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Post by foxa on Mar 19, 2017 10:09:45 GMT
Caught this last night and would definitely recommend. I can see that on another thread people are recommending a Crystal Pite piece. Her new ballet s the last of the three ballets in this programme and is amazing. Even those who don't usually like ballet will like this. There are over 30 dancers on stage, and the group movement (depicting a journey, hope, despair of refugees) is unlike anything I've seen before. It's called 'Flight Pattern' and one of the pleasures is watching the unexpected patterns/rhythms of movement. The second ballet, After the Rain, was also beautiful - so tenderly danced.
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Post by jadnoop on Mar 19, 2017 17:56:50 GMT
Caught this last night and would definitely recommend. I can see that on another thread people are recommending a Crystal Pite piece. Her new ballet s the last of the three ballets in this programme and is amazing. Even those who don't usually like ballet will like this. There are over 30 dancers on stage, and the group movement (depicting a journey, hope, despair of refugees) is unlike anything I've seen before. It's called 'Flight Pattern' and one of the pleasures is watching the unexpected patterns/rhythms of movement. The second ballet, After the Rain, was also beautiful - so tenderly danced. I've got tickets for this later in the week and can't wait. Incidentally, you haven't discussed the first ballet, Human Seasons, in your comment. Does this means you weren't so keen on it? There seem to have been some pretty negative reviews towards that part.
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Post by foxa on Mar 19, 2017 18:09:45 GMT
I enjoyed the whole evening. You know sometimes it just comes together in all sorts of ways - I was with a friend who was so happy to be there and is such good company, we had inexpensive stalls circle seats which were amazing value, the intervals were the perfect length to catch up...it was all super pleasant.
I liked all three pieces. The first ballet, Human Seasons, was very good - some fascinating holds/lifts, Sarah Lamb- lovely as always, and really beautiful dancers (like works of art, so perfect) - some of whom were new to me. But it was more technically impressive, while the other two packed an emotional punch. I understand that Nunez and Soares were wonderful in the pas de deux in 'After the Rain' for the opening. We saw Zenaida Yanowsky (who is retiring soon) and Reece Clarke and adored them. There was something about the control and slow pace and mutual dependency of the dancing - I caught myself holding my breath. Loved it - and it was my friend's favourite. My favourite was Flight Pattern, but my friend thought they should have changed the order and ended with 'After the Rain' because 'I like a happy ending.' So, a long-winded reply - but Human Seasons was enjoyable but the other two were something special. I would like to see both of them again. Right now.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 20, 2017 11:09:09 GMT
So glad I got a ticket for this; I usually assume that the ROH is too expensive for me and never look at what's on, so was hugely surprised by how comparatively cheap the tickets were. Is it reasonably common that they would be set at this level?
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Post by jadnoop on Mar 20, 2017 12:23:12 GMT
So glad I got a ticket for this; I usually assume that the ROH is too expensive for me and never look at what's on, so was hugely surprised by how comparatively cheap the tickets were. Is it reasonably common that they would be set at this level? Although the top seats are super expensive, there are usually cheap tickets either further back (amphitheatre level), seats with restricted views and standing tickets (at the second level iirc). The price depends on the production, so modern ballets like this one or Woolf Works had the cheapest tickets at around £5, whereas the upcoming Mariinsky season starts at £10. I think it's also just a question of getting there early as, like anything, the cheap seats will sell very quickly for popular shows. By the way, the royal opera house does a Friday Rush thing like the National Theatre, where a number of cheaper tickets are held back and sold on each Friday, so it's worth keeping an eye out for that also, for sold out shows.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 20, 2017 12:47:58 GMT
So glad I got a ticket for this; I usually assume that the ROH is too expensive for me and never look at what's on, so was hugely surprised by how comparatively cheap the tickets were. Is it reasonably common that they would be set at this level? Although the top seats are super expensive, there are usually cheap tickets either further back (amphitheatre level), seats with restricted views and standing tickets (at the second level iirc). The price depends on the production, so modern ballets like this one or Woolf Works had the cheapest tickets at around £5, whereas the upcoming Mariinsky season starts at £10. I think it's also just a question of getting there early as, like anything, the cheap seats will sell very quickly for popular shows. By the way, the royal opera house does a Friday Rush thing like the National Theatre, where a number of cheaper tickets are held back and sold on each Friday, so it's worth keeping an eye out for that also, for sold out shows. Thanks for this - will look out for the modern productions where they are charging less! I know you can get cheap tickets but honestly I'd rather miss out than sit in crap seats, and the crap seats at the ROH are REALLY crap. It just gets so frustrating and uncomfortable that it's not worth bothering. The front stalls seats for this were amazingly good value though.
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Post by foxa on Mar 20, 2017 13:39:02 GMT
There is a huge variation in prices. We were sat in Row B of the side stalls circle for £21. These are padded bench sheets, but decent leg room and good views, although you were looking at a bit of an angle, but we thought they were good value. There is another modern mixed ballet programme coming up in a couple of months and the exact same seats are £38 - go figure (we decided to pass on them.) The other thing if you think you might go frequently is to look into their Friends scheme. I really enjoy the Friends rehearsals where seats are usually around £5 - £19. Sometimes if I just want to take a chance on something that's what I go for. But I can't handle anything farther back than L in the amphitheatre and haven't loved the slips, so sympathise, Abby. I tried to watch Falstaff from the slips at a Friends rehearsal and it was impossible. You weren't allowed to lean forward at all, so I could see about a quarter of the stage. At an early break, I decided to cut my losses and slip out. On the way out, the Front of House saw me leaving and asked if anything was wrong. I said I couldn't really see, so was going to have a sandwich. They were like 'no, no, you have to see it - it's great' and snuck me into the Grand Tier - it was fabulous! And they earned a lot of loyalty from me.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 20, 2017 13:53:01 GMT
There is a huge variation in prices. We were sat in Row B of the side stalls circle for £21. These are padded bench sheets, but decent leg room and good views, although you were looking at a bit of an angle, but we thought they were good value. There is another modern mixed ballet programme coming up in a couple of months and the exact same seats are £38 - go figure (we decided to pass on them.) The other thing if you think you might go frequently is to look into their Friends scheme. I really enjoy the Friends rehearsals where seats are usually around £5 - £19. Sometimes if I just want to take a chance on something that's what I go for. But I can't handle anything farther back than L in the amphitheatre and haven't loved the slips, so sympathise, Abby. I tried to watch Falstaff from the slips at a Friends rehearsal and it was impossible. You weren't allowed to lean forward at all, so I could see about a quarter of the stage. At an early break, I decided to cut my losses and slip out. On the way out, the Front of House saw me leaving and asked if anything was wrong. I said I couldn't really see, so was going to have a sandwich. They were like 'no, no, you have to see it - it's great' and snuck me into the Grand Tier - it was fabulous! And they earned a lot of loyalty from me. Ah, bless them, I like enthusiastic front of house staff! Have considered the friends programme in the past just for the rehearsal seats, but I can't get any info about when the Friends rehearsals take place. I assume during the day? - it seems too good to hope that they would be evenings/weekends.
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Post by foxa on Mar 20, 2017 14:00:53 GMT
Yes, unfortunately most are during the week and early. I was going to try to do a clever screenshot for you, but don't know how to upload that. Of the current 9 or so on sale (which covers two booking periods Spring and Summer), two are early weekday evenings (5 pm and 6.30) and two are Saturday mornings (11 a.m.) The rest are during the week Monday - Friday. When I was working Monday - Friday, I found there was usually at least one rehearsal per booking season I could do, so probably about 4 across a year.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 20, 2017 16:02:24 GMT
That's really helpful, thanks - I'll definitely look into it!
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Post by jadnoop on Apr 9, 2018 10:34:34 GMT
Really glad to see that the wonderful Flight Pattern is being revived next year (http://www.roh.org.uk/mixed-programmes/within-the-golden-hour-new-sidi-larbi-cherkaoui-flight-pattern).
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Post by Coated on Apr 12, 2018 0:27:05 GMT
I tried to watch Falstaff from the slips at a Friends rehearsal and it was impossible. You weren't allowed to lean forward at all, so I could see about a quarter of the stage. At an early break, I decided to cut my losses and slip out. I love the upper slips AA or CC for opera at the ROH, and if anyone tries to tell you you can't lean, you can tell them where to go (as long as you don't hang over the edge that is). Anything above seat 21 will give you 3/4 to nearly full (seats 1-4) view of the stage and the sound and price are lovely. obviously some opera directors might choose to stage everything in the left or right most part of the stage so you might still miss out, but that doesn't happen to often.
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Post by jadnoop on May 10, 2019 10:33:02 GMT
The Royal Ballet's current triple bill includes Crystal Pite's fantastic Flight Pattern from a couple of years ago. If anything, it was even better than I remember it. Last time we were sat high up, and this time we splashed out for orchestra stalls tickets which I'm sure helped. The piece was moving, emotional, beautiful and the new perspective just amplified everything, providing a sense of the layers of dancers that wasn't visible from up high, and giving an overwhelming sense of scale to the sets and lighting. I'm still decompressing from this, and can't recommend it enough.
The rest of the triple bill was mixed for me: I enjoyed most of the pieces in Within the Golden Hour, but I really wasn't keen on Medusa.
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Post by jadnoop on Nov 10, 2020 9:35:36 GMT
For anyone wanting to get a bit of online ballet back in their lives, Royal Ballet have started streaming a number of performances. Currently, they're showing the wonderful Flight Pattern www.roh.org.uk/tickets-and-events/flight-pattern-stream-details I'm definitely looking forward for the opportunity to see this again. However, it's fairly dark & emotional, so perhaps not appropriate if you're looking for something uplifting.
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Post by jadnoop on Oct 19, 2022 13:09:52 GMT
Haven't seen a thread about this, but Royal Ballet have just started a new 3-part ballet called 'Light of Passage' which is Crystal Pite's expansion of her piece Flight Pattern from a few years back. www.roh.org.uk/tickets-and-events/light-of-passage-detailsLight of Passage started yesterday, and was very good. Having loved Flight Pattern in 2017 and 2018, I was nervous that any additions might feel disconnected or an afterthought, but the 3 parts seemed to fit together really nicely for me. The first part is Flight Pattern and, as far as I can remember, pretty much unchanged, so as hypnotising and moving as it was when it premiered 5 years ago. Part 2 was similar, albeit at a slightly smaller scale, and with child (~10 years old) dancers involved. While I enjoyed this, and it had the same feel and rhythm as Flight Pattern, some bits felt a little uninspired/flat (repeated jogging on the spot which felt a bit silly, and some religious imagery that felt very well-worn for example) so it didn't quite click with me as much. Part 3 on the other hand was wonderful. This had two older dancers alongside the wider corps and seemed to be about life, memory and mortality. A beautiful and moving finale to the evening. If FP didn't click with you, then this evening probably wouldn't do anything to change that. But if you enjoyed Flight Pattern I'd highly recommend seeing Light of Passage.
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Post by Dawnstar on Oct 19, 2022 17:31:20 GMT
If FP didn't click with you, then this evening probably wouldn't do anything to change that. Which is exactly why I haven't booked for Light Of Passage. Flight Pattern was one of the longest half hours I've ever spent in a theatre - I was bored rigid within about 2 minutes - let alone adding another half hour. I couldn't even amuse myself trying to work out who was who because everyone was costumed the same & mostly moved in one big amorphous mass.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 19, 2022 20:13:38 GMT
I find Pite inspires a bit more love it or hate it than many modern choreographers because of the massing she uses in a fair percentage of her numbers. I enjoy it, but a little of it goes a long way.
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