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Better than Baryshnikov? You be the judge

Corella Ballet's appearance at Meany Hall, which concludes tonight (May 21), is technically powerful and beautifully designed, and features a male dancer who spins faster than Mikhail himself.

Better than Baryshnikov? You be the judge
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Ashli Blow

Corella Ballet's appearance at Meany Hall, which concludes tonight (May 21), is technically powerful and beautifully designed, and features a male dancer who spins faster than Mikhail himself.

In her recently published history of  ballet, Apollo’s Angels, Jennifer Homans argues that ballet  is effectively dead, that today’s choreographers and dancers can’t  match the brilliance of their predecessors. She does single out Angel  Corella among a few others for their “larger vision and more sophisticated  technique,” but accuses them of wasting their talents on  mediocre new pieces or old workhorses.

Apparently, Homans hasn’t seen Corella  Ballet. As the ballet company demonstrated over  and over again in a triumphant performance Thursday night (May 19), this is a company of technically powerful, intensely  committed dancers led by Corella, whose artistic taste in the dancers  he hires and the choreographers he chooses is impeccable.

Corella has selected four very different  contemporary ballets for this beautifully designed program, which showcases  both the diverse talents of his dancers and some of the best dancemakers  working today. Although it’s almost impossible to single out one piece  over all the others given the consistently high quality of both the  dancing and the choreography, the highlight of the evening was clearly  the flamenco-inspired duet “Soléa,” which Corella performed with  his sister Carmen. From the moment he began to move, it was clear why  Corella is considered one of the greatest ballet stars on the world  stage today.

Corella has all the charisma you’d  expect from a dancer of his stature, but his persona never overpowers  the movement. Even when he spins faster than I have ever seen a male  dancer turn (including Baryshnikov, whom I saw frequently in his heyday),  it is the movement and not the personality that takes center stage.  The precision of Corella’s landings, the energy of his jumps, and the  elegance of his line provide a rare combination of pyrotechnics and  grace.

But this is not a ballet just for him. Carmen Corella is a wonderful  dancer in her own right, and Mariá Pagés has given her intricate flamenco-like  steps that she is able to pull off effortlessly while remaining on pointe.  More than bravado, however, “Soléa” explores the tender interplay  between a man and a woman, and the two Corellas bring a total emotional  connection to the movement and to each other.

Opening the performance, which repeats tonight (May 21) with a slightly different cast, was  Clark Tippet’s lyrical “Bruch Violin Concerto No. 1.” Created  for American Ballet Theatre, a company known for its eclectic style  and the varied backgrounds of its members, it is a ballet perfectly  suited to the different styles of Corella Ballet’s dancers. Structured  almost as a series of scenes plucked from various neoclassical ballets,  the work features several spellbinding pas de deux, along with  stirring ensemble sections that the Corella Ballet corps performed in  exceptional unison. Natalia Tapia’s dramatic flair, Fernando Bufalá’s  extraordinary elevation, and Momoko Hirata’s firecracker assurance  were particular standouts on Thursday night.

The other two featured works are by  Christopher Wheeldon, and both demonstrate once again why Wheeldon is  justifiably considered among the most inventive choreogaphers alive  today. Wheeldon created “For 4” for Corella and three other internationally known  male dancers, and it is, more than anything, a tribute to the technical  range of the male dancer. Whether slowly extending a leg or flying through  the air at breakneck speed, the four men — Dayron Vera, Fernando Bufalá, Aaron Robison and Yevgen Uzlenkov — embody both the artistic and athletic sides of dance and the ability  of each dancer to bring his own special quality to a role.

The program closer, “DGV:Danse à  Grande Vitesse,” is a fitting conclusion to a dazzling evening. Created  for England’s Royal Ballet and performed only by that troupe and Corella  Ballet, “DGV” uses the minimalist score Michael Nyman wrote for  the opening of the high-speed train route between Paris and Lille. With  Nyman’s propulsive music as a foundation, Wheeldon creates a series  of pas de deux, blended with ensemble dancing, that is as sharp  and piercing as a train racing between two urban centers. Although a  bit overlong, “DGV” pushes the dancers into overpitched, sculptural  shapes that showcase the elongated line of the Corella Ballet dancers.  Natalia Tapia made an especially strong impression once again with her  total commitment to the music and the mood.

With all of its accomplishments, the  most remarkable thing about Corella Ballet is how quickly this troupe  has cohered into a unified company of the first rank. That Angel Corella  has been able to manage this while maintaining a performing career that  continues to dazzle audiences around the world is nothing short of amazing.  If we needed any proof that ballet is as alive and relevant today as  it was hundreds of years ago, Corella Ballet provides it.

Note: Besides repeating his performance  in “Soléa” tonight, Angel Corella is also  scheduled to appear in “DGV.”

If you go: Corella Ballet Castilla  y León, tonight (May 21) at Meany Hall, University of Washington. Tickets cost  $46, ($43 subscribers, $44 UW faculty/staff/alumni, $20 students) at the  UW Arts box office, 3901 University Way N.E., by phone (206-543-4880 or 800-859-5342), or online.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal