Spring Mix is a thrilling program that pairs iconic George Balanchine neoclassicism with daring new works by today’s leading ballet visionaries.
The program opens with Balanchine’s Tschaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 2, created in 1941 as an homage to the spectacle and grandeur of the Russian Imperial ballet tradition. In a commissioned world premiere, Tiler Peck—acclaimed ballerina and emerging choreographer—brings her distinctive artistic voice to Miami City Ballet.
Completing the program is Rodeo: Four Dance Episodes by Justin Peck, who captures the American spirit with his signature blend of athletic movement, ensemble interplay, and theatrical flair.
Let the momentum and excitement of these choreographic voices carry you through the night.
An abstract take on Aaron Copland’s well known Americana score, Rodeo: Four Dance Episodes pairs a lone woman with a cast of 15 jocular, energetic, and charming male dancers for a fresh and thrilling adventure that audiences adore.
Resident Choreographer and Artistic Advisor Justin Peck’s Rodeo: Four Dance Episodes, with a cast of 15 male dancers and a single female principal dancer, was his eighth work for New York City Ballet. In 1942, the composer Aaron Copland wrote the iconic ballet score Rodeo for choreographer Agnes de Mille. Copland later rearranged the original score for symphony orchestra, which Peck has used for his ballet. Upon the ballet’s premiere in February 2015, Peck wrote, “In creating the choreography, I divided the score into four distinct choreographic interpretations: The first movement takes on a kinetic, engine-like quality; the second movement elicits recurring weather patterns; the third movement calls to mind the synchronicity illustrated by two birds in flight; and finally, the concluding fourth movement communicates a sense of total vitality, bright fervor, and healthy competition.”
Balanchine’s Tschaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 2 is an ebullient outpouring of classical technique with tiaraed tiers of corps de ballet dancers.
Balanchine first staged Tschaikovsky’s Second Piano Concerto for the American Ballet Caravan in May 1941. Under the sponsorship of the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs under the Roosevelt administration (Nelson A. Rockefeller, coordinator), the Caravan undertook a tour of South America, performing in every country except Paraguay and Bolivia.
It was felt that a classical ballet should be presented, but instead of reviving an existing ballet, Balanchine created a work in the style of Petipa and the Petersburg tradition. The decor, by Mstislav Dobuzhinsky, showed the Neva, with the Peter-Paul Fortress, framed in the Imperial blue and white of the Winter Palace.
Ballet Imperial was revived in 1964 by New York City Ballet with new decor by Rouben Ter-Arutunian, who followed a similar visual approach. In 1973, Balanchine felt that the allusion to Imperial Russia was outmoded, and that the ballet could stand in relation to the music alone. The title was changed, the decor eliminated, the costumes simplified, and some of the pantomime in the second movement altered—but the choreography as a whole remained the same.
For the 2019 Winter Season, NYCB Director of Costumes Marc Happel has redesigned the costumes. Created with the generous support of Swarovski, the costumes and headpieces feature thousands of Swarovski crystals.
The Ballet Imperial was first staged for New York City Ballet by Frederic Franklin on 15 October 1964 at the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center. Balanchine restaged it in 1973 with its current title. Traditional tutus and scenery in the grand Russian style were used through the 1964 NYCB revival; since 1973 it has been danced with chiffon skirts designed by Karinska and without scenery. Balanchine said that the ballet is "a contemporary tribute to Petipa, 'the father of the classical ballet,' and to Tschaikovsky, his greatest composer."