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Wednesday, February 27, 2019

2019 TOUR OF THE ROYAL MOSCOW BALLET


Russian cultural impresario, Edouard Miasnikov, has announced the 2019 tour of the Royal Moscow Ballet to South Africa presenting three pieces: Tchaikovsky's Romeo and Juliet Overture: Fantasy; the third movement of Tchaikovsky's Symphony No.6 (Pathétique); and excerpts from Carl Orff’s scenic cantanta, Carmina Burana.

Royal Moscow Ballet has toured successfully around the globe presenting more than a thousand performances. The company, which consists of graduates of the best Russian choreography, ballet and dance schools, premiered as the Royal Moscow Ballet on August 12, 2002, founded by Anatoly Emelianov and Anna Aleksidze.

This tour continues last year’s theme celebrating great Russian composer, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. This time two pieces are on the bill: Romeo and Juliet which is one of the best loved one-act ballets, featuring a score by Tchaikovsky, based on Shakespeare's tragic tale of star-crossed young lovers.The Symphony No. 6, also known as the Pathétique Symphony, is Tchaikovsky's final completed symphony. There is much debate as to what inspired this beautiful piece. The composer entitled the work "The Passionate Symphony", that was then incorrectly translated into French as “pathétique”, meaning "solemn" or "emotive".

German composer Carl Heinrich Maria Orff, is best known for his distinctive cantata Carmina Burana (1935) based on 24 poems, mostly boisterous and bawdy, from the medieval collection of texts of the same name. The opening, O Fortuna, was famously used in an iconic advert for Old Spice aftershave and as the X Factor theme. The ballet performed for this tour will be a new production of Carmina Burana.

All ballets for this tour are choreographed by Anatoly Emelianov.

The Russian Ballet will have two performances in Durban in the Playhouse Opera on March 9 at 14h00 and 18h00. Booking through Computicket.

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

DANCING DIVAS OF INDIAN CINEMA


Sibaya Casino & Entertainment Kingdom provides the stage for vibrant tribute to the Dancing Divas of Indian Cinema on March 2 and 3, 2019. The show by Epic Entertainment in association with Nateshwar Dance Company brings to life the classic hits of Madhubala, Meena Kumari, Hema Malini, Rekha, Madhuri Dixit, Sri Devi, Aishwarya Rai and others. 

Don’t miss this mesmerizing dance-musical tribute to these iconic women who brought the soul of dance to the forefront of Indian Cinema.

Dancing Divas of Indian Cinema runs at the Sibaya iZulu Theatre at 15h00 and 19h00 on March 2 and at 15h00 on March 3 2019. Tickets R150 at Computicket

19 ITALIAN SONGS & ARIAS OF THE 18TH & 19TH CENTURY


(Sandile Mabaso)

The Highway area’s principal tenor, Sandile Mabaso, will be presenting a recital of 19 Italian Songs & Arias of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century on March 3, 2019, at the Holy Trinity Church in Hillcrest. Mabaso will be accompanied by the accomplished Highway Area based pianist, Bonita Ziegelmeyer.

The audience will hear Mabaso’s smooth lyric tenor sing beautiful songs and arias, accompanied by the piano, composed by early masters of opera and members of the Florentine Camerata. This group came together to innovate the ‘musical theatre’ of their time. Their innovations led to the development of opera. Some of their innovations are still used and heard in opera today. The songs and arias capture the joys of new love and the pain when that love ends. Some of the songs mention names of the lovers. This heightens the intensity of the emotions in the music. The audience will be transported back in time and experience the full emotions of the songs, only to realise that they have also felt these emotions.

The idea to present these songs and arias came to Mabaso after a music lesson when a student had sung one of the pieces. “It became clear that this repertoire has to be performed regularly for young singing students to understand the requirements of the piece. They must be also performed pleasure because the music is just magnificent,” he explains.

Mabaso is a tenor from KwaZulu-Natal who began his musical training at the Drakensberg Boys’ Choir School, under the direction of Christian Ashley-Botha. In 2005 he obtained his Bachelor of Music from the University of Pretoria. While a student he sang the roles of Tamino in The Magic Flute (Mozart) and Alfredo in Die Fledermaus (Strauss). He had his first professional engagement in 2006 singing the role of Inkos’ Mathole in Opera Africa’s touring production of Princess Magogo (Khumalo). He toured South Africa and The Netherlands with this production.

From 2006-2007, he was a member of the Cape Town Opera Vocal Ensemble where he toured to Germany, France and Sweden in the productions of Showboat (Kern) and Porgy and Bess (Gershwin).

In 2009 he began studying with Prof. Werner Nel and was selected to participate in The International Baroque Symposium, held at the North West University, under the leadership of Kobie van Rensburg. In 2010 he sung the role of Acis in Acis and Galatea (Handel) also under the direction of Kobie van Rensburg. In 2012 he has sung the role of Puck in The Fairy Queen (Purcell) for Umculo Cape Festival.

In 2013 he was a finalist in the Mimi Coertse Singing Competition. In 2014 he made his solo debut with the KwaZulu-Natal Philharmonic Orchestra.

The German art-song has been his main focus along with his operatic endeavours. In 2012 he was invited to perform Dichterliebe (Schumann) at UNISA's annual An die Musik recital. He has also presented this work at the Wakkerstroom Arts Festival, Tatham Art Gallery. In 2013 he presented Brahms’ LiebesliederWalzer, opus 52 & 65 at the Odeion, Bloemfontein. In 2014, he sang On Wenlock Edge (Vaughan-Williams) in Pretoria. In 2015 He sung Die schone Mullerin in Stellenbosch.

In 2015, he toured a programme of Baroque music with harpsichordist, Andrew Cruickshank along South Africa’s garden route. In 2016, he moved to KwaZulu-Natal and opened his own teaching studio.

The recital will take place at 15h00 on March 3, 2019, at the Holy Trinity Church in Hillcrest. Tickets R75 at the door. For more information contact Sandile Mabaso on 084 598 8125 or email mabaso.sandile@gmail.com

GREEN BOOK


(Viggo Mortensen as Tony Lip & Mahershala Ali as Dr Don Shirley)

That this conspicuously old-fashioned liberal movie won the best picture Oscar is as bemusing as the 1989 win for Driving Miss Daisy. (Review by Patrick Compton - 6/10)

It’s not surprising that Spike Lee stormed out of the Academy Awards ceremony on Sunday when the best picture award was announced.

With the best will in the world, Green Book simply doesn’t match up in quality to Roma, Lee’s own BlacKkKlansman and The Favourite, to name but three of its competitors. And its politics are thoroughly out of sync with 21st Century America.

Yes, it does contain two excellent performances from Mahershala Ali as a black touring musician in the Deep South in 1962 and Viggo Mortensen as his white chauffeur/protector at a time when rigid racial attitudes in states below the Mason-Dixon line hadn’t relaxed appreciably from the end of the civil war. Their characters are supposedly based on a real-life friendship.

But the film is so retro. It’s glib, liberal values hark back to Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner (1967) and for much of the time the movie is an exercise in ticking off a series of obvious boxes.

The movie is written and directed by Peter Farrelly, previously known for crude comedies like Dumb and Dumber and There’s Something About Mary; one has to accept, I suppose, that Green Book is at least a step up in ambition.

The film’s title refers to a green reference book (a kind of Rough Guide to the racist south) that helps black travellers avoid making embarrassing mistakes by entering certain bars, hotels and restaurants where they were not allowed.

The movie’s theme is an exercise in peeling the onion of the two men’s characters. Initially, and for much of the movie, they seem profoundly different. Tony Lip (Mortensen), an Italian-American nightclub bouncer with the bluest of blue collars and a crude and perpetual eater, begins the film by throwing away two glasses used by black carpenters who have been given something to drink by his wife after working in his house.

By contrast, Dr Don Shirley, a classically trained black musician, is a reserved, fastidious and cultured intellectual who is touring with his musical trio, giving concerts for rich white culture vultures in the former confederacy. They are happy to pay money to see him play his Steinway piano, but less inclined to let him use the regular toilet.

Ali’s performance is especially impressive in that he manages to make a great deal more of his kingly albeit quietly tormented persona, than the script allows.

In general, this is not a film of delicate nuances although some may point out that it’s Driving Miss Daisy in reverse. And there is a scene, late in the film, when their car stops next to a field where a group of African-Americans are toiling. The elegantly besuited Shirley and the peasants simply gawp at each other across the fence, suggesting that class and education are at least as important a divide in the US as simple skin colour.

One reason for some of the hostility towards the film is its hackneyed perspective. Rather like Cry Freedom, in which Donald Woods rather than Steve Biko is the real hero, the story is told from the point of view of Tony, who comes over as just the sort of fellow the unworldly Shirley needs when the going gets tough.

Green Book is a road movie and the film features a series of vignettes along the way in which we become wearisomely acquainted with racist cops, restaurant managers, promoters and drunks in bars.

Of course, the film is not just about our white hero. There is an attempt to balance the ledger as Shirley teaches Lip to write glowing love letters home to his wife.

Even if you accept that this film’s heart is in the right place, and that we care for both the well-acted main characters, there is something tired and obvious about this film that seems 50 years out of date. The top award is all a bit of a puzzle when you consider that the Academy got so much else right this year.

In the meantime, if you want to see high-pedigree movies about race in the US, check out Spike Lee’s Do The Right Thing (1989), or, more recently, Jordan Peele’s Get Out (2017).

Green Book is showing in multiple cinemas in Durban. - Patrick Compton

THE TORTOISE CRIED ITS ONLY TEAR


The novel is an eye-opener into a part of our society that we all too often wilfully fail to see. (Review by Margaret von Klemperer. Courtesy of The Witness)

Carol Campbell’s third fictional outing among the poorest people of the Karoo opens with the central character, Siena, running for her life. It becomes clear that she has killed a man, and why, and she is heading for the only safe haven her life has ever offered – the Seekoegat Primary School.

We don’t know who she has killed at this stage, and Campbell weaves her story back and forth between the present, with Siena struggling to escape what life has thrown at her, and the past, which has brought her to this. She is one of three main characters, the other two being Boetie and Kriekie.

Boetie was a neglected child and when the only family he had ever known were taken away by the police for a murder which he witnessed, he joined up with Siena’s karretjiemense parents. But when the children killed a tortoise, the furious Mevrou on the farm dispatched Siena off to school, and Boetie became, to all intents, feral. Kriekie, the third leg of the triangle, was damaged in an attack by older children and when his prostitute mother vanished, he too was sent off to school.

The title refers to the myth that the ancient Karoo tortoise will shed just one tear as it dies, and myth and magic play a role in the story. Once again, as in her two previous novels, My Children Have Faces and Esther’s House, Campbell highlights the plight of people on the fringes of society, and the often unimaginable horror and poverty of their lives. But don’t be put off: there is a redemptive sense of beauty here, and kindness found in many, often unexpected places. Siena, Boetie and Kriekie and their plight will remain with the reader long after the final page has been turned. The novel is an eye-opener into a part of our society that we all too often wilfully fail to see.

The Tortoise Cried its Only Tear is published in paperback by Umuzi. ISBN 978-1-4152-1008-6 Recommended Price R240.00. - Margaret von Klemperer

THERE will be a launch for Carol Campbell’s “The Tortoise Cried its Only Tear” on Tuesday, March 5 at Exclusive Books Gateway at 18h00 for 18h30. The author will be in conversation with Duncan Guy. RSVP events@exclusivebooks.co.za or 011 7980180