Love and ‘La Bayadere’
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Young Chang
If the mark of a great piece of work -- as opposed to something merely
“good” -- is that it stands the test of time, then Rudolf Nureyev’s “La
Bayadere” earns that title.
The late dancer-choreographer first staged his version in 1992 in
Paris, basing it on a ballet created by Marius Petipa, which premiered in
Russia in 1877. Set in ancient India, the story of love, jealousy and
betrayal is one that spans not only time, but the globe over, says Agnes
Letestu, principal dancer with the Paris Opera Ballet.
“I think it could happen now,” added Letestu, who will dance the
principal role of Nikiya for this week’s performances of “La Bayadere” at
the Orange County Performing Arts Center. “I think it could be a story of
now.”
The story is a tragic tale of two lovers -- Solor, a warrior, and
Nikiya, a bayadere (Hindu dancing girl). The Grand Brahmin also loves
Nikiya and becomes jealous upon discovering she and Solor are together.
On top of everything, the Rajah offers Solor his daughter, Gamzatti, for
marriage. Solor accepts out of obligation.
Gamzatti has Nikiya poisoned by a snake. The Grand Brahmin offers to
save her life in exchange for his love. Nikiya declines and dies. Solor
grieves and meets her in his dreams.
Nureyev took some liberties with the piece, adding steps and technical
difficulties to create something in his style and to modernize a
classical story, Letestu said.
Judy Morr, executive vice president of the Center who oversees dance
programming, calls his touches “the Nureyev nuances” apparent in all of
his work.
Letestu maintains this is necessary.
“Because now people come to see a person, and they want to understand
what they see,” she said in a lispy, French accent. “If we used
old-fashioned, they don’t understand the story. We have to be modern and
very clear.”
The dancer said the same applies to the way they move.
A luxurious, extravagant ballet, “La Bayadere” is a grand production.
Set designs reminiscent of royal courts in India will transform
Segerstrom Hall into an exotic world this week.
The costumes -- far from the traditional tutus -- include gold-trimmed
saris; yellow, green and orange dresses and elaborately jeweled hair
decorations.
Ludwig Minkus composed the score, which the Pacific Symphony Orchestra
will perform this week.
“And it’s important to see Nureyev’s ‘Kingdom in the Shades,’ which is
the third act, which is this extraordinarily beautiful positioning [and]
choreographing [of] dancers that I think is incomparable,” Morr said.
“There are, of course, many other ‘Bayaderes’ that are beautiful, but I
think this one is extraordinary, and people won’t forget it.”
Nureyev danced the role of Petipa’s Solor in 1961. Many have restaged
the piece, including Natalia Makarova for the American Ballet Theatre and
Yuri Grigorovich for the Bolshoi, but Nureyev’s version stems from
Petipa’s notes.
The sets and costumes were created by Ezio Frigerio and Franca
Squarciapino. Some of the dresses are heavy, all are beautiful, and none
are hard to dance in after extensive rehearsals, Letestu reassured.
“The most hardest is to be very pure and very simple,” said the
dancer, who’s done the ballet twice before -- once in the role of
Gamzatti, once as Nikiya.
This week, the company performed the ballet in San Francisco.
“The public is very good, very warm,” Letestu said. “I feel in the
role, really inside, you know? When you do a role you have to do it
onstage. If you rehearse you can rehearse many months but it’s not the
same. You have to feel the profession. I really felt it yesterday.”
FYI
WHAT: “La Bayadere”
WHEN: 8 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, and May 11-12; 2 p.m. May 12-13.
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
COST: $20-$85
CALL: (714) 740-7878
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