Posts Tagged ‘nytb’

Jardin aux Lilas Excerpt by Antony Tudor

Monday, September 7th, 2009

A few years ago I lit a production of Lilac Garden for New York Theater Ballet reconstructed by the late Sallie Wilson. I was given the following to help guide my lighting of the piece. It is written by Antony Tudor, choreographer for the ballet.

Wilson was rather exacting with her reconstructions and this was given to me as a means of most accurately addressing the lighting for this piece. In deference to the rigor with which we reconstructed the ballet, I am including Tudor’s words, unedited, with the inclusion of grammatical and spelling errors, as per the original.

I hope you enjoy.

“Jardin aux Lilas” is more often requested by companies for inclusion in their repertory than any of my other ballets, and is often asked for by groups with little experience and small resources in matters of technique, personal, or training. It must be supposed that, to a director, it must seem very practical in every way, but this is a misconception and a delusion. And the delusions seem to include that of regarding this piece as “romantic”, because there is a romanticism about the scenery with its overwhelming masses of lilacs, and of the predominantly blue lighting, for the dim light filtering through from the right off-stage area where we suppose the house to be is the only other color used.

Although the short story based on the idea of the “Droit du Seigneur” was abandoned, the situation remains a dramatic one, without the former melodrama, and the “dramatis personae” of the four principals are thrown into relief by the background of the young friends of Caroline with their easy sort of romanticism of the adolescents and teenagers.

The ballet is steeped in the conventions of the beginning of the twentieth century, when young girls of good families were trained in the good manners of young ladies of refinement, with the right social graces and an understanding that a girl remains a virgin until she is Married. Caroline’s young friend who makes his appearance unexpectedly, having unexpectedly, having played “french leave” from his Academy, has grown up with her as children together and they probably always assumed in their innocence that they would eventually be married with each other.

Unfortunately the diminishing fortunes of her parents, having no longer the wealth that was formerly theirs have arranged a betrothal, with her consent, to Caroline with a very rich young man of considerable financial means. He has great ambition, is very successful and is accustomed to knowing what he wants and always getting it, and his marriage to Caroline will open doors to many of the old families who still wielded enormous influence. The fourth of the group of principals is the fashionable about-town woman with whom he has conducted a love relationship of long standing, and she also appears unexpectedly upon the scene through the side entrance. It is understandable that characters of this complexity cannot expect to be performed by young talented technicians whose sole education seems to have been acquired in the limited conversations of the ballet studios and dressing rooms. And they can be very limiting.

In this ballet I had the inestimable advantage of working is out with dancers with whom I had worked very much before, and we were able to understand each other and to be truly “simpatico” but all of whom were bringing adult minds with them.

They understood my approach and worried with it, but Rambert herself did not and after a few incidences when she tried to get my dancers to put more motion into it, to “feel with the emotions” or in other words to ham it up and turned it toward the melodrama that I was so studiously avoiding, then it became necessary to forbid her to attend any further rehearsals of this piece, and if she as much as poked her nose in the door than all action came to an immediate halt.

This ballet concerns itself with the hiding of emotions from public display, but still conveying through the performance the emotions that were being concealed. As is the case with the majority of my ballets the performers must recognize the existence of the audience’s presence and the fourth side of the stage in “Jardin aux Lilas” is as much overgrown with lilacs in the old part of a manor house garden as are painted scenery on stage, and the proscenium arch is not there in essence. And the audience are witnessing the action clandestinely.

The ballet continues a regular course of narrative choreography until the moment of Caroline’s swooning into her betrothed’s arms. The succeeding sleepwalking episode, which should be handled as though water divination was happening, and the succeeding sequence for the four principals should be looked upon as if the ballet until this moment were being regarded nostalgically from a period still forty years ahead. This is ended by the White girl beckoning that the carriage has arrived to take Caroline and her future husband into their new life far away, and the ballet ends with her young friend left alone and solitary in the deserted garden, and regretting that he will likely never see Caroline again and that this last time together was made impossible of any joys of being together by the constant interruptions by other people in the ballet. Now all of this of the past and the future is now present.

Musically it is necessary that Chanson’s guiding remarks shall be followed and also that the main theme whenever it returns shall also return to the “l’istesso tempo”, especially with the entrance of the orchestra after the original exposition by the solo violin.

The lighting should be as though moonlight was filtering through overhead branches and should be of various shades from blue spotlights to cover the whole dancing area of the stage.

To My Lighting Designer Friends

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

New York Theatre Ballet needs a touring LD/SM for its tour of the Mid West. Dates are mid-September through late November.

Contact me at nytb [at] lucas krech [dot] com for more information if you are interested.

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Lighting the Times

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Tudor650

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Cinderella Opens Today

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Cinderella opens today and plays today and tomorrow.

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Dance Show Opens Tonight

Friday, February 8th, 2008

New York Theatre Ballet’s Signatures 08 program opens this evening at the Florence Gould Hall on 59th Street.

All lighting is by me.

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The Duel with New York Theatre Ballet

Thursday, May 3rd, 2007

The Duel
Choreography by William Dollar
Staging by Paul Sutherland

combat_1

combat_2

combat_3

combat_4

combat_5

combat_6

All photographs by Richard Termine

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Come See My Show This Weekend!

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

Link

This Friday and Saturday, New York Theatre Ballet will perform Antony Tudor’s “Judgement of Paris,” in New York’s Florence Gould Hall. I saw the company’s performance of the work about a year ago, and it stuck in my imagination. NYTB has eminent Tudor interpreter Sallie Wilson to stage and coach, and the dancers have real acting chops. But they also have the humility to bring out the subtlety in a joke. If you never understood why Tudor was great, I recommend seeing New York Theatre Ballet’s productions of his ballets. Above: Venus, Minerva, and Juno take turns attempting to seduce their tipsy customer.

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Celebrity Sightings

Sunday, April 22nd, 2007

We had a bit of a celebrity sighting at the Ballet this morning. I find it highly amusing to see celebrity types in parent mode, or otherwise domestic activities.

Years ago I was standing in line at a supermarket, it was close to midnight, and standing there two aisles over checking out was one of my favorite musicians. One can get over being star struck rather quickly when the object of your adoration is buying toilette paper and soap.

We have two more shows today. I have had quite a nasty cold for the last few days and I must say that lighting ballet not to mention calling the shows is quite an ordeal when one is sick. On top of the illness of course was the usual tech/load-in sleep deprivation, but enough with the complaints.

The shows seem to have been quite successful and next week we have the adult evening program for two nights.

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Where I'll be for the Next Few Days

Wednesday, April 18th, 2007

NYTB_legends07_Postcard_R6

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Rotating Rep

Monday, April 16th, 2007

Its a curious thing lighting a work you have already designed a year earlier. We load in Cinderella and the repertory program this Thursday and have shows this weekend and next weekend. Its curious because on the one hand the work is done. I have done this before and rebuilding it should be no real trouble at all. On the other hand, every time you encounter a piece it is different. Sometimes its a different cast, sometimes you just have different eyes. Any way you slice it, the work is different.

The lightplot is very similar, but I did make a few adjustments to it that will help the new pieces in the repertory program this time around. Small changes. The kind of this only a lighting designer would notice. But very important.

Repertory lightplots are such strange beasts. They are a delicate balance of specificity and generality. In the case of New York Theatre Ballet each program is distinct enough that there is a different plot for each show. The Cinderella plays not just by itself but with a rotating repertory program that varies year to year. Thus the plot must be able to work for Cinderella but so too must it work for the changing repertory program that goes along with it.

Depending upon the piece, be it a dance, a play or an opera, no less then half the lighting needs to be general enough that the plot can accommodate changes. Perhaps the staging changes at the last minute, or the scenery or costume colors are totally different than you were led to believe, or the writer adds a scene in a new location in the middle of the piece. Any of these scenarios can, will and have happened. The lightplot needs to be flexible enough to react to these and more extreme scenarios. At the same time it must give the particular work in question the specificity and care that it deserves.

It is a balancing act. Difficult and at times nearly impossible, but so goes the job, here is an impossible situation, make it beautiful. Cinderella is far from impossible. It is, to be quite honest a fairly straight forward situation. Some of the documentation is incomplete and most of the repertory pieces are new to me so there is a lot of creation that must go into it. Not so simple as plugging a disk into a computer and cleaning up a few light cues, but certainly not difficult.

It looks to be a nice program, with an interestingly eclectic group of dances. This should be a very pleasant couple of weeks.

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