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    Unforgettable Ballet

    Houston Ballet Reveals all with ghostly revival and rousing spectacle in unforgettable program

    Theodore Bale
    Sep 26, 2015 | 2:00 pm

    Whenever the curtain rises on a Christopher Bruce ballet, I feel as if something crucial is at stake. In his world, the stage is far more than just a space where action unfolds. It’s rather a kind of tense arena, and the events often feel more like ritual.

    Bruce has always demonstrated a predilection for archetype, and when his ballets finish, you feel as if you’ve completed a wild journey through the collective unconscious. Impressively, Houston Ballet has 11 works by him in its repertory. The company first performed his stunning Ghost Dances in 1988 (the ballet had premiered in England seven years earlier), but due to music copyright issues, it has been in limbo for more than a decade.

    Set to a series of heartfelt South American folksongs recorded by Inti-Illimani, Bruce dedicated Ghost Dances to “… the innocent people of South America, who from the time of the Spanish Conquests have been continuously devastated by political oppression,” as he described in the program. I experienced deep emotions at the opening night performance.

    Story behind the story

    The story behind the creation of this singular work is extensive, and it includes Bruce’s association with Joan Jara, the wife of singer, composer, and poet Victor Jara, who had been tortured and executed during the Chilean military coup of 1973. Joan Jara had danced with the legendary Kurt Jooss Company, and I imagine that in this ballet, Bruce is also making some reference to her via Kurt Jooss’ great masterpiece The Green Table.

    Bruce has amplified the death figure of Jooss and cast three men (on opening night, the brilliantly fluid Ian Casady, Christopher Coomer, and Charles-Louis Yoshiyama) as skeletal ghost-figures. As the dance progresses, it seems these three are summoning the remaining cast of three men and five women to the grave.

    The movement bears some relationship to the rise-and-fall, and recovery-from-fall, style of José Limón, and the entire cast captured this feeling with skill and clarity. In its more simple sections, the ensemble works in blocks of unison phrases or basic line dances, and for the most part their interpretation was correctly understated and restrained.

    Of particular note was a short duet from Christopher Gray and Jacquelyn Long. Gray’s everyday necktie seemed magically transformed into a dog leash, and his horizontal trajectory across the stage featured short steps on his back “paws.”

    There was something tragic and poignant in his desperate solo, and it’s clear that he has become an interpretative artist.

    World premiere spectacle

    While Ghost Dances was the middle piece on a bill unimaginatively titled “Fall Mixed Repertory Program,” the big news of the evening was Garrett Smith’s spectacle and world premiere, Reveal. Smith has made a huge leap from his already successful Return, his first commission for Houston Ballet, set to a rousing orchestral score by John Adams. I would speculate that Smith could become a significant choreographer of ballets in the years ahead, if he can resist a few of his eccentricities (such as overuse of running) and avoid stealing too much from his own earlier works.

    Smith is evidently thrilled by speed, mass and volume. His two works for Houston Ballet take a handful of dancers and make them seem like a company of 50 or more. He likes sharp, athletic movement often imbued with a sense of ecstasy.

    I am impressed that he seems to pull a winning performance out of each and every dancer. In this work, as in Return, the cast showed no ambiguity or indifference. They were clearly fully committed to the piece.

    Reveal suggests that Smith has become familiar with the well-codified movement strategies of the great master William Forsythe. This is evident from his extensive use of mirroring, a common scheme in Forsythe’s early work, as well as his focus on an extremely fluid spine, something also quite evident in Jorma Elo’s ballets.

    But where Forsythe or Elo would allow simultaneous events to comfortably co-exist, Smith resorts to excessive use of unison phrasing. This makes it seem like he doesn’t quite have enough ideas for Philip Glass’ lengthy scores.

    Highly theatrical

    Having seen my first Philip Glass ballet more than 30 years ago, I thought the fad has passed, at least in the world of contemporary dance. However, Glass’ Double Concerto for Violin and Cello (first commissioned by Nederlands Dans Theater) his Tirol Concerto for Piano and Orchestra are stunning, highly theatrical works. Ermanno Florio brought a polished and inspired performance from the orchestra and soloists. But I think that Smith maybe bit off more than he could chew, and I would have rather he had focused on the overall form and made a shorter piece.

    Stanton Welch’s Tapestry opened the program, a nondescript and longish dance set to Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5. It gives the impression that it was not made for anyone in particular, without any specific intent. Most of the arrangement is symmetrical and played directly to the front of the house.

    Karina Gonzalez and artists of the Houston Ballet in Reveal.

    Karina Gonzalez and Artists of Houston Ballet in Reveal
    Photo by Amitava Sarkar
    Karina Gonzalez and artists of the Houston Ballet in Reveal.
    young-professionals
    news/arts

    your attention please

    Houston Grand Opera names Rice alum James Gaffigan its next music director

    Tarra Gaines
    Nov 6, 2025 | 9:00 am
    ​Houston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director
    Photo by Claire McAdams
    Houston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director

    Opera lovers in the audience for the Houston Grand Opera’s magnificent season opening production of Porgy and Bess didn’t know it, but they were hearing HGO’s future. James Gaffigan, the acclaimed conductor of the performance will no longer be called an honored guest to the company and our city; instead, he’ll make the Wortham Center his new home.

    HGO announced on Thursday, November 6, that Gaffigan will serve as the fifth music director in its 70-year history, leading the company alongside general director and CEO Khori Dastoor. He replaces Patrick Summers, who announced last year that he would step down as artistic and music director at the end of the 2025-26 season.

    When Gaffigan begins his term as music director designate for the 2026-27 season and then assumes the full role of music director in the 2027-28 season, he won’t find Houston an unfamiliar landscape. Though originally from New York, Gaffigan once lived here while earning his master’s degree from the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University.

    After his time at Rice, he quickly rose to international superstardom in both symphonic and operatic circles. He has conducted some of the greatest orchestras around the country, including the New York Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and many others. In Europe he has taken the podium at the London Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin, and more.

    In 2011, he made both his HGO and American operatic debut with the company’s production of The Marriage of Figaro. He has also become a very welcome guest conductor for national and international opera houses, including the Metropolitan Opera, Bayerische Staatsoper, Opéra National de Paris, Lyric Opera of Chicago, and more.

    For the past several years, he has made a home in Europe serving as the general music director of Komische Oper Berlin, and he recently completed his fourth and final season as music director of the Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía in Valencia, Spain.

    Even with such a strong global presence, this Rice Owl continues to migrate back to Houston, guest conducting the Houston Symphony several times. Last year, he lead the first-ever performance by the HGO Orchestra at the annual Eleanor McCollum Competition for Young Singers Concert of Arias.

    Gaffigan’s ties to Houston are so strong that back in 2011, CultureMap’s own society king and classical music expert, Joel Luks, pondered if Gaffigan might be an excellent candidate for Houston Symphony director upon Han Graf ’s retirement. Luks, who attended the Shepherd School at the same time as Gaffigan, lauded the maestro’s sense of musical timing, charisma, and spirit.

    \u200bHouston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director

    Photo by Claire McAdams

    Houston Grand Opera has named James Gaffigan as its next Music Director.

    “He seems to understand music-making in a macro level, presenting a cohesive interpretation, while allowing musicians freedom of expression,” described Luks, also noting Gaffigan’s ability to connect with musicians and audiences, alike.

    It turns out Luks’s prediction for a musical directorship for Gaffigan was only off by 14 years and about a theater district block, the distance from Jones Hall to the Wortham Center.

    “I always knew that the first post I would take in the United States as music director had to be the perfect fit,” Gaffigan said in a statement. “All the boxes needed to be ticked. As I considered which institution, which city, and which community aligned with my dreams and goals for an American institution, I found HGO to be my ideal partner. In my opinion, HGO is the most exciting opera company in the United States. It is rare to find such a healthy institution, with tremendous potential, and a solid foundation on which to build.”

    Gaffigan went on to reminisce that he has admired HGO since his early twenties.

    “When walking into the building, I get a sense of community and excitement for our art form and the importance it has in our lives. I feel the same from the people in the greater Houston area. Houstonians want great art. Under Khori Dastoor’s leadership, the company has flourished, and it has become clear to me that the sky is the limit. I can’t wait to return to this city and start our thrilling new chapter together.”

    Dastoor sings similar praises for Gaffigan.

    “To welcome James Gaffigan back to Houston, and to HGO, as our new music director represents the fulfillment of an ambitious dream,” stated Dastoor. “This fall, Houston audiences have had the incredible opportunity to witness his passion, electric energy, and mind-blowing artistry at the podium. I am overjoyed that today’s leading American conductor — who embodies a new generation of music-making at the highest level — has chosen to invest fully in this company. James was steeped in the art and culture of Houston on his way to finding phenomenal international success. His return is both a testament to our city and a reflection of HGO’s ascendance as a force in the global opera industry.”

    For those wanting to get a taste of that passion and energy Gaffigan will bring to his role as Houston Grand Opera music director, he conducts Porgy and Bess November 7 and 9.

    performing-artshouston grand operajames gaffigan
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