A Suite of Dances | |
---|---|
Choreographer | Jerome Robbins |
Music | Johann Sebastian Bach |
Premiere | March 3, 1994 New York State Theater |
Original ballet company | White Oak Dance Project |
Design | Santo Loquasto |
Created for | Mikhail Baryshnikov |
A Suite of Dances is a ballet choreographed by Jerome Robbins to Johann Sebastian Bach's Cello Suites. The ballet was created for Mikhail Baryshnikov and premiered on March 3, 1994, at the New York State Theater. [1]
Jerome Robbins had earlier attempted to choreograph Bach's Cello Suites with dancers Victor Castelli and Peter Boal, although the project was abandoned. He used the music for A Suite of Dances with Mikhail Baryshnikov, who was in his 40s, as the sole dancer instead. [2] [3] As Baryshnikov was touring and Robbins was staging his works in Paris and St. Petersburg, A Suite of Dances was made over the course of two years, and according to Robbins, most of the choreography was made without Baryshnikov's presence, [2] [3] before the ballet, a 16-minutes-long solo, [2] premiered at a performance of the White Oak Dance Project, Baryshnikov's company, with Wendy Sutter on the cello. [4]
The ballet uses the following music from Bach's Cello Suites: [1]
In May 1994, at a New York City Ballet performance, Baryshnikov performed A Suite of Dances as a guest artist, with Sutter also returning. [5] The ballet then entered Paris Opera Ballet's repertory, and New York City Ballet's members danced it for the first time in 1997. [6] In subsequent revivals, the ballet is usually danced by an experienced dancer. [2] In March 1999, eight months after Robbins died, Nicolas Le Riche danced A Suite of Dances at a Robbins tribute gala organized by the Paris Opera Ballet. [7] In 2008, at New York City Ballet's Jerome Robbins Celebration program, Le Riche reprised the role. [8] The ballet has also been performed at Carlos Acosta's solo program in 2009 and the Vail Dance Festival in 2018, by American Ballet Theatre's Herman Cornejo. [9] [10]
In light of the impact of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic on the performing arts, Paris Opera Ballet released a recording of A Suite of Dances, as a part of the Tribute to Jerome Robbins program. [11] The Vail Dance Festival released a video of an excerpt danced by Cornejo online. [12]
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