American classical dance. He was
- already a power to reckon with as head of what is often
- described as the world's finest classical company. Running a
- ballet troupe is a tricky business. In addition to day-to-day
- operations, fund raising and the ceaseless development of
- talent, a director must have artistic impact on the world of the
- arts, or the troupe's name will lose its luster. Martins' Beauty
- cuts like a stiff breeze through increasingly remote traditions.
- No major company has managed such a rigorous rethinking of a
- full-length work in more than a decade.
- </p>
- <p> The break happened none too soon. Martins took over
- running the company at George Balanchine's death in 1983, and
- he has had the ghost of the great choreographer shadowing his
- every move. He tried to put his personal stamp on City Ballet
- with his American Music Festival in 1988, but the grand effort
- was a failure.
- </p>
- <p> "I like to be presumptuous," says Martins. "I wanted this
- ballet here because this is the house of Tchaikovsky. Here we
- understand and revere him. Other companies have used the score
- like wallpaper music." In the dance world, those are fighting
- words. American Ballet Theater and San Francisco Ballet have
- recently restaged the work; Britain's Royal Ballet, the Soviet
- Kirov and Bolshoi companies have versions they consider
- historic. "Tchaikovsky's score markings are very close to what
- I want," notes Martins. "But people have been selfish through
- the years and accommodate themselves with slow tempi."
- </p>
- <p> Fast-forwarded or merely strict, the pace is a challenge
- to the dancers, particularly the ballerina who plays the
- heroine, Princess Aurora. She must appear to be a quicksilver
- sprite, but with only one intermission, the role is brutal. Of
- the five alternating ballerinas, the radiant Darci Kistler best
- maintained the illusion that she had just thought up these steps
- and was dancing them for the first time. Kyra Nichols stood out
- for the moral quality, essential in a fairy tale, that she
- brought to the part.
- </p>
- <p> Will there be more full-length extravaganzas? The man who
- has devoted his energies to short pieces, many of them sternly
- modern, won't rule them out. His next innovation, scheduled for
- spring 1992, will be something more up to date: a week of new
- ballets, which may never make the regular repertory, to keep the
- creative juice flowing. As for now, he imagines how Mr. B. might
- react to his Beauty. "You see, dear, not bad," says the mentor.
- Counters Martins: "Better than not bad." Much better.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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