Sunday, November 30, 2008
Dance Review: Smuin's 'Christmas Ballet'
In its 14th outing, Michael Smuin's spiffy, toe-tapping alternative to the avalanche of 'Nutcrackers' retains its lovable verve and still sports loads of eye candy for the anti-snobs of ballet."
Read more on the SF Chronicle site.
Friday, November 21, 2008
Dance Review: San Jose Ballet's 'Toreador'
'The Toreador' hasn't been seen since 1990, after Ballet San Jose's artistic director, Dennis Nahat, bought the sets and costumes - created originally for the Royal Danish Ballet's 1978 revival - from the Dallas Ballet, which had folded under director Flemming Flindt. Once a staple at the Royal Danish Ballet, 'The Toreador' left the active ballet repertoire in 1929 and was not seen again until 1978, when Danish choreographer Flindt revived it based on historical notes and the memories of the few people who had danced the ballet."
Read more on the SF Chronicle website.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Yerba Buena Learning Gardens
"It's one of the best kept secrets in town," Mary McCue, the general manager of Yerba Buena Gardens, says of the program that has been quietly teaching urban kids the basics of gardening for almost 10 years.
"It started when we were taking a group around on a tour of the Yerba Buena Gardens," she recalls, " and we had a little boy in the group who said he was going to start a garden, too. He said he was going to plant tomatoes and carrots ... and lamb chops. And I thought, 'Oh my, we need to teach these kids about gardening!' "
Read more on the SF Chronicle site.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Smuin Ballet: Been Through Diamonds, Carmen
It's been a year and a half since the company's highly visible and high-energy founder passed, and time has wrought some changes. Celia Fushille-Burke has assumed the mantle of company director, while dancer Amy Seiwert is now a choreographer-in-residence. Added to the roster this year are dancers Darren Anderson, Ryan Camou, Terez Dean, Ted Keener, Brooke Reynolds, Jean Michelle Sayeg and Shane Messac.
Friday's program opened with a premiere of Seiwert's Been Through Diamonds, a larky neo-classical look at relationships between four couples that found the men clad in loose suit jackets and pants and the women in Mario Alonzo's sexy dresses. With its dark smokiness and mysterious interplay between the sexes, Diamonds has a bit of the look of a much earlier work that Seiwert did for Oakland Ballet in 2003, Monopoly. Whereas Been Through Diamonds is set to Mozart, the music for Monopoly was Gorecki, but in both Seiwert stepped away from movement as abstraction and given her steps a more human backstory and emotional context.
When I saw Monopoly-- which also featured a rock-solid Erin Yarbrough-Stewart, who stood out in Diamonds too-- I recall thinking that something about Seiwert's trademark twisting and fluid style didn't quite jibe with the story at hand and likewise, it's not clear to me that she had found a comfortable way to get her emotional points across while still utilizing the distinctive connectors and thrusts of weight that mark her work.
Still, as more of a meditation, Diamonds made an impression, particularly in the confident way that Seiwert layers complex steps and transitions from one scene to the next. Newcomer Camou made an appealing soloist, as did his partner Susan Roemer.
The other new work on the program was Robert Sund's Carmen, a one act distillation of the famous story of love gone wrong, this time set to tracks from Miles Davis and Gil Evans' Sketches of Spain. Although it seems like the perfect sort of vehicle for a company known for larger-than-life stories, this Carmen came across as less dramatic than angst-ridden.
Aaron Thayer, as the ill-fated Don Jose and Jessica Touchet as his titular lover did their best with the choreography, which offered serviceable, though not always inspired moments. Touchet-- a dancer who sports a bright charm to go with her dead-centered turns--engaged in much teasing and flicking of her shawl and one rather absurdly tame catfight with Yarbrough. She worked hard to serve up sizzle, but it wasn't her fault that ultimately at the moment of highest emotion, she was little more than kicked around.
Also on the program was Michael Smuin's cleverly nostalgic portmanteau ballet Dances with Songs.
Program Notes.
Saturday, October 18, 2008
SF Jazz: Max Raabe & the Palast Orchester
The other day all I could remember was the sound of one of the little thirty second musical transitions, and when I finally got up and looked on the NPR site to find out what it was, I ran across the name of Max Raabe. One link led to another and I found myself utterly charmed by his lounge-lizard approach to the dance music of the 20s and 30s. Then I found out he was coming to the Paramount Theatre in Oakland, courtesy of SF Jazz.
The Palaster's appeal is in the utterly tight, thoroughly serious approach to comedy. The band looks immaculate and plays even better, evincing the sound of a bygone era of Weimar, Germany that occasionally makes someone like me -- who grew up steeped in 1930s Hollywood stereotypes --wonder if someplace in an alley jack-booted thugs are kicking a victim to death.
Raabe himself is a dry and witty front man, a study in leisured boredom as he croons through delightful tunes such as "My Gorilla has a Villa in a Zoo," as well as Brechtian favorites from "Mahagonny" and "Three Penny Opera."
By the time he got round to the band's perennial favorite encore number, an austerely rendered cover of Britney Spears' "Oops I Did It Again," they had the crowd in the palm of their hands... and wondering when they'll be back again.
Program Notes.
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Target Family Day at downtown museums

On the Esplanade Stage, the Unique Derique and the Destiny Arts Youth Performance Company will be among the many performers, and at Zeum, kids will be able to ride the carousel for free all day long. A huge communal sidewalk mural is planned for the Museum of the African Diaspora, and over at the new Contemporary Jewish Museum, activities will celebrate the Jewish festival of Sukkot.
SFMOMA's Family Day earlier in the year brought in 2,400 visitors, but Sunday's mix of films, hands-on activities and events, inspired by the museum's eye-catching "Brought to Light: Photography and the Invisible, 1840-1900" exhibition, promises to attract even more.
Read more at the SF Chronicle website.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Coastal Cleanup Day: Tidying up our shores

It's the perfect project for families, school groups, scout troops or community organizations, says the Marine Mammal Center's Ann Bauer.
In 2007, more than 60,000 volunteer cleaners removed 900,000 pounds of trash and recyclable materials from California's shores. In the Bay Area, you can come out between 9 a.m. and noon to one of dozens of sites, grab a trash bag and a check-off sheet and join in the pickup.
Read more on the SF Chronicle site.Wednesday, September 10, 2008
San Mateo park a cornucopia of pleasures

Planted in downtown San Mateo, and only a few minutes' walk from the Caltrain station, Central Park has become the go-to place for the community for everything from music and theater festivals that draw thousands to impromptu family picnics on a hot Sunday.
On a balmy Thursday night in July, the lawn was jammed with dancers and picnickers taking in the Central Park Music Series, an annual summer tradition. The lawn was carpeted with blankets and lawn chairs, and dancers from ages 6 to 60 were grooving away at this year's closing concert, featuring San Francisco reggae band Native Elements.
Read more at the SF Chronicle site.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
96 Hours: Palo Alto Junior Museum

If you can pry kids away from the activities, out the back door is a small but highly appealing zoo with a bevy of critters that range from the tame (turtles, snakes and ducks) to the exotic (peacocks) to the wild (bobcats and a leopard shark). Many of the zoo's residents were carefully chosen as representatives of the local wildlife - an effort to foster understanding about the creatures that share the Bay Area with humans. It seems to be working: The kids cluster around the owl and ooh and ahh as it swivels its head 180 degrees. At a larger cage, visitors crane their necks to look at a red-tailed hawk while others brush past to see the fruit bats.
Read more on the SF Chronicle website.
Thursday, July 17, 2008
96 Hours: Strawberry Picking

Just off Highway 1 north of Santa Cruz, Swanton Berry Farm offers berry aficionados the chance to roam their fields and collect a perfect basket of fruit while enjoying the sun, breezes and spectacular views over the Pacific. With warm days in the sun and cool nights wrapped in ocean fog, conditions on these coast-side acres are ripe for growing sweet, flavorful berries. One bite of a succulent Swanton strawberry and you'll see why they're so prized by connoisseurs like local jammaker June Taylor, who uses strawberries from the farm in her renowned preserves.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
"A Beautiful Tragedy" and the life at the Perm State Ballet School

It's not unlike watching a terrible tragic accident: so upsetting that you can't look away.
"Why would a teacher do that?" wonders my student aloud. "What kind of a person is that?"
I have no good answers. But almost more disturbing is the thought that so many people think this is the way to make good dancers. Skorik went into the Kirov Ballet, and her classmate Masha Menchikova went to the Perm company. Success came to them, but how much more beautiful could they have been without the abuse?
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You can order the film in both NTSC and PAL formats from Faction Film.
Monday, July 7, 2008
Dance Review: Scott Wells & Dancers in "Home Again"

Too often in dance the word "line" is used to describe a static pose, but Scott Wells & Dancers' deft style of contact improvisation reminds us that "lines" should be continuous threads of movement that roll, knot, ravel and occasionally seem to trail off into space - concepts of motion turned into a physical reality.
It's a particular pleasure to see the company back in the cavernous, cathedral-like Project Artaud, which beautifully frames the airborne flights of Wells' 16th season, presented by ODC Theater through Saturday at Artaud, a temporary home while the ODC venue undergoes renovation.
Beyond the drama of what look like dangerously high-flying antics, Wells' dancers have a talent for drawing audiences into the exhilaration of launching a body through the air, and sharing the satisfaction of timing so accurate, it makes clipping onto a trusty partner look easy. In his 2007 "Gym Mystics," Wells' gleeful sense of play pervades the piece from the moment Rajendra Serber launches himself at a free-standing wooden beam to the simultaneous tumbles and cartwheels of eight dancers criss-crossing the stage speckled with Allen Wilner's smoky lighting.
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Family films at Frameline32

First up is "Dottie's Magic Pockets," the brainchild of Tammy Stoner and Pink Pea Productions, which is designed not just to be gay- and lesbian-friendly, but also to feed a growing appetite for programming that introduces kids to the modern world's broad family range.
Monday, June 9, 2008
Dance Review: Joe Goode Performance Group-Remember the Wonder...

As in "Christmas Ride," the style reflects a modern version of the Japanese bunraku puppet form, in which the operators of the puppet are not only visible to the audience, but play characters of their own. In a strange way, the parsing of Goode's choreography, with slightly self-conscious, inward-seeking movements, makes an excellent match with the range of motion available to the boy himself.
In fact, the dancers (Melecio Estrella, Mark Stuver, Jessica Swanson, Andrew Ward, Patricia West and Alexander Zendzian) have obviously lavished attention not only on their own solos and duets, but also on matching their movement to Wonderboy's choreographed phrases. Perhaps though, there is no one better suited to this danced bunraku style than movement professionals. Accustomed to working in partnership and projecting the lines beyond their own bodies, the human performers generously transfer "realness" to this latter-day Pinocchio.
But making "realness" is also Basil Twist's stock in trade. A master puppeteer, who can seemingly enable any object--puppet or not--tell its own story, Twist imbues his boy with endearing details, an enigmatic lift to the corner of his lips, a sparkle in his eye, that continually draw your attention back to him.
As Wonderboy observed and commented on the workings of the world from his spare metal window frame-- just as the audience was watching from outside our own proscenium/window-- I couldn't help marveling at the enormous empathy I felt for the little guy. When he left the stage, I was a little unnerved and disappointed, like a kid whose friend has moved away, and when he tentatively dips his foot into the flow of life, I sensed a rush of exhilaration at his jetes from place to place. If only we could have flown up the aisle with him at the end.
Visit joegoode.org for more information on the show.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Mission to Mars at Chabot Center

Chabot will be throwing a landing party sure to spark the imaginations of anyone who's ever wondered about life on Mars. Over three days, visitors can follow the progress of the 1,500-pound Phoenix spacecraft as this first entrant in NASA's Mars Scout program completes its 422 million-mile journey, and - in just seven tense minutes - decelerates from its 12,500-mph plunge toward Mars to, it is hoped, gently land on its own three feet Sunday afternoon.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Global perspective at S.F. Arts Festival



Wednesday, May 14, 2008
SFB School: Room, board and barre for Ballet students

As any artist knows, the road to professional success isn't easy. For many of the youngsters who win the opportunity to train at San Francisco Ballet's School, the pursuit of a career in the notoriously competitive world of ballet means sacrificing, not only time and energy, but family life as well. Students come from across the country and around the world to study at the school, but for a young dancer of perhaps 16 or 17, the task of finding a place to live in San Francisco is no trivial matter.
Monday, May 12, 2008
Earthquake in China

It shows up starkly as a giant block the size of, oh say, New Mexico, in the USGS' World Earthquake Map.
I was amazed to find out that NPR reporters Robert Siegel and Melissa Block happened to be in Chengdu on Monday recording shows for All Things Considered. Talk about wacky timing. Listen to Melissa Block, who was rolling tape at the time of the earthquake.
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Dance review: Nahat adds twists to 'Firebird'

Nahat's 2005 version, which opened at the San Jose Center for the Performing Arts on Thursday night, makes minor changes to the original tale, inexplicably changing the name of the Russian folk hero Ivan Tsarevitch to Prince Vladimir, for example. But for the most part, Igor Stravinsky's luxurious score - here a recording of his original 1910 version of "The Firebird" - dictates much of the story line, a conflation of Russian folk legends about the young son of a czar who rescues a princess from the clutches of the demon Kastchei with the help of a magical Firebird.
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Dance review: 'C(H)ord' hard to forget

Like most of the 10-year-old inkBoat's butoh-inspired theater, "c(H)ord" - a commission for YBCA's Making Peace series - is hardly literal or linear. Boasting an international cast - which includes Finnish performer Heini Nukari as well as the Japanese Takuya Ishide, Yuko Kaseki and Sten Rudstrøm (both based in Berlin) and Sherwood Chen, Dana Iova-Koga and Dohee Lee - it's the sort of show where you can't seriously ask yourself what just happened. The pleasure lies in allowing its vagaries to cascade past you episodically, and the overall effect is not so much discomfiting as strangely charming.
Read more on the SF Chronicle site.
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
SF Symphony's Adventures in Music program

Eng puts on a CD and Saint-Saëns' Algerian Suite thumps mildly in the background amid the chatter of young voices. While the girls continue embellishing the neck of their snare guitar with flames that would make Ted Nugent proud, the other kids in the comfortably cluttered room at Argonne Alternative Elementary in the Richmond District of San Francisco are working on their own fascinating menagerie of instruments - a "viano," a "clarolin," "drymbals" and other exotic inventions, which they describe with varying degrees of technical detail. One pair of girls is carefully copyrighting their instrument's description, and they casually, but deftly, turn the paper over when I come closer to have a look.
As the kids themselves are quick to explain, it's all part of the San Francisco Symphony's Adventures in Music, one of the most ambitious music education outreach programs in the nation, and one that aims to integrate music into the lives of every first- through fifth-grade kid in the San Francisco Unified School District.
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Arielle Jacobs stars in High School Musical
A native of Half Moon Bay, Jacobs was 14 when she moved with her family from California to Princeton, N.J., just as she was to start high school, so she knows what it's like to be the new girl in town.
"Fortunately for me, there were two middle schools in Princeton," she says, laughing. "So everyone just thought I was from the other middle school."
Read more on the SF Chronicle website.
High School Musical hits the Orpheum stage
One of the Disney Channel's most popular movies, "High School Musical" has garnered hundreds of millions of young fans around the world in the past two years. The movie's soundtrack went quadruple platinum, and last year a rock-concert-style tour featuring the film's stars sold out in 40 cities, with the Beatlemania-esque shrieks of young fans shattering eardrums across North America.
The rousing popularity of the movie has spun off one sequel already, another is in the works for this summer and there's even an ice-show version making its way around the world. Now, for those who just can't get enough of the story of handsome jock Troy Bolton, shy, bookish Gabriella Montez and their struggle to break free of stereotypes and win roles in the school musical, the high-energy, Broadway-style stage production of "High School Musical" comes to San Francisco, opening Tuesday at the Orpheum Theatre.
Read more on the SF Chronicle site.
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Where are they now? Alums of SF Ballet

Jacqueline Martin
A native of Portland, Ore., Jacqueline Martin came to San Francisco as a young girl in 1935 with Willam Christensen, who had taken over the then San Francisco Opera Ballet's school. Martin quickly drew attention in classical roles, and when Willam Christensen staged America's first full-length "Swan Lake" in 1940, he chose her to dance Odette opposite Janet Reed's Odile. With little money and few men in the troupe as World War II began, performances decreased, and Martin left to marry and raise a family in Oregon. There she was director of the Portland Ballet School for 32 years and the founded the Portland Ballet Company. She retired at age 62.
Read profiles of Janet Sassoon, Virginia Johnson, Cynthia Gregory, Diana Meistrell, Simon Dow, Mikko Nissinen and Caroline Loyola at the SF Chronicle site.
Jocelyn Vollmar of S.F. Ballet

At San Francisco Ballet's recent gala opening in January, rounds of polite applause greeted the introduction of many of the company's illustrious patrons and leaders, but when a trim, elegant little woman dressed impeccably in an evening gown made her way onto the stage of the War Memorial Opera House, there was a ripple through the room as the audience recognized America's first Snow Queen and rose to their feet in tribute.
"It's Jocelyn," went the whisper. "Get up! it's Jocelyn!"
Perhaps no figure in San Francisco Ballet's 75-year history is more beloved than Jocelyn Vollmar, who joined the company when it was 5 years old, and whose career traces nearly seven decades as dancer and then teacher for the Ballet.
Read more on the SF Chronicle site.