Tag Archives: Jamiel Devernay-Laurence

BALLET NIGHTS 006

β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

Cadogan Hall

BALLET NIGHTS 006 at Cadogan Hall

β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

“A hugely enjoyable evening with a true mix of ballet styles in one performance”

As the title states this is the sixth Ballet Nights in a series that was founded last year by its Artistic Director Jamiel Devernay-Laurence, who also comperes the evening with a friendly warmth. This was Ballet Nights’ first outing at the beautifully intimate Cadogan Hall, which usually houses concert nights.

Ballet Nights 006 is all about celebrating new choreography and dancers at all stages of their careers.

The evening begins with Ballet Nights’ in-house pianist (and we are told also their photographer) Viktor Erik Emanuel performing Chopin’s Ballade No 1 in G Minor, a little surprising to open the night without dance.

First up was a new work September, In The Rain, with choreography by Jordan James Bridge and danced by Constance Devernay-Laurence, former principal of Scottish Ballet. The ballet starts as Constance pas de bourrΓ©es down stage with her loose hair covering her face, which looked great for that moment. The choreography is not complicated, and the loose long hair becomes slightly annoying, as whilst in profile you could not see her face at all. Now we know why the classical ballet tradition is to have hair tied up in a tight bun.

Tanzt is a new duet danced by the Company Wayne McGregor star Rebecca Bassett-Graham and James Pett. Tanzt is choreographed by Pett|Clausen Knight and accompanied live on stage by the composer and singer Madil Hardis and a violinist. Hardis has a terrific voice, but the dance was nothing new in the angst-ridden couple stakes, however neatly and passionately danced.

Introducing Joy is the title of another new work by Constant Vigier created for American ballet and former Bolshoi star Joy Womack, in her debut performance with Ballet Nights. A flowing dance and lovely to see Joy’s beautiful lines and her connection to the in-house pianist Emanuel.

Then comes Set Fast with seven young final year students with Rambert School of Ballet and Contemporary Dance. And the stage came alive with the piece choregraphed by fellow student Grace O’Brien and danced by Amari Webb-Martin, Evie-Leigh Savage, Lottie Hawkins, Matthew Potulski, Jemma Sparrow, Phoebe Dowglass and Rory Clarke. This was innovative and new choreography with fast paced quivers and syncopated moves, with, at times, an almost Spanish toreador arm position. The piece was pulsing and danced with precision and passion by these young, still to graduate 20-year-olds.

Part I finale is the White Swan Pas De Deux, Act II Swan Lake with the classical choreography of Marius Petipa. Sangeun Lee and Gareth Haw, both principles with ENB were entrancing as they fell in love through this beautiful pas de deux. Lee’s wonderfully long legs were truly unbelievable wrapping past Haw’s head in arabesque and her miniscule frappΓ©s were breathtaking. A fitting end to the first part of the evening, with one of the most famous pas de deux in the classical dance cannon, traditional and unbeatable if danced well, and this was.

Part II opens with a long unnecessary piano solo as Emanuel plays (very well) the hugely difficult Ravel’s Gaspard De La Nuit, Ondine. The piece completely slowed down the pace of the evening and it was hard for Cha Cha And Tiara to lift the audience again. This was a light fun dance choreographed by Rentaro Nakaaki, whose parents had been ballroom dancers. Danced by ENB’s Julia Conway and Eric Snyder, it starts in silence with some comedic almost Coppelia puppet dance movements before mixing ballroom with classical dance.

If, should have been a magical performance, as reciting Rudyard Kipling’s poem If was spoken word artist and hip hop dancer Jonzi D, with dancer Alexander Fadayiro responding to the words, choreographed by Jamiel Devernay-Laurence. It could have been so much more if there had been interaction between the two and a fusion of hip hop and classical….

Nashville Ballet’s debut performance with Ballet Nights 006, is another pas de deux Leto, choreographed by their CEO and Artistic Director, Nick Mullikin. The dance is inspired by a poem written by the French poet Henri de RΓ©gnier, with Ravel’s Jeux d’eau, performed by the onstage in-house pianist and danced by Sarah Pierce and James Lankford.

Max Richter’s recomposed The Four Season’s Summer is choreographed and danced by Sarah Jane Taylor and James Wilton in a very physical and athletic performance as atoms prior to the big bang. There were star jumps and a fascinating lift with Wilton lying on the floor as Taylor held a hand stand over him.

And to the finale as the Royal Ballet’s Steven McRae swaggers on stage with his trademark red hair, wearing a white sleeveless vest and red kilt and wows the audience with his tap-dancing prowess and speed. With a flash of Lord of the Dance arms, he is clearly having great fun. Mcrae is joined on stage by the internationally renowned violinist Charlie Siem as they perform Fortitudine together.

A hugely enjoyable evening with a true mix of ballet styles in one performance.


BALLET NIGHTS 006 at Cadogan Hall

Reviewed on 4th September 2024

by Debbie Rich

Photography by Deborah Jaffe

 

 

 

 

 

Previous Ballet Nights reviews:

BALLET NIGHTS | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | LANTERNS STUDIO THEATRE | February 2024
BALLET NIGHTS 2023 | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | LANTERNS STUDIO THEATRE | September 2023

BALLET NIGHTS

BALLET NIGHTS

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page

 

BALLET NIGHTS

β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

Lanterns Studio Theatre

BALLET NIGHTS at Lanterns Studio Theatre

β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

“a unique experience to get up close to some of the most high-profile and promising dancers of the moment”

Jamiel Devernay-Laurence is back this spring with another programme of emerging and established dance talent at the Lanterns Studio Theatre. With the format now fairly well established, the production and compering is slicker, yet it is still the quality of the performers and choreographers across the programme that makes this show unique.

Where else can you see top tier company dancers this close and personal? Yasmine Naghdi and Reece Clarke, both principals with the Royal Ballet, headline this programme. The show closer, the famous balcony Pas de Deux from Kenneth Macmillan’s Romeo and Juliet, was first danced by Naghdi on the Opera House stage aged just 22. Approaching a decade later, she is still convincingly the lovestruck teen opposite Clarke’s long limbed lothario. However, it is their first appearance in a lesser known piece that really shows off their athleticism. The Spring Waters Pas de Deux was choreographed by Asaf Messerer for the Bolshoi Ballet in the 1950s. It’s supposedly legendary for astounding American audiences with how powerful ballet could be – a brilliant companion piece to Macmillan’s more emotive choreography. Clarke and Naghdi undoubtedly rise to the challenge of the piece, throwing themselves across the full width of the studio stage effortlessly. The final lift is a dazzling combination of beauty and technical skill – with Naghdi appearing to float above Clarke’s head as they both glide off the stage.

Where the classical elements demonstrate beauty and grace – excitement and ingenuity comes from the contemporary works. Jordan James Bridge’s self conceived And So the Rhythm Goes, is a stand out and back on this programme after first appearing in Ballet Nights 001. Performed to an electronic track by British composer Rival Consoles, his movements are spellbinding, seamlessly blending classical traditions with hip hop and queer club culture in a way that is truly bewitching. He is without doubt a talent to watch.

Pett|Clausen-Knight’s Nerve Wire is exactly as the name suggests – a bright spark of a piece that will leave you on the edge of your seat. Again conceived and performed by the artists, the piece is full to the brim of jerky movements and reactions as if the pair are electricity personified. Then the music cuts, but the movement continues, leaving you anxiously waiting to see how it ends. It’s daring and dynamic choreography, portraying a maturity and confidence surely built over the last five working together as Pett|Clausen-Knight and during their time together at Company Wayne MacGregor.

 

 

Watson and Woodvine are just starting out on their own journey as a young duo choreographing and performing together. Their piece displays some nice ideas, pretty lifts and partner work where both of their long hair intertwines so that you almost lose who is who. But the piece could benefit from some tightening up to avoid the raw, youthful energy from verging on the wild and messy.

Wildness is harnessed by both Laurel Dalley Smith and Felicity Chadwick in two pieces both created in lockdown. Similar themes of isolation and a need to explore space play out in different ways, but both are always in control. In Laurel’s piece, a solo from Seven Portraits by Sir Robert Cohan created for her, she has an animal-like quality, eyes darting, head twitching, exploring a woodland space but interrupting herself as if startled by her own shadow. Chadwick on the other hand, performing 324a choreographed by Joshua Junker, explores the space with frenzied movement, seemingly battling against the constraints of a small flat by stretching and expanding in to all that is available.

But that’s not all. There are also appearances from Chloe Keneally, performer with the English National Ballet in two traditional solos from Paquita and Sleeping Beauty, and a β€˜mystery guest’, who is gratuitously revealed to be Devernay-Laurence’s brother, tackling a tap number. House pianist Viktor Erik Emanuel is also back, despite only accompanying one performance, 324a, opening both acts with solos on the gorgeous grand piano gifted by Elton John.

Ballet Nights offers a unique experience to get up close to some of the most high-profile and promising dancers of the moment. The unbeatable view, and chance to see both classic pieces and contemporary works is a thrill. It may not all blow your socks off – but there is almost a guarantee something will.

 


BALLET NIGHTS at Lanterns Studio Theatre

Reviewed on 24th February 2024

by Amber Woodward

Photography by Deborah Jaffe

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

BALLET NIGHTS 2023 | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2023

BALLET NIGHTS

BALLET NIGHTS

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page