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    U.S. Premiere

    Despite stellar dancing and lavish sets, Houston Ballet's Aladdin doesn't really fly

    Theodore Bale
    Feb 23, 2014 | 9:16 am

    The orchestra members played with gusto. The dancers gave their all. And the complicated production, with its flying carpets, Chinese dragons, and smoke-filled genie lamps, went off without a hitch. Why then, didn’t everything add up to a stellar evening at the Wortham?

    Because the choreography lacks invention, and the scenario is inconsequential. David Bintley’s Aladdin is to classical ballet just what Wicked was to the great Broadway musical: A pretty, over-priced, and ultimately hollow spectacle.

    Six years ago, National Ballet of Japan premiered this three-act clunker in Tokyo. Thursday night, Houston Ballet offered the American premiere. Usually a thrilling occasion, this particular premiere makes my job as a critic very challenging. That’s because Houston Ballet is clearly at the top of its game. The quality of the dancing is nearly supreme. In his first decade here, artistic director Stanton Welch has brought the ensemble to very high standards, and it shows.

    David Bintley’s Aladdin is to classical ballet just what Wicked was to the great Broadway musical: A pretty, over-priced, and ultimately hollow spectacle.

    Why, then, does Houston Ballet want a work like Aladdin in its repertory?

    Could it have something to do with audience development? Is Welch hoping that young adults who saw Disney’s animated Aladdin in the early 1990s (or any of Disney’s unending sequels and television spin-offs) would be drawn to see the story realized as a ballet?

    I will say that the performance helped me think deeply about what works and what flops on the ballet stage. A great ballet needs a great score, right? Not always. Sometimes, good choreography covers the problem areas in the music.

    Petipa worked so much sophistication into Raymonda, despite Glazunov’s trite melodies. Musically, Giselle has some sublime moments but also plenty of dull spots from Adolphe Adam. Great choreography and great music are, of course, best friends. Petipa had Tchaikovsky, Balanchine had Stravinsky, and Forsythe has Thom Willems, whose pulsing pastiche for In the Middle, Somewhat Elevated is already a classic.

    Forgettable music

    Bintley, it seems, has Carl Davis. Davis composed Cyrano for the Birmingham Royal Ballet, and has composed for television (Pride and Prejudice, The World at War, and others.). His music for Aladdin is forgettable. Like a lot of heavy-handed film scores, Davis’ phrases are too dramatic for their own good, and my ears tired quickly from all that schmaltz brass and generic, pentatonic East-ness. Conductor Ermanno Florio and the Houston Ballet Orchestra did their best with it. Thursday night’s performance began at 7:30 and finished at 10:22, with two intermissions. That’s a long time to go with a mostly cloying score.

    Bintley’s scenario is a confusing blend of pan-Asian imagery and hokey pantomime. The intricate synopsis covers more than two pages in the program. Orientalism, of course, has been a problem in western performance since Oscar Wilde wrote The Sphinx, Verdi composed Aïda, and Fokine choreographed Le Dieu bleu and Scheherazade (the latter, much to the dismay of Rimsky-Korsakov’s widow), to mention only a few.

    I suppose I could have forgiven it all if the corps de ballets hadn’t emerged in the third act dressed in black burqas.

    I tried to imagine precedents for Bintley’s choreography, which is so plain here that it doesn’t ever quite materialize into what could be called a style. I thought of Rita Hayworth delivering her saucy “Dance of the Seven Veils” in the 1953 film Salome, a great example of Orientalist kitsch. And then I started to make a list of Bintley’s borrowings. The evil Mahgrib (danced emphatically last night by James Gotesky), for example, is a bit like Swan Lake’s Rothbart, Sleeping Beauty’s Carabosse, and The Nutcracker’s Drosselmeyer, all rolled into one character.

    The first act of Aladdin, with its numerous “cave of riches” dancers, seems but an empty echo of Balanchine’s deeply sophisticated Jewels, or perhaps the fairies in the first act of Petipa’s Sleeping Beauty. I thought also of Frederick Ashton’s Ondine, though nothing of Davis’ score reminded me of Hans Werner Henze. Bintley’s style is tentative paraphrase.

    I suppose I could have forgiven it all if the corps de ballets hadn’t emerged in the third act dressed in black burqas. Let’s be clear. In the early 1990s, Mark Morris wore a flowing black burqa for his mesmerizing Arabian solo in The Hard Nut. It was an intelligent move, commenting on gender and the western fetish of the Middle East. Morris had clearly read his Edward Said and he was adding something to it through dance. But Bintley, described in Margaret Willis’ program notes as “one of Britain’s most prolific and respected choreographers,” should know better. This isn’t the sort of scene any choreographer of the 21st century should celebrate.

    Joseph Walsh, in the title role, spends much of the evening running around and leaping. His estimable talents are underused in this silly story ballet, and I felt for him. Really, he did his best to make a go of it. Ian Casady as The Sultan and Karina Gonzalez as Princess Badr al-Budur are as lovely as ever. But it’s impossible not to imagine how the evening might have gone if they’d had something real to dance, something more worthy of their artistry.

    Karina Gonzalez and Joseph Walsh with artists of the Houston Ballet in Aladdin, choreographed by David Bintley

    Houston Ballet Aladdin February 2014 Karina Gonzalez and Joseph Walsh choreographed by David Bintley 4
    Photo by © Amitava Sarkar
    Karina Gonzalez and Joseph Walsh with artists of the Houston Ballet in Aladdin, choreographed by David Bintley
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    hail to the chief

    Iconic Houston sanctuary selects new leader to guide future growth

    Holly Beretto
    Aug 6, 2025 | 10:00 am
    Abdullah Antepli
    Photo courtesy of Duke University's Sanford School of Public Policy
    Abdullah Antepli has been named the new president of the Rothko Chapel.

    The Rothko Chapel, one of Houston’s most-recognized landmarks, has a new president. The chapel’s board of directors has named Abdullah Antepli to the role. He begins his tenure on September 1. Antepli succeeds David Leslie, who retired in June after 10 years at the Chapel.

    Antepli brings decades of stewardship, scholarship, and advocacy across higher education and the nonprofit sector to the role. He is a globally recognized leader in cross-religious and cross-cultural dialogue, with a deep commitment to pluralism and intellectual diversity, according to press materials.

    “It is with great excitement and a deep sense of purpose that I join the Rothko Chapel – a sanctuary where the sacred, the artistic, and the just converge,” said Antepli. “I am eager to walk alongside the Rothko Chapel family as we write the next chapter of its remarkable journey. At a time when the world is fracturing along religious, partisan, and ideological lines, the Rothko Chapel dares to offer a sacred space where art, silence, and justice meet, and I am humbled to help steward that space forward.”

    Antepli is a Turkish-born American imam and one of the few scholars working at the convergence of faith, ethics, and public policy. He currently serves as director of POLIS: Center for Politics at Duke’s Sanford School of Public Policy, where he is also professor of the practice of interfaith relations.

    He integrated the Civil Discourse Project into POLIS, broadening the center's scope and sharpening its focus on the civic and moral dimensions of public life. Antepli is also a senior fellow on Jewish-Muslim relations at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem, where he founded and co-directs the Muslim Leadership Initiative.

    Antepli led faith-based humanitarian and relief efforts in Myanmar and Malaysia, and served as Wesleyan University’s first Muslim chaplain. He was the associate director of the Islamic Chaplaincy Program and interfaith relations at Hartford Seminary, and served as Duke University's first Muslim chaplain and director of its Center for Muslim Life and later as its chief representative for Muslim affairs. He also held the position of associate director of the Duke Islamic Studies Center.

    He completed his graduate work at Hartford Seminary and his undergraduate studies at Ondokuz Mayis University in Turkey. He is the only Muslim chaplain to have delivered prayer at the House of Representatives, first in 2010 and again in 2017. In 2018, he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    “Abdullah’s spirit, values, and successes resonate deeply with the Rothko Chapel’s mission,” said Troy Porter, chair of the board. “We are confident that he will successfully implement the ambitious strategic plan we’ve just adopted, and that his leadership will guide the Chapel into its next chapter as a convening space for spiritual exploration, artistic expression, and the pursuit of justice.”

    Antepli joins the chapel at a time of change and bold plans. Last year, it was announced the chapel would spend $42 million on a campus expansion, adding new buildings just north of the existing Chapel on the other side of Sul Ross St., including an Administration and Archives Building, the Kathleen and Chuck Mullenweg Meditation Garden, and a new Program Center.

    Long a place for contemplation, the chapel shuttered after Hurricane Beryl tore through Houston last summer, causing millions in damage. It reopened last December, following much-needed repairs. Funds for the repairs came via a Bank of America grant.

    Founded by Houston philanthropists Dominique and John de Menil, the chapel was dedicated in 1971 as an interfaith, nonsectarian sanctuary. It is open every day of the year, free of charge.

    rothko chapelabdullah atepli
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