George Balanchine, by his own admission, always admired jewels, a quality he attributed to his Georgian roots.
“I like the color of gems, the beauty of stones,” he wrote in “101 Stories of the Great Ballets.”When, in 1967, the curtain rose at New York City Ballet on his opulent triptych, known as the first full-length plotless ballet, it had no unifying title.
“Emeralds” possesses the fragrant earthiness and secrecy of nature; “Rubies” is heat and playfulness, with the games and posturing of a summer scape in New York City; and “Diamonds” casts a dazzling spell of cool refinement that wavers between soft and hard.
“Jewels,” as it came to be called, is an occasion as well as a ballet.
(The music was performed live, though before the show, members of the New York City Ballet Orchestra held a rally in front of Lincoln Center’s plaza to protest delays in contract negotiations.)
Persons:
George Balanchine, ”, Balanchine, Lincoln Kirstein, Suzanne Farrell, Allegra Kent, Patricia McBride, Edward Villella —
Organizations:
New York City Ballet, City, Lincoln Center, New York City Ballet Orchestra
Locations:
New, New York City, Lincoln