Tamara Rojo and María Pagés dance for Europe

Published: 8 January 2010 y., Friday

Balerinos
Classical dance versus flamenco. Tamara Rojo and María Pagés offer two very different interpretations of movement, although their choreographies share a common air of beauty and sincerity. The ballerina and the flamenco dancer will have the honour of playing the leading roles at the Inaugural Gala of the Spanish Presidency of the EU (Teatro Real, Friday 8 January, 18:45 pm), which will be a transcendent reflection of European creativity.

The repertoire of Tamara Rojo includes 'Carmen' by George Bizet, with choreography by Roland Petit, and 'Don Quijote' by Marius Petipa, with music by Ludwig Minkus. The ballerina will be accompanied by the complementary and masculine dance of Lienz Chang and Romel Frómeta, leading performers from the Cuban school of dance.

María Pagés is performing three of her own dances with music provided by members of her company. At the end of the performance they will be joined by the Spanish National Choir to sing the European anthem.

Both artists performed on the same stage in the Teatro Real in 2008 at the Ellas Crean festival, one of the leading European events for women's culture and creativity, which will also form part of the cultural program of the Spanish Presidency.

The gala will begin with the handover of the European Presidency and will end with the release of thousands of balloons from various locations around Madrid, turning the sky above the city blue

A Presidency for the people

The inaugural gala will be broadcast live on the Presidency Web site and by Televisión Española (TVE) on Channel 2 and TVE International. The Puerta del Sol and Plaza de Colón will also be fitted with giant screens to allow residents and visitors to Madrid to enjoy the show.

This extensive media coverage reflects the Spanish Presidency's firm commitment to transmitting and sharing the spirit of Europe among its people. Europe will once again be at the heart of Madrid.

Tamara Rojo

After her first steps at the Víctor Ullate Ballet, Tamara Rojo (Montreal, 1964) achieved her first international success at the Paris Competition, and shortly afterwards joined the English National Ballet, and then the Royal Ballet in London, where she has been the principal dancer since 2000.

She received the Gold Medal of Merit for Fine Arts in 2000 and the Prince of Asturias Prize for Arts in 2005. Today, Tamara Rojo's dancing is both universal and European thanks to her outstanding performances, from Swan Lake to Giselle, including Romeo and Juliet, Don Quijote, Manon and the admired ballets of Kenneth McMillan and Frederick Ashton.

María Pagés

The dancer and choreographer María Pagés (Seville, 1963) is at the height of her artistic and creative career. With her personal interpretation of flamenco, this dancer 'with infinite arms' performs her art with no boundaries and is praised time and again by the whole of the dance world.

María Pagés won the National Dance Prize and the ADE Choreography Prize in 1996, and has designed numerous dances since creating her own company in 1990, from 'Sombra' to 'Flamenco y Poesía', including 'Ilusiones FM' and 'Flamenco Republic'. She has also collaborated with Plácido Domingo and her latest creation alongside the choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui is the show called 'Dunas'.


 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Culture (Re)Discovery Programme

In 2009, the Air of Architects team is coming back to Vilnius! more »

Restoring the Berlin wall

Almost twenty years after it fell - this chunk of the Berlin Wall still stands in the centre of the German capital. more »

Picasso of the Carribean

Jose Fuster -- a proud product of the Castro era -- works out of a studio in the Jaimanitas section of Havana -- where mosaics and sculptures have created an island of brightness among the city's humble suburbs. more »

„ARTscape“ presents arts from Austria

The presentation of Austria within the “ARTscape“ programme is special for Austrian city Linz like Lithuania’s Vilnius is awarded the title of the European Capital of Culture this year. more »

Sand tiger

The 15 foot long tiger is the design of world reknown sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik. He wanted to thank Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar for dedicating his 42nd Test century to tiger conservation. more »

Elegant art of prize patisserie

An international patisserie competition is held in Tokyo. more »

Peter Eötvös opera Love and Other Demons

The premiere of Peter Eötvös’ latest opera, Love and Other Demons (based on the novel by Gabriel Garcia Marquez), will be presented as the co-production by culture institutions of two countries. more »

Debut films from New Europe will compete in the 14th Vilnius International Film Festival (42060)

14th Vilnius international film festival starting on 19 March this year for the first time in its history will introduce the competition programme “New Europe - New Names”. more »

Beijing's 798 Art Zone protest

Hao Guang, a French-Chinese painter, who moved into 798 five years ago and now has trouble making ends meet. more »

Gandhi's grandson tries to stop sale

More than 60 years after Mahatma Gandhi`s assassination, his great-grandson, Tushar Gandhi, is appealing to stop an auction of his grandfather's surviving possessions from going ahead in New York. more »