Parts in Suite Mar 9–Apr 7, 2018 Program Background

Parts in Suite Mar 9–Apr 7, 2018 Program Background

Parts In Suite Mar 9–Apr 7, 2018 Program Background Bach Cello Suites Music: Johann Sebastian Bach Choreography: Jorma Elo Set Design: Mikko Nissinen Costume Design: Charles Heightchew Lighting Design: John Cuff Cellist: Sergey Antonov World Premiere: Apr 30, 2015, Boston Opera House, Boston, Massachusetts In Creases Music: Philip Glass, “Four Movements for Two Pianos” (First and Third Movements) Choreography: Justin Peck Costumes: Justin Peck and Marc Happel Lighting: Mark Stanley Staging: Patricia Delgado World Premiere: Jul 14, 2012, New York City Ballet, Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga, New York Boston Ballet Premiere: Mar 9, 2018, Boston Opera House, Boston, Massachusetts Pas/Parts 2018 Choreography: William Forsythe Music: Thom Willems Scenic and Lighting Design: William Forsythe Costume Design: Stephen Galloway Technical Supervisor, Forsythe Productions: Tanja Rühl Staging: Jill Johnson Original Premiere: Mar 31, 1999, Ballet de l’Opéra de Paris, Palais Garnier, Paris, France Pas/Parts 2016 World Premiere: Jan 24, 2016, San Francisco Ballet, War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco, California Pas/Parts 2018 Boston Ballet Premiere: Mar 9, 2018, Boston Opera House, Boston, Massachusetts BIO: JORMA ELO, Resident Choreographer Finnish-born Jorma Elo was appointed Resident Choreographer of Boston Ballet in 2005. Elo has created more than 60 works for over 30 companies worldwide, including New York City Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, San Francisco Ballet, National Ballet of Canada, Bolshoi Ballet, Royal Danish Ballet, Royal Ballet of Flanders, Vienna State Opera Ballet, Stuttgart Ballet, Finnish National Ballet, Basel Ballet, and Norwegian National Ballet. Elo trained with the Finnish National Ballet School and the Kirov Ballet School in Leningrad. He danced professionally with Finnish National Ballet and Cullberg Ballet, and joined Netherlands Dance Theater in 1990, where he enjoyed a 15 year career. As Resident Choreographer of Boston Ballet, Elo has created many world premieres, including Carmen, Le Sacre du Printemps, Plan to B, Brake the Eyes, Bach Cello Suites, and the full-length Elo Experience. Elo’s From All Sides premiered in 2007 for Hubbard Street Dance Chicago to a commissioned score from Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s Mead Composer-in-Residence, Mark Anthony Turnage, conducted by Maestro Esa-Pekka Salonen. Vienna State Opera Ballet premiered his full-length A Midsummer Night’s Dream in 2010. Finnish National Ballet premiered Elo’s full- length Alice in Wonderland in 2016. Elo was awarded the Pro Finlandia Medal of the Order of the Lion of Finland, one of Finland’s highest honors, in 2015. He was awarded Moscow’s prestigious Benois de la Danse prize for best choreography in 2011 for his production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, commissioned by Vienna State Opera Ballet, and Slice to Sharp, a new version of the ballet created for the Stanislavsky Music Theatre. The Finnish Government awarded Elo with the 2012 Dance Artist Prize. The 2005 Helsinki International Ballet Competition awarded Elo their Choreographic Prize and he is the recipient of the Prince Charitable Trust Prize and the Choo-San Goh Choreographic Award in 2006. BIO: JUSTIN PECK, Choreographer Justin Peck is the Resident Choreographer and soloist dancer with the New York City Ballet. He began choreographing in 2009 at the New York Choreographic Institute. In 2014, after the creation of his acclaimed ballet Everywhere We Go, he was appointed as Resident Choreographer of New York City Ballet. He is the second person in the institution’s history to hold this title. Peck joined New York City Ballet as a dancer in 2006. As a performer, Peck has danced a vast repertoire of works by George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Peter Martins, Alexei Ratmansky, Benjamin Millepied, Christopher Wheeldon, and many others. In 2013, Peck was promoted to the rank of soloist. Justin has created over 30 ballets—16 of those for New York City Ballet. His works have been performed by Paris Opera Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, Miami City Ballet, Pacific Northwest Ballet, LA Dance Project, Dutch National Ballet, Joffrey Ballet, Houston Ballet, and Pennsylvania Ballet, to name a few. His collaborators include composers Sufjan Stevens, Bryce Dessner (The National), Dan Deacon; visual artists Shepard Fairey, Marcel Dzama, John Baldessari, and Jules de Balincourt; and fashion designers Mary Katrantzou, Humberto Leon (Kenzo, Opening Ceremony), Tsumori Chisato, and Dries Van Noten. In 2014, Peck was the subject of the documentary “Ballet 422,” which followed him for two months as he created NYCB’s 422nd original dance, Paz de la Jolla. In 2015, his ballet Rodeo: Four Dance Episodes won the Bessie Award for Outstanding Production. Peck choreographed the 2018 Broadway revival of Carousel. The production was directed by Jack O'Brien and stars Jesse Mueller, Joshua Henry, and Renée Fleming. Peck choreographed and consulted on the 20th Century Fox feature film Red Sparrow, starring Jennifer Lawrence and Joel Edgerton. The movie was directed by Francis Lawrence. BIO: WILLIAM FORSYTHE, Choreographer William Forsythe has been active in the field of choreography for over 45 years. His work is acknowledged for reorienting the practice of ballet from its identification with classical repertoire to a dynamic 21st century art form. Forsythe's deep interest in the fundamental principles of organization has led him to produce a wide range of projects including installations, films, and web-based knowledge creation. Raised in New York and initially trained in Florida with Nolan Dingman and Christa Long, Forsythe danced with the Joffrey Ballet and later the Stuttgart Ballet, where he was appointed Resident Choreographer in 1976. Over the next seven years, he created new works for the Stuttgart ensemble and other ballet companies worldwide. In 1984, he began a 20-year tenure as director of the Ballet Frankfurt, where he created works such as Artifact (1984), Impressing the Czar (1988), Limb’s Theorem (1990), The Loss of Small Detail (1991), Eidos:Telos (1995), Kammer/Kammer (2000) and Decreation (2003). After the closure of the Ballet Frankfurt in 2004, Forsythe established a new, more independent ensemble, The Forsythe Company, which he directed from 2005 to 2015. Works produced by this ensemble include Three Atmospheric Studies (2005), Human Writes (2005), Heterotopia (2006), I don’t believe in outer space (2008) and Sider (2011). Forsythe’s most recent works were developed and performed exclusively by The Forsythe Company, while his earlier pieces are prominently featured in the repertoire of virtually every major ballet company in the world. Forsythe has been commissioned to produce architectural and performance installations. These Choreographic Objects, as he likes to call these works, have been presented in numerous museums and exhibitions, including the Whitney Biennial (New York, 1997), the Louvre Museum (2006), the Wexner Center for the Arts (Columbus, 2009), Tate Modern (London, 2009), MoMA (New York 2010) and the Venice Biennale (2005, 2009, 2012, 2014) and the Biennale of Sydney (2016). In collaboration with media specialists and educators, Forsythe has developed new approaches to dance documentation, research, and education. His 1994 computer application Improvisation Technologies: A Tool for the Analytical Dance Eye, developed with the ZKM / Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe, is used as a teaching tool by professional companies, dance conservatories, universities, postgraduate architecture programs, and secondary schools worldwide. In 2002, Forsythe was chosen as one of the founding Dance Mentors for The Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative. Forsythe is an Honorary Fellow at the Laban Centre for Movement and Dance in London and holds an Honorary Doctorate from The Juilliard School in New York. Forsythe is a current Professor of Dance and Artistic Advisor for the Choreographic Institute at the University of Southern California Glorya Kaufman School of Dance. BIO: SERGEY ANTONOV, Bach Cello Suites Cellist Cellist Sergey Antonov enjoys a versatile career as a soloist and chamber musician. After winning the Gold Medal in the 2007 International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, Russia, Antonov has been touring extensively throughout Europe, Asia, North and South America performing in halls ranging from the Great Hall of Moscow Conservatory to Suntory Hall in Tokyo. He has collaborated with musicians such as Denis Matsuev, Bernadene Blaha, Kevin Fitz Gerald, Ekaterina Mechetina, Harve A’ Kaoua, Carl Ponten, Dora Schwartzberg, John Lenehan, Colin Carr, Cynthia Phelps, Martin Chalifour, David Chan, among others, as well as his permanent piano partner Ilya Kazantsev. The duo has recorded several CDs of traditional cello- piano repertoire as well as their own transcriptions, recorded in their CD album Elegy. Antonov is a member of the acclaimed Hermitage Piano Trio with Ilya Kazantsev and violinist Misha Keylin. In addition to being the 2007 Tchaikovsky gold medal winner for cello, Antonov has been a recipient of the 2008 Golden Talent Award by the Russian Performing Arts Foundation as well as garnering top prizes at the Justuz Friedrich Dotzhauer Competition, Germany, David Popper International Cello Competition, Hungary, American String Teachers Association in Detroit. His chamber ensemble performances have also brought him honors from the Lyrica Chamber Music Series as their “Young Artist of the Year”, and First Prizes from the Chamber Music Foundation of New

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