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Tag: Stanton Welch

  • Rock, Roll & Tutus a Thrilling Mixed Rep at Houston Ballet

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    Few things are as exciting as when Houston Ballet stages a Rock, Roll & Tutus mixed repertory program, and it’s not just because rock music makes an appearance where some think it doesn’t belong. It’s because without fail, the rock ‘n’ roll spirit – with its promise of intimacy and spectacle, subtlety and bravado – will run through every work selected for the program, making for one exciting night at the ballet.

    And last night was no exception.


    The program opened with a bang in the form of Brett Ishida’s what i was thinking while i was waltzing, a Houston Ballet commission that originally premiered during last year’s Margaret Alkek Williams Jubilee of Dance.

    The curtain rises to reveal five couples twirling around the stage like figurines in a music box. Between the women’s blood-red dresses and Ezio Bosso’s über dramatic String Quartet No. 5, music from a live score the Italian composer wrote for a 1927 Alfred Hitchcock thriller, we are immediately struck both visually and sonically. Then, one by one, the women, with arms outstretched and backs arched, appear to be, in turn, waking up, struggling against, and transforming, eventually disappearing into the drapey vermilion of their self-standing skirts only to crawl out, emerging from the cocoon of artifice somewhere darker.

    what i was thinking while i was waltzing is seductive and gripping, unflinching and raw, like an exposed nerve. Ishida’s escape into the subconscious is sensuous and visceral, drawing on precision, slow and dream-like, and varied technique, from pointe work to kip-ups and bridge poses. The partnering is especially breathtaking, with Saul Newport and Brittany Stone delivering standout performances. By the time the women climb back into their dresses and the couples resume their waltz, the curtain closing on a whirl of spinning lifts sweeping across the stage, it was clear: This is a piece you’re guaranteed to want to see again, and again, and again.

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    Houston Ballet First Soloists Tyler Donatelli and Naazir Muhammad in Jacquelyn Long’s Illuminate.

    Photo by Alana Campbell (2025). Courtesy of Houston Ballet

    After a brief pause, another work that first premiered at a Margaret Alkek Williams Jubilee of Dance takes the stage. This time, it’s Houston Ballet Soloist Jacquelyn Long’s debut work, Illuminate.

    Set to Oliver Davis’s Frontiers, Concerto for Violin and Strings, Illuminate is like sorbet, a palate cleanser, a refreshing and delightful contrast to the previous work. Choreographed for an ensemble of six, the short dance, set in three movements, is light and airy, and strong in its romanticism. Long displays strong musicality, the steps clean and accessible, with the dancers positively spritely to match the violin part played masterfully by Denise Tarrant.

    If you’re the type to read the program given to you on the way in, you’ll read that themes of ideas and inspiration are embedded in the work, though the dance itself is quite ambiguous, the only real hint to those themes the lightbulb hanging stage left. Illuminate, however, is not at all ambiguous in its joy. It is bright and infectiously happy. Long also knows how to end on a high note, the ending pose with the dancers all reaching toward the light memorable all on its own.

    One 25-minute intermission later, Christopher Bruce’s Rooster undeniably brought the rock star swag to the evening’s program.


    Created in 1991 for Ballet du Grand Theatre de Geneve, and receiving its American premiere right here at Houston Ballet in 1995, Rooster is an irresistibly fun dance for ten, five men and five women, set to eight different songs by The Rolling Stones. Each song is its own little vignette, connected via the repeated gestures and motifs Bruce draws directly from the lyrics.

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    Houston Ballet Principal Connor Walsh, Demi Soloist Jack Wolff and Corps de Ballet Dancer Alejandro Molina León in Christopher Bruce’s Rooster.

    Photo by Alana Campbell (2025). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.

    Bruce starts the piece with the bluesy “Little Red Rooster,” and, as the song goes, the “little red rooster is on the prowl.” In this case, it’s Connor Walsh, who appears on stage, strutting, repeatedly fixing his hair and straightening his tie, and generally peacocking around, establishing a recurring theme for the men.


    There seems to be a sexual tug-of-war at play, with the men certainly acting as though the power is on their side, as during “Lady Jane,” as male attention flits from one woman to another. The women, however, occasionally triumph, like during “Not Fade Away,” a punchy number that features a preening Jack Wolff, who certainly tries to embody the demands of Jagger’s words, though he still gets kicked down, stepped on, and eventually carried away.


    Rooster
    is filled with memorable performances, including Karina González’s child-like outcast in “As Tears Go By”; the bop of a solo by Alejandro Molina León during “Paint It Black”; and Jessica Collado’s gentle portrayal in “Ruby Tuesday.”


    Following a shorter, 15-minute intermission, the centerpiece of the evening, Vi et animo from Stanton Welch, commenced to impress the audience.

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    Houston Ballet Principals Yuriko Kajiya and Aaron Robison with Artists of Houston Ballet in Stanton Welch’s Vi et Animo.

    Photo by Alana Campbell (2025). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.

    After choreographing the first movement of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1 for the Margaret Alkek Williams Jubilee of Dance in 2023, Welch expanded the work to encompass all three of Tchaikovsky’s movements, which now debut as part of the mixed rep program. And expanded it is, featuring nearly 50 dancers across its three movements.

    Vi et animo evokes George Balanchine, with its classical vocabulary and a sea of tutus emphasizing the piece’s grandeur. The first movement is characterized by delicate footwork and gorgeous port a bras from the ensemble mixed with spotlight-demanding solos tailor-made for Welch’s dancers. Though all deserved their oohs and ahhs, the power and acrobatics of the men – Eric Best, Naazir Muhammad, and Simone Acri – juxtaposed too perfectly with the broader dance to not deserve a special mention. Welch marries the beautiful lyricism of Tchaikovsky’s second movement with a breakable pas de deux danced by Karina González and Harper Watters, before turning to Sayako Toku and Angelo Greco to lead the corps in a more playful, and quicker, third movement.

    Mixed repertory programs are perfect starter packs for people who aren’t familiar with dance and special treats for those who are. One again, Houston Ballet is offering four contrasting pieces that show the breadth of what the company has to offer, and it’s nothing if not impressive. 

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Velocity is An Emotional and Thrilling Triple Bill at Houston Ballet

    Velocity is An Emotional and Thrilling Triple Bill at Houston Ballet

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    Mixed repertory programs are always something special, especially when they come from a company like Houston Ballet, known for firmly placing its proverbial finger on the pulse of now. It’s something Houston Ballet does well and does again during their latest triple bill, mixed rep Velocity. If it were a person, the oldest work on the program would be barely old enough to drink (Stanton Welch’s Velocity), another just entering its teens (Aszure Barton’s Come In), and one (Silas Farley’s Four Loves) a world premiere, essentially making it a newborn.

    For the second time, Houston Ballet has opened a mixed rep program with Aszure Barton’s Come In. The first time was in 2019 when the work premiered in Houston, 13 years after Barton created it for the needs-no-introduction Mikhail Baryshnikov.

    Featuring 13 male dancers dressed in black, the half-hour-long work is reflective, its pensive mood permeating every gentle, repeated gesture, like the precise shifting of weight as dancers lean to-and-fro. The undercurrent of the piece appears to be time, the setting a dim other world lit by Leo Janks, a place where a dancer, once young and now not, seemingly contemplates his life while sharing the stage with 12 (ostensibly younger) men. This would be the role Baryshnikov danced, here performed by Connor Walsh. Walsh dances the part with subtlety and fluidity, communicating emotional depth through twists and spins, shimmies, and arches of his back.

    It’s here, in each deceptively simple and familiar move, that Barton most impressively shows how much humanity can be found in a simple swipe of your face or a hand, outstretched and wobbling, and how much emotion can be mined from a long beat simply spent on an empty stage, where 13 chairs sit forgotten.

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    Houston Ballet Principal Connor Walsh in Aszure Barton’s Come In.

    Photo by Amitava Sarkar (2024). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.

    The musical piece that lends its name to the work is Vladimir Martynov’s six-movement “Come In!” Martynov’s title refers to the response one might (hopefully) get when they knock on heaven’s door, a concept that plays out musically with the strikes of woodblocks often paired with Katherine Burkwall-Ciscon’s charming celesta. Beatrice Jona Affron leads the Houston Ballet Orchestra for this one and leads with ease, with the strings, in particular, making themselves known, such as when Walsh takes a spin around the stage to their playful tune.

    Come In approaches its subject with sensitivity, specifically centering the vulnerability of men, though even in its approach, the dancers often look stage right, as if to say in their angled eye line that yes, you can see inside, but I can’t always acknowledge that I’m letting you. The next two works, however, tend to look right at you.

    There’s always a lot of excitement for a world premiere, and Silas Farley didn’t disappoint. Farley’s Four Loves is built around the four different types of love found in Greek thought, by way of C.S. Lewis.

    The first love, “storge” or familial love, takes the form of a tender mother-daughter relationship between Jessica Collado and Tyler Donatelli played against achingly sweet melodies from Kyle Werner’s commissioned score. Donatelli floats across the stage, Farley’s choreography is airy and light, and the dynamic between Collado and Donatelli beautifully switches at the end, as parent-child relationships tend to do.

    Philia,” which dominates the second section, refers to the love between friends, and the buddies are played by Eric Best and Naazir Muhammad. Best and Muhammad capture the happiness in this section, which is off and running quickly with legs beating together, pas de chat, leaps, etc., all set to an equally active turn in the score. Lewis famously said that friendship “must be about something,” but it was hard to get a sense of any somethings here. Also, far be it from me to deny someone on stage a chance to catch their breath, but there was a bit too much time with Best and Muhammad standing and watching from the sidelines.

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    Houston Ballet Principals Beckanne Sisk and Chase O’Connell in Silas Farley’s Four Loves.

    Photo by Amitava Sarkar (2024). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.

    Romantic love, or “Eros,” begins with a solo by Beckanne Sisk before she and Chase O’Connell come together to dance one of the most purely romantic pas de deux to grace the Houston Ballet stage in I-don’t-know-how-long. It was almost a shame when the ensemble appeared – almost, because much like Sisk and O’Connell appeared to only have eyes for each other, the audience still only had eyes for them.

    The final section, agape, refers to a spiritual love, represented by a trinity, or trio, of dancers – Julian Lacey, Gian Carlo Perez, and Harper Watters. Lacey, Perez, and Watters serve as the piece’s through line, appearing in each section and furthering the idea that the divine is present in all types of love. The music, which built to a crescendo in each section, adopted an increased pace and more percussive crashes for a wildly dramatic portrait of agape. I don’t know if you can spoil a dance, but just in case, let’s say persecution, resurrection and exaltation, and a visit to heaven (?) were not on my bingo card for the evening.

    Stanton Welch’s Velocity, which closes the program, speaks to something a bit more primal than either Farley or Barton. Actually, let’s start here instead: Velocity is a lightning strike in the form of a dance. For those who like classical ballet vocabulary thrown at them at high speed – without sacrificing technique or precision – Welch’s breath-stealing Velocity is for you.

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    Houston Ballet First Soloist Julian Lacey and Artists of Houston Ballet in Silas Farley’s Four Loves.

    Photo by Amitava Sarkar (2024). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.

    Created in 2003 for the Australian Ballet, the 33-minute ballet made its Houston premiere three years later. Eleven men, all in black, and eleven women in tutus, classic white and pancake-flat, dance in front of a geometric, Piet Mondrian-inspired backdrop (all designed by Kandis Cook). From there, there’s certainly no discernible narrative, and there doesn’t need to be, though, without something to hold to, the one downside to Velocity is that it continues just long enough to start feeling aimless.

    The work opens on a ballerina, an eye-catching Danbi Kim (who stole the piece along with Angelo Greco), with men posturing in shadow behind her. From there, it’s a whirlwind of movement set to two equally dizzying Michael Torke pieces from the ‘80s.  There are leaps and rolls, fouettés, ballerinas tossed and caught out of the air, stamping feet, synchronized movement, and a lot of stares – it really seems that Welch choreographed Velocity with the confidence that no one would be able to look away and he was right.

    Velocity is a beguiling crowd-pleaser, and it’s easy to see why. And paired with Barton and Farley, it’s also the crescendo the evening needs, the exclamation point on yet another terrific mixed rep program.

    Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Saturdays and Friday, September 27, and 2 p.m. Sundays through September 29 at the Wortham Theater Center, 501 Texas. For more information, call 713-227-2787 or visit houstonballet.org. $25-$219.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Houston Ballet’s Enchanting Cinderella Finds New Life in Age-Old Fairy Tale

    Houston Ballet’s Enchanting Cinderella Finds New Life in Age-Old Fairy Tale

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    Is Stanton Welch’s Cinderella as magical as its forebearers?

    That’s the question going in to the Wortham Theater Center for the Houston Ballet’s latest mounting of Welch’s more modern take on the age-old fairy tale, which he first premiered in 1997 with the Australian Ballet.

    You know the story, but a very abridged version goes like this: Once upon a time, lived a young woman named Cinderella, who was treated like little more than a servant by her stepmother and two stepsisters. One day, with a little magical intervention, Cinderella gets the chance to attend a ball where she meets a prince. But like all good things, the evening must come to an end at midnight (so say the magic), and in her haste to leave, Cinderella leaves behind a single slipper. The prince uses the slipper to track her down and save her from her wretched life. They live happily ever after. The end.

    Welch’s Cinderella retains the wicked stepmother and stepsisters, as well as a ball, a midnight deadline and a slipper that just won’t stay on. But instead instead of a doormat waiting for a prince to save her, his Cinderella is a fighter, and instead of any “bibbidi-bobbidi-boo” spouting fairy godmother, it’s Cinderella’s deceased mother and a graveyard full of ghoulish minions that get Cinderella ready for the ball. If that sounds a bit macabre, that’s because it is. But it’s also representative of what Welch has done so masterfully with this ballet: riding the tonal shifts of Sergei Prokofiev’s lyrical score.

    Prokofiev’s score can go from ominous to optimistic in seconds – just take a look at that graveyard scene. It has notes of darkness as well as whimsy, all of which the Houston Ballet Orchestra, under the hand of Ermanno Florio, approach with superb skill. Welch embraces the theatricality of Prokofiev’s music, and mines every bit of humor, with a fun and varied approach to movement. From the sweeping romance of the work’s pas de deux to the herky-jerk style of the undead, and the all-too brief shuffling and pulsating dances from the Spanish Princesses (Adelaide Clauss and Natalie Varnum) and the Arabian Princess (Yuriko Kajiya) – not to mention every head bobble and chicken neck – Welch leaves nothing to be desired. Not only is this true for the dance, it’s true for the characterization.

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    Houston Ballet First Soloist Mónica Gómez as Cinderella and Principal Connor Walsh as Dandini with Artists of Houston Ballet in Stanton Welch’s Cinderella.

    Photo by Lawrence Elizabeth Knox (2024). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.

    In patchworked overalls and short hair – think Natalie Portman’s post-V for Vendetta-pixie-crop short – with her arms crossed, feet planted and chin up, Mónica Gómez is a scrappy Cinderella. She’s not one to be pushed around without pushing back (literally at times) or let her stepsisters show her up, like when she puts them to shame with a series of fouetté turns. But Gómez also imbues her Cinderella with wistfulness; it’s in the longing in her face as she gazes at her deceased mother (an exquisitely elegant Karina González), or the sadness when she looks upon her father (an absolutely defeated Aaron Daniel Sharratt).

    Gómez is also exuberant, and particularly charming when paired with Connor Walsh’s Dandini. Walsh looks enchanted as Dandini, and the pairs interactions culminate in a pas de deux straight out of, well, a fairy tale. Tender and joyous, and topped only by a second pas de deux in the third act.

    Harper Watters, with a dramatic red lip and perfectly arched eyebrow, owns this show as Cinderella’s stepmother. Easily the most enjoyable character to watch on stage. Watters cuts an imposing, intimidating figure, backed up often by the over-the-top antics of Nikita Baryshnikov and Elivelton Tomazi, who play stepsisters Grizabella and Florinda. And yes, they’re on pointe and it’s a lot of fun to see.

    Jack Wolff only has eyes for himself as the Prince (though Cinderella does briefly catch his attention). Wolff’s Prince is a perfectly preening, pouty, finger-gun shooting, winking dolt, and Steven Woodgate is his relatively benevolent father, the King, who is constantly pushing the marriage agenda. Simone Acri puts in an admirable effort as Buttons (and makes an exciting exit at one point in first act) but the character itself is a bit of a hard sell. And, out of nowhere, props to Saul Newport for earning much deserved laughs from the crowd as the dance instructor.

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    Houston Ballet Principal Karina González as Mother and Artists of Houston Ballet in Stanton Welch’s Cinderella.

    Photo by Lawrence Elizabeth Knox (2024). Courtesy of Houston Ballet.

    The world of Welch’s “once upon a time,” designed by Kristian Fredrikson, looks a bit like the late 19th- or early 20th-century and is full of both the beautiful and the grotesque. There are nightmarish mannequins come to life, a carnival that Pennywise would fit right into and skeletal masks for the undead army, aside the stained-glass glow of Cinderella’s home, a peacock-adorned ballroom, and the most dramatic of choices – stark black staging in the third act, which eventually gives way to a gorgeous night sky. Lisa J. Pinkham provided the lighting concepts for the show, which makes good use of spotlights to draw the eye.

    Now, there is one other thing I feel strongly about in a much less positive way: Two boob grabs, by two different characters, in one show is one too many. There’s only one dickish character who should be inappropriately copping a feel.

    Other than that, the conclusion is pretty simple: Stanton Welch’s Cinderella isn’t just as magical as its forebearers, it’s even more memorable because of its scrappy heroine, excellent cast of supporting characters, and some tweaks that make the story just a bit more real.

    Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Friday, 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays through March 3 at the Wortham Center, 501 Texas. For more information, call 713-227-2787 or visit houstonballet.org. $25-$220.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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