The Best of the Best: Our Top 10 Performances of 2014
This story originally appeared in the December 2014/January 2015 issue of Pointe.
Steven McRae
Commanding presence: McRae in Ashton’s Rhapsody
Tristan Kenton, Courtesy ROH
The Royal Ballet’s Steven McRae danced with a power and speed most people would need figure skates to achieve at Covent Garden in February, but the amplitude of his chaînés, barrel turns and rivoltades was just the icing on the cake during his finely calibrated performance in Sir Frederick Ashton’s Rhapsody. Dancing the lead role originally made for Mikhail Baryshnikov, the 28-year-old Aussie also excelled in the small gestures and precise positional details for which Ashton’s work is known. McRae says the music, Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, is the key to balancing athleticism and artistry in the piece. “It’s easy to get caught up in the technical demands of the choreography,” he says. “However, when you really listen to the music, something magical starts to happen.” The same can be said for the moment when this dynamic and versatile principal takes the stage. —Michael Northrop
Diana Vishneva & Marcelo Gomes
Vishneva and Gomes brought their partnership to greater heights.
Gene Schiavone, Courtesy ABT
One of the biggest thrills of Diana Vishneva and Marcelo Gomes’ longtime partnership at American Ballet Theatre is its ability to transcend to greater heights each season. It was ever apparent in their performance of Giselle last June. While they’ve performed the roles together in years past, familiarity and experience have allowed them to bring deeper richness to their characters. Vishneva’s Giselle was shy and vulnerable, coming out of her shell gradually in response to Albrecht’s affections until she almost seemed to burst with joy. Meanwhile, Gomes—a cocksure but lovable Albrecht—grew more and more smitten with his conquest. Once his ruse was discovered, you sensed not only Giselle’s disbelief but her painfully public humiliation, making her breakdown all the more understandable and heartbreaking. In Act II, Vishneva was otherworldly in her lightness, accentuated further through Gomes’ reverential, seamless partnering. Together they drew the audience into their story and held them, spellbound. —Amy Brandt
Connor Walsh
Princely polish: Walsh in Swan Lake
Amitava Sarkar, Courtesy Houston Ballet
When Houston Ballet’s Connor Walsh first danced Siegfried in the premiere of Stanton Welch’s fast-paced, dreamy version of Swan Lake in 2006, he was technically impressive, holding his own with the elegant Barbara Bears. But watching him reprise the role some eight years later, it became clear just how much he has grown. It’s as if his edges have become sharper—not just technically but in all aspects of his artistry; he’s developed a distinctly refined performance polish. There’s ample heart behind his princely swagger now. Walsh’s noble command of the stage, solid virtuosity and well-tempered bravado all add up to one convincing prince. His involvement in the ballet’s original creation process, along with added years of experience, certainly helped deepen his interpretation. The HB principal is moving into his own, and his performance in Swan Lake provided the evidence. —Nancy Wozny
Bolshoi Ballet
Shakespeare with a modern edge: Lantratov and Krysanova in the Bolshoi’s Taming of the Shrew
Alice Blangero, Courtesy Bolshoi Ballet
It was a gamble on all sides: a new, full-length Taming of the Shrew by a foreign choreographer at the Bolshoi Ballet, just over a year after the acid attack on Sergei Filin. Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo’s Jean-Christophe Maillot, who was creating his first ballet for an outside company in two decades, proved undaunted, and the result was a team effort that showed the Bolshoi’s young generation in a new light. Each of the 10 soloist roles was choreographed with and for the first cast, from Vladislav Lantratov to Olga Smirnova, Vyacheslav Lopatin and Anna Tikhomirova, channeling their offstage personalities to show a new facet of their talent; their bold classical technique was in evidence throughout yet colored by the spontaneous, naturalistic approach Maillot favors. It was the Bolshoi as the world loves it, with a modern edge—and the Shrew herself, principal Ekaterina Krysanova, led the pack with a nuanced, career-defining performance, her power matched by a new abandon. —Laura Cappelle
Chloe Felesina
Powerfully nuanced: BalletX’s Chloe Felesina
Alexander Iziliaev, Courtesy BalletX
In the BalletX premiere Sunset, o639 Hours, Chloe Felesina danced front and center, with an abandon, fire and precision that made her riveting. The dreamlike adventure tale, choreographed for 10 dancers by BalletX co-founder Matthew Neenan, was based on the true story of Captain Edwin Musick’s ill-fated Honolulu-to-Auckland flight in 1938. As the famous pilot’s wife, and in her other roles in the ballet, Felesina’s depth of feeling was matched by a robust agility. She shone in scenes portraying the couple’s romance, the island life of New Zealand and her solitary bereavement.
Even though her medium height and fine features make her look delicate, she’s a powerhouse: at the front of the pack in floor-rolling unisons and sparkling in Neenan’s inventive partnering. A full-time company member since 2012, Felesina relishes deciphering each choreographer’s intent and seeking more ways to communicate strongly with her audience. In Sunset, o639 Hours, her approach worked: You couldn’t take your eyes off her. —Lisa Kraus
Christine Rocas
Rocas, with Rory Hohenstein, brought sweeping lyricism and dramatic ingenuity to the role of Juliet.
Cheryl Mann, Courtesy Joffrey Ballet
A couple of years back, Joffrey Ballet dancer Christine Rocas confessed: “I’m always scared to do modern things…I try to be spontaneous, but I know I look funny at first.”
Rocas, 28, definitely didn’t look “funny” in her opening night performance of Polish choreographer Krzysztof Pastor’s Romeo & Juliet in Chicago this past April. And Pastor’s take on the story was supremely contemporary—not at all like the Kenneth MacMillan or John Cranko versions for which Rocas’ lyrical, weightlessly lovely style would have been a perfect fit. In fact, as Juliet, Rocas seized hold of Pastor’s starkly modern, sweepingly cinematic reinvention, which used 20th-century Italian history as a backdrop. Masterful in her embrace of the ballet’s mix of difficult classical and contemporary technique, she revealed a powerful, highly individualistic, surprisingly dramatic talent.
Her performance had genuine star quality, with pristinely beautiful dancing and fiercely honest acting in evidence from the moment, early on, when she simply walked around the perimeter of the stage, quietly fixing her gaze on Romeo. The palpable quickening in Rocas’ face and body was a far cry from simple pubescent awakening. This was the dawning of a young woman with a mind of her own. —Hedy Weiss
Nathalia Arja
Quicksilver brillance: Arja with Renan Cerdeiro in Ballo della Regina
Daniel Azoulay, Courtesy Miami City Ballet
As the recently promoted Miami City Ballet soloist Nathalia Arja can attest, some roles lift dancers to the heights of artistic privilege. While still a corps member last season, Arja—a 21-year-old MCB-school alumna with Rio de Janeiro roots—earned the opportunity to dance the lead in George Balanchine’s exquisitely demanding Ballo della Regina. There she was, on opening night no less, fast and fastidious in virtuoso moves: restless changes in direction, riveting hops on pointe, clockwork articulations that teased time itself. “I learned to do what I didn’t know I could,” says Arja. No small amount of calibration, of course, came from being coached by Merrill Ashley, the New York City Ballet wonder who originated the role. Still, Arja brought strengths she’s been honing since dancing the role of Sugar Plum at MCB as a teenager—the verve and knack for detail that also served Alexei Ratmansky when he fashioned a solo on her in Symphonic Dances in 2012. A culmination for many, Ballo figures for Arja as the promise of an ever more thrilling career. —Guillermo Perez
Ashly Isaacs
A confident debut: Isaacs with Gonzalo Garcia in Symphony in C
Paul Kolnik, Courtesy NYCB
In the third movement of Balanchine’s Symphony in C, the leads repeatedly charge onto the stage in a series of grands jetés—irrepressibly buoyant, as if they’re more at home in the air than on the ground. In a way, that’s a fitting metaphor for New York City Ballet corps member Ashly Isaacs’ 2014 season, which saw her star on the rise, achieving greater heights with each successive performance. Her debut as the ballerina in that movement of Symphony showed off not only her preternatural ballon, but also her easy command of the stage. In the wrong dancer’s hands (and feet) the always-on-the-go choreography can feel bombastic, but Isaacs colored it sensitively, adding subtle shading to its softer moments. For some years this role has been danced brilliantly by Ashley Bouder; it was hard not to notice the similarities between the two. —Margaret Fuhrer
Esteban Hernandez
Hernandez (left) stole the spotlight in Les Lutins.
Erik Tomasson, Courtesy SFB
Season galas showcase principal dancers at their best, but San Francisco Ballet’s 2014 gala also introduced a rising star: Esteban Hernandez. Announced pre-curtain as a replacement for Joan Boada in Johan Kobborg’s Les Lutins, the first-year corps member faced high expectations from a demanding audience, who rustled their programs looking for clues about this unfamiliar dancer. But in Lutins, an eight-minute battle of the sexes that requires insouciant charm, clear acting and blistering petit allégro—and falls flat if any one of those is missing—the Mexican-born Hernandez proved his mettle as a Royal Ballet–trained technician and a natural performer, with confidence well beyond his 19 years. Not only did he hold his own opposite Gennadi Nedvigin and soloist Dores André, in those thrilling eight minutes he won 3,500 hearts and became a name to remember. —Claudia Bauer
Gabrielle Thurlow & Luca Sbrizzi
Making their mark: Thurlow and Sbrizzi rehearsing Don Quixote
Aimee DiAndrea, Courtesy PBT
When lead casting was announced for Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre’s Don Quixote last season, there was a surprising pair included in the mix. While Gabrielle Thurlow and Luca Sbrizzi have long been regarded as cornerstones among PBT’s ranks, their star power was relatively untested: Thurlow was a longtime corps member and Sbrizzi, a soloist, had been away from the stage nearly nine months following a career-threatening back injury. But they more than delivered. Thurlow entered the first act as an energetic Kitri, all spry jumps and energetic pas de chevals, while Sbrizzi played an earnest Basilio, his admiration for Kitri present in every carefully finished movement. Later, during their brightly executed grand pas de deux, Thurlow brought playful sharpness, breezy turns and balances that said, “I could stay here all day.” Sbrizzi’s refined technique and bounding jumps lent his Basilio the elegance of a man in love. Following the performance, Thurlow was promoted to soloist and Sbrizzi cemented his place as a leading man after an uncertain season away from the stage. —Kathleen McGuire