In 1974 Jerome Robbins premiered an enigmatic choreographic work, “The Dybbuk,” for New York City Ballet. A collaboration with Leonard Bernstein, it was based loosely on the play of the same name by S ...
"At this point, I've got a dead body I'm not sure about. How do we get him off the stage? The man who originally performed it is, unfortunately, no longer with us." Problems, problems. May that ...
Contemporary resonances abound for the century-old play The Dybbuk by S. An-sky, as a new collection of research articles implies. Israeli director Diego Rotman, one of the contributors, even notes ...
NEW York City Ballet’s revival of “Dybbuk” Friday night was more like a resuscitation – a return from the dead. And after all that, it may not even have been worth the trip. This 1974 ballet was ...
The idea of a ballet based on S. Ansky’s famous Yiddish play The Dybbuk didn’t possess Jerome Robbins the way the demonic wandering soul of the title possesses his promised bride, but it was something ...
IT’S easy enough to see why Helgi Tomasson appreciates Jerome Robbins’ “Dybbuk,” which San Francisco Ballet revived Tuesday night at the War Memorial Opera House as part of subscription program no. 6.
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