Originally published Friday, October 30, 2009 at 12:01 AM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
A 'lost' ballet is re-envisioned by Val Caniparoli at Pacific Northwest Ballet
Val Caniparoli's new ballet, "The Seasons," is based on a "lost ballet" created by master choreographer Marius Petipa more than a century ago. Pacific Northwest Ballet premieres the piece Nov. 5 on a mixed bill that also includes works by Jerome Robbins, Jiri Kylian and Marco Goecke.
Seattle Times arts writer
"Director's Choice"
Pacific Northwest Ballet, Nov. 5-7 and 12-15, McCaw Hall, 321 Mercer St., Seattle; $25-$160 (206-441-2424 or www.pnb.org).
When Val Caniparoli's ballet "The Seasons" makes its world premiere with Pacific Northwest Ballet (PNB) on Thursday, it will be a new page in a chapter of dance history. The new work is set to music by Russian composer Alexander Glazunov, who wrote it as a ballet score for choreographer Marius Petipa more than a century ago.
While the music survived — audiences may recognize some familiar passages — the Petipa ballet did not. "It's sort of a lost ballet," said Caniparoli. "There's no record of it, just a lot of pictures."
Caniparoli, a native of Renton who's been an active choreographer for nearly 30 years, said that the music came to him from Bruce Simpson at the Louisville Ballet (which shares "The Seasons" with PNB as a co-commission). "What's great is that it's something I wouldn't normally pick, because I didn't know much about it."
He noted that the music has a very balletic, traditional feel; while he's often made less obvious musical choices (his popular "Lambarena," for example, is set to traditional African music and to Bach), he was drawn to the idea of creating new choreography for this piece. "I don't usually pick that kind of score," he said, "but I love a challenge."
Intrigued by the score's history, Caniparoli found that the ballet did have an existing scenario. "I was going to abandon that," he said, "but then I thought, why not? I wanted to treat it in an old-fashioned way. There's no real story, but vignettes and interesting characters throughout."
The ballet mirrors the seasons, beginning with winter. In a recent rehearsal, PNB soloist Seth Orza was the whirling center of a sequence as Zephyr, clad in a long coat that created its own breeze.
"The Seasons" marks the fifth Caniparoli ballet to join PNB's repertory, beginning in 1980 with "Street Songs," his first choreographed work. His artistic base for many years has been San Francisco Ballet, where he began his career as a 19-year-old scholarship student in 1972 and is still a dancer under contract as well as an independent choreographer.
Caniparoli is currently resident choreographer for the Tulsa (Oklahoma) Ballet and is busy with commissions from a number of companies; he said he's now booking choreographic work two or three years in advance. Next, he'll move on a new work for Milwaukee (Wisconsin) Ballet, and a dance/theater piece for San Francisco's American Conservatory Theater.
But for now, he's enjoying being back with the company that "feels like home," and nervously anticipating being in the audience when "The Seasons" takes the PNB stage. "It's awful!" he said of the experience of watching a new work. "I'm comatose. I'm usually standing in the back, I can't sit. It's an out-of-body experience, because there's nothing you can do."
"The Seasons" will make its world premiere as part of the "Director's Choice" repertory evening, along with the PNB premiere of Jiri Kylian's 1991 ballet "Petite Mort" (music by Mozart) and revivals of Marco Goecke's "Mopey" (music by C.P.E. Bach and The Cramps) and Jerome Robbins' "West Side Story Suite" (music by Leonard Bernstein).
Moira Macdonald: 206-464-2725 or mmacdonald@seattletimes.com
NEW - 7:00 PM
Get a kick out of Cole Porter? Marvin Hamlisch and Seattle Symphony have the program for you
Spectrum Dance Theater explores Africa in Donald Byrd's 'The Mother of Us All'
Performers sing for their supper, and to help a friend, at Lake Union Café
Shelf Talk | Medical Lectures + medical info: at your public library!
NEW - 7:04 PM
Toy-maker shifts gears into sculpting career
![]()

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Electronics
just listed
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
- David Stern's Seattle sucker punch shows we must stop being a pawn in NBA's game | Jerry Brewer
- Mayor: Kings deal about 'not letting somebody take something that isn't theirs'
- Seattle’s failed bid: No NBA, no promises
- Great Wolf Lodge ex-lifeguard held in alleged rape of guest, 14
- North Bend intruder had job, was father of five
- Pot rules taking shape; public gets a taste of what’s ahead
- Mariners beat Yankees again, near .500
- Ex-student sues Tacoma schools over restroom sex
- GE, Boeing tell airlines to inspect some 777 engines for defect
- Boston bombing suspect’s note explains motive, officials say
- Kings moving closer to sale to Sacramento group
346 - Game thread: Mariners try to contain high-octane Indians
296 - Hood River, Ore., bakery won’t make cake for lesbians
260 - House committee to grill ousted IRS chief
256 - SI report --- Hansen offered deposit back, declines to take it
128 - Another new Husky? Blakley gives commitment to UW
118 - Why is any political group exempt from paying taxes?
90 - Mariners have been here before, but this feels different
79 - LGBT students get $600,000 in scholarships from 2 groups
27 - Burgess quits mayor's race
26
- Pot rules taking shape; public gets a taste of what’s ahead
- Columbia Hills State Park is a Gorge wonder
- LGBT students get $600,000 in scholarships from 2 groups
- Why is any political group exempt from taxes?
- Sex-with-animals advocate told to stay off Internet
- Contractor at Wade’s gun range cited for lead exposure
- Marine, dog partner reunited in surprise ceremony
- Helping high-school students navigate the next step | Lynne K. Varner / Times editorial columnist
- Tableau Software shares soar 64% in trading debut
- Italy on the plate by way of Ballard | Taste
