Homecoming ballet stars in Ballet Manila’s gala

By Ellen Tordesillas, VERA Files

There’s no sweeter applause than the ones coming from the hometown audience.

For the audience, there are no stars who shine brighter than those from home.

On Saturday, dance enthusiasts will have a rare treat of Filipino dance artists who are shining in the world stage perform together. Ballet Manila’s Lisa Macuja-Elizalde gathered at least seven multi-awarded Filipino dancers with different ballet companies overseas for a one-night gala concert.

The Saturday event is another variation of what Macuja-Elizalde has been doing the past three years: organizing ballet galas. In the past years, she gave Filipino audience Stars of Russian Ballet, the Singapore Dance Theatre gala entitled DUO and the World Stars of Ballet.

“This year, I decided to keep the gala close to home by inviting Filipino artists who have excelled abroad and bringing them here to dance for our local audiences,” she says.

The gala was inspired by shows Macuja-Elizalde herself performed in in the 1980s and 1990s, mounted by Ballet Philippines and Philippine Ballet Theater, and featuring Filipino dance icons working abroad and in the local scene.

Featured in Stars of Philippine Ballet are Candice Adea of Hong Kong Ballet, Christine Rocas of Joffrey Ballet, Aileen Gallinera and Eduardo Espejo of Ballet David Campos, Marcelino Libao of Hamburg Ballet and Jared Tan of Atlanta Ballet.

Macuja-Elizalde is partnered by Rudy De Dios of Ballet Manila, with Jean Marc Cordero joining the production courtesy of Ballet Philippines.

Eduardo Espejo and Aileen Gallinera of Ballet David Campos

Eduardo Espejo and Aileen Gallinera of Ballet David Campos


Also showcased are Ballet Manila, the Philippine Ballet Theater, and international guest artists Mayo Arii of Hamburg Ballet, Jennifer Drake and Brian Williamson of Dance Theatre of Tennessee, and Mauro Villanueva of Joffrey Ballet.

Chris Mohnani, former principal dancer of Ballet Manila and the Nashville Ballet, is coming as artistic director of his own ballet company, Dance Theatre of Tennessee.

Mohnani said it feels “great and surreal” to be back in Manila with artists from a company that he directed back in the US.

In 2004, while in Nashville,Mohnani founded the Asian American Performing Arts Society (AAPAS), a non-profit, tax-exempt organization that promotes and celebrates the beauty and diversity of Asian performing arts and artists. Upon his retirement in 2009, he transitioned AAPAS to be Dance Theatre of Tennessee (DTT), one of only two professional dance organization in Middle Tennessee. Applying the same foundation he learned from Ballet Manila and its leaders, DTT carries the mission of “ballet for the people.”

“Giving ballet class to US based artists in the very same place I learned all of it is humbling. Although the audience will just see two of them – they are going to share years of training and wisdom BM taught me, coupled with the experience and opportunities I got and learned while dancing abroad. Not a full circle as of yet, but a great start and a great opportunity and one that I hope won’t be the last,” he said.

Eduardo Espejo and Aileen Gallinera will dance the pas de deux from the opera Faust and from Mascara de la Muerte Roja, both choreographed by David Campos of Barcelona’s Ballet David Campos where the two are principal dancers.

Christine Rocas and Mauro Villanueva will perform two pieces from the Joffrey Ballet repertoire – Reflections by Gerald Arpino and Bells (Pas de Deux) by Yuri Possokhov.

Candice Adea and Jean Marc Cordero will dance in Diane et Acteon, by Agrippina Vaganova, taken from the ballet Esmeralda about the Goddess of the Hunt who falls in love with the brave hunter; and in Alden Lugnasin’s interpretation of a Neil Diamond and Barbra Streisand duet, You Don’t Bring Me Flowers.

From Ballet Manila, among the featured pairs are: Stephanie Eunice Cabral and Arnulfo Andrade in Wedding Pas De Deux from Act 3 of The Sleeping Beauty; and Dawna Mangahas and Elpidio Magat in Grand Pas Classique.

Rocas is excited about the dance event: “The word `gala’ just adds more pressure. It’s not just an ordinary show. 2005 was the last time I danced here, and it almost feels like I have something to prove but at the same time, no, because why think about that? Why not just dance? “

She assures the audience it’s going to be a good show. She said she is also looking forward to the other pieces that the other Filipinos that are coming will dance. “It’s gonna be fun. It’s a good learning experience to see what others will be sharing artistically — the steps, the techniques..,” she enthused.

The gala also includes the Philippine premiere of choreographies by John Neumeier, artistic director and chief choreographer of the Hamburg Ballet (Spring and Fall and Nocturnes); the two dance pieces of the Joffrey Ballet, Bells and Reflections; a new choreography by Ron Jaynario (La Femme, the second of a three-part work in progress for PBT, called The Tribe); and a new piece by Augustus Damian III for an all-male ensemble of Ballet Manila entitled Aramica.

Also not to be missed is George Balanchine’s Who Cares? set to the music of George Gershwin, featuring Dance Theatre of Tennessee’s Drake and Williamson.

The show is for the benefit of Ballet Manila’s scholarship program, Project Ballet Futures.(VERA Files is put out by veteran journalists taking a deeper look at current issues. Vera is Latin for “true.”)

(For ticket inquiries to Stars of Philippine Ballet and other information, please contact Ballet Manila at telephone numbers 525-5967 or 400-0292 or Ticketworld at 891-9999 or ticketworld.com.ph.)

Ballet Manila’s Sinderela: poignant Elgar and dazzling Prokofiev


By Pablo A. Tariman,VERA Files

Stepmother and stepsisters with Sinderela

Ballet Manila has an interesting twin-bill for its holiday treat and with contrasting flavors at that.

It opened with an austere, if, poignant Sonata (choreographed by Osias Barroso) to the full music of Elgar’s Sonata in E Minor, Opus 82 for violin and piano. Providing live music is British violinist Robert Atchison with Russian pianist Olga Dudnik on the piano.

Sub-titled “Love’s Awakening With A Kiss,” Sonata is a complicated piece to interpret owing to the cerebral nature of the the music. But you actually warm up to both the music and the choreography as the story unfolds. Danced by Hana Oh and Harold Salgado with a corps de ballet, the Sonata wove its own magic when the music and the choreography found their common link. Salgado is a very competent partner and a very supportive one. A highly lyrical dancer with a luminous face is Hanna Oh whose subtle acting gave you a romantic clue as to what the piece is all about.

It must be unsettling playing a three-movement sonata with the stage filled with thuds of dancers entering and exiting the stage. Even in this uncommon collaborative set-up, Atchison and Dudnik proved to be a tried-and-tested chamber duo. The first movement was a good opener for the piece; one soloist froze for the start of the second movement and all at once you could feel the poetry of the piece. The music didn’t have a hard time finding their way into the supple bodies of the dancers.

As it is, Sonata is a fitting tribute to the 150th birth anniversary of Sir Edward William Elgar.

One has seen several versions of Cinderella in the past based on the classic tale by Charles Perrault and the Grimm brothers. But Hazel Sabas-Gower’s story adaptation localized as Sinderela has many things going for it.

For one, the set design by Katsch Catoy and costume design by PJ Arañador easily set the mood of the story.

For another, the ballet proper opened with brilliant character actors (Jonathan Janolo as Traviesa the step-mom, Gerardo Francisco as Avaricia the lazy stepsister and Michael Divinagracia as the controlling stepsister) whose every move had the audience guffawing with every naughty move they had as they harass poor Sinderela played by Jennifer Rose Olayvar.

Talent search on television was realistically incorporated in this ballet complete with screaming fans, interviews with contestants and with male lead Al Prinsipe (Nazer Salgado) appearing on a showbiz TV interview.

Gower’s adaptation changed the setting of the grand ball to a dance audition pretty much like the myriads of talent search shows on television. Even in this setting, the choreography allowed breath-taking solo variations and grand pas which all the more highlighted the original flavor of the choreography.

Hana Oh as Tita Nia and nature enchantress is one dancer blessed with a beautiful body and an arresting face that can convey joy and sadness with the least effort. Her dancing – never blatant or showing off — revealed familiarity with the score. She is one big additional asset to Ballet Manila.

Sinderela choreographer

The acting and dancing challenges of Sinderela is no less daunting as in Swan Lake or Giselle. The solo variations and grand pas required no less and Salgado shone.

The Sinderella of Olayvar lived up to the acting challenge but it was easy to see in the last grand pas that the choreography required so much power and stamina and was bound to drain them. She managed beautifully but the big effort showed.

The other big attractions of the ballet are the superb ensemble dancing of the corps de ballet playing the roles of the Garden Spirits, the Time/Clock Spirits, the female auditionees and dance assistants.
From the way the audience reacted, one could gauge that this ballet is a winner.

True enough, this updated Sinderela by Hazel Sabas Gower is a show-stopper. Scene by scene, the ballet is as timely as last night’s talent search, the highly innovative choreography has the immense challenge of Swan Lake and Giselle and the dancing and acting of the stepsisters had audiences rolling on the floor with laughter. The popular showbiz inputs notwithstanding, this localized version of Cinderella managed to live up to the powerful Prokofiev score with aplomb!

We look forward to more choreographic gems from Hazel Sabas Gower!

“Sinderela” has its last performances December 8 and 9 at Aliw Theater at 10 a.m; 1 p.m.; 3 p.m.

(VERA Files is put out by veteran journalists taking a deeper look at current issues. Vera is Latin for “true.”)