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NYCB Vol. 8 No. 18 - Apollo
“In Apollo’s second variation, Balanchine hit on a startling image to convey that the god is conscious of his divinity. Twice Apollo...

Lauryn Johnson
Oct 7, 2023


NYCB Vol. 8 No. 16 - Apollo
“Ballet began when Terpsichore touched Apollo’s finger, as on the Sistine ceiling God touches Adam’s, and inspired a pas de deux in which...

Lauryn Johnson
Oct 5, 2023


NYCB Vol. 4 No. 13 - Apollo
Balanchine choreographed Apollo in 1928 when he was just 25 years old. In 1951, he revived it and cast André Eglevsky (aged 34) as...

Lauryn Johnson
Sep 30, 2022


NYCB Vol. 3 No. 31 - Apollo
(6/6) “I think Apollo is the best role for a male dancer that has ever been choreographed, and I think it has more in it than any dancer...

Lauryn Johnson
May 14, 2022


NYCB Vol. 3 No. 29 - Apollo
(5/6) In his 1936 autobiography, (affiliate link) Stravinsky wrote of the original 1928 decor and costumes for Apollo: “I did not see eye...

Lauryn Johnson
May 13, 2022


NYCB Vol. 3 No. 24 - Apollo
(3/6) Balanchine on the idea that his ballets are abstract: “No piece of music, no dance can in itself be abstract. You hear a physical...

Lauryn Johnson
May 10, 2022


NYCB Vol. 3 No. 23 - Apollo
(1/6) “Ballet began when Terpsichore touched Apollo’s finger, as on the Sistine ceiling God touches Adam’s, and inspired a pas de deux in...

Lauryn Johnson
May 9, 2022
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