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The Royal Ballet College Reunites Onstage

LONDON — When students at the Royal Ballet School scattered to their homes around the globe during the first British lockdown last spring, classes went virtual and, at first, proved quite tricky.

It was not just about time differences, with Chinese, Australian and Japanese students, among others, not keen to get up in the middle of the night to meet classmates on the virtual barre during the day in Europe.

Technical issues also arose as the recorded music that teachers played was out of sync. “When I would look at my screen, we’d be doing grand battement and our legs would be in different positions, and everyone was on totally different timings,” recalled Ava May Llewellyn, a 19-year-old British ballerina who has been at the school since she was 11. “And the teachers would always say: ‘Yeah, really good work. However, musicality wise, I don’t really know who is right.’”

But things improved.

By England’s second (October) and third (December to March 2021) lockdowns, teachers and students had reconfigured their digital settings, allowing them to work with a live accompanist, and living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens and back porches around the world had become makeshift dance studios.

Next week, the students’ hard work during hybrid training — they returned to in-person teaching in early March — will be on display at their annual summer performance on the main stage at the Royal Opera House. On Saturday, for the first time in two years, 88 of the 210 the dancers will be able to perform before a sold-out, socially distanced audience.

This year’s showcase, eagerly awaited because the pandemic canceled last year’s, includes classical as well as contemporary works like “Elite Syncopations,” which the choreographer Kenneth MacMillan created for the Royal Ballet in 1974.

Founded 95 years ago by the dancer and choreographer Ninette de Valois, the Royal Ballet School is the official training home of both the Royal Ballet, headquartered at the Royal Opera House, and the Birmingham Royal Ballet. Over the years, both ballet companies have drawn a majority of their dancers from the school’s graduates.

In an email, Kevin O’Hare, director of the Royal Ballet, called the showcase “a fantastic opportunity to witness some of the most exciting upcoming talent in dance today,” and Caroline Miller, chief executive of the Birmingham Royal Ballet, said the school’s “excellent classical training has developed what is now celebrated globally as ‘the English style.’”

Dancers who are 11 to 16 live at the lower school, on the outskirts of London; others, 16 to 19, are at the upper school, linked by a footbridge to the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden.

Each class year has about 30 students, almost evenly divided between boys and girls. By the time of the final show on July 10 — which this year will feature only the older students — the school will have put on 32 shows in various venues around London, mostly just for parents and school supporters.

Famous graduates of the school include Margot Fonteyn, Darcey Bussell, Marianela Nuñez and Sergei Polunin. “A lot of people really aspire to go there,” said Clark Eselgroth, 18, who went home to North Carolina during the first lockdown. “I grew up watching videos of the Royal Ballet performing, so I always thought that was my dream.”

Like a number of international students during lockdown, Mr. Eselgroth was not able to be in all the same classes as his year group or to have his regular teacher. “But I had other teachers that I may not have had as much, which was really great,” he said. “The more eyes on you for different things, the more hopefully you will grow.”

Ms. Llewellyn, too, found a bright side in isolation. “I definitely learned to be driven, self-motivated and able to correct myself more,” she said about working at a small barre in her bedroom at her parents’ house in Bristol. “In the studio at school, you are doing all these exciting pieces of rep” so there might not be time to think about working on “these tiny details.”

The teachers also found some fulfillment. Ricardo Cervera said that digital instruction was “unchartered territory for everybody,” but that there were surprising benefits. Not only were students forced to go back to basics — most did not have space at home for moves like jumping and pirouettes — but they also focused more on things like Pilates and strength training.

“By the time we got back to school, we could fly and move forward much faster,” said Mr. Cervera, a former first soloist with the Royal Ballet and an alumnus of the school. “All the basics — the turnout, the placement, all of their alignment — we had so much time to work on. And actually, as a result, I saw real progress in their technique, coming back really strong and confident about themselves in their own ability.”

He added that the school might incorporate some of the digital learning as a tool for reinforcing the basics of ballet.

While all the dancers were eager to get back into the studio, the school’s health care team stepped up to assess, with the teachers, how to ease the dancers back in without injuries and care for their mental health as well.

“It was a bit of a shock to begin with,” Ms. Llewelyn said of returning, “but you know, it does come back quickly.”

Mr. Eselgroth, who will be joining the youth company of the Finnish National Ballet in the autumn, said he had butterflies when the students recently started costume rehearsals for the showcase. “It was like, ‘Wow, this is why I do this,’” he said, “and this is such a source of happiness for all of us.”

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Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton Are Formally Married

Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton have officially tied the knot! According to People, the couple married Saturday at Blake’s Tishomingo Ranch in Oklahoma. Gwen and Blake previously sparked marriage rumors after Gwen also recently had an intimate bridal shower with family and friends on the 12th. The “Let Me Reintroduce Myself” singer also recently had an intimate bridal shower.

Gwen and Blake first met as trainers The voice in 2015 and began a romance following their respective divorces from Gavin Rossdale and Miranda Lambert. Gwen also shares three children with Gavin, 15-year-old Kingston, 12-year-old Zuma, and 7-year-old Apollo. Blake asked the question at their Oklahoma ranch in October 2020, and they’ve been going strong ever since. Ahead, see photos of Gwen’s glitzy new wedding ring.

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Met Opera Strikes Deal With Stagehands Over Pandemic Pay

The Metropolitan Opera has reached a preliminary agreement on a new contract with the union that represents its stagehands, which increases the likelihood the company will return to the stage after its longest shutdown in September.

The deal was reached early Saturday morning and the union plans to brief its leaders and members after the July 4th holiday, said a union spokesman, Local One of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. The union and the company declined to provide details of the agreement, which union members will have to vote on.

The company’s 300 or so stagehands were locked out at the end of last year due to disagreement over the duration and duration of the pandemic pay cuts. But the opera house desperately needs workers to prepare its complex operations if it is to reopen in less than three months. The pressure on the talks increased as the two sides negotiated for almost four weeks.

The Met, which claims it has lost more than $ 150 million in revenue since the pandemic forced its closure in March 2020, has called for substantial cuts in the wages of its union members. Peter Gelb, the company’s general manager, said that in order for the company to survive the pandemic and thrive, it will need to cut labor costs for these unions by 30 percent, which is effectively lowering pay by about 20 percent. Union leaders have opposed the proposed cuts, arguing that many of their members have been unpaid for many months.

A Met spokeswoman declined to comment on the deal.

Because of Local One’s lockout, the Met outsourced some of its stage construction work to Wales and California, a move that angered union members struggling during the pandemic. These sets were shipped to New York City, where it would take long hours to get the productions up and running.

Of the other two major Met unions, one representing the orchestra is still in negotiations. The contract with the other, the American Guild of Musical Artists, which includes choir members, soloists, and stage managers, saved money by modestly cutting salaries, moving members from the Met’s health insurance to the union, and reducing the size of the regular choir. The projected savings do not correspond to Mr. Gelb’s demand for a wage cut of 30 percent.

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10 Influences That Clarify Why ‘Concern Road’ Appears Acquainted

In the film trilogy “Fear Street”, a killer is on the loose. But this Netflix horror extravaganza not only leaves a sizable amount of blood, it also sprays the screen with a torrent of pop culture references.

The trilogy mainly takes place in the fictional town of Shadyside and is based on the books by RL Stine when the town was a village. (The episodes premier on three consecutive Fridays starting July 2.) The trilogy speeds through characters, moods, and genres, including teen romance and full-on slasher. The movies are in a way like a Netflix algorithm of styles all wrapped up in a bingeable package.

Amid the many twists and turns, the films follow the city and the oversized murder problem that it has had for generations. Is witchcraft involved? Could it be satan? Or are the people just mean? The director Leigh Janiak wants to keep the audience on their toes, at the same time hum catchy tunes and think of both Halloween and “Halloween”.

Below is a look at 10 influences horror and comedy fans alike can spot.

In the first film, set in 1994, mall culture (including B. Dalton) is alive and well. So it is almost every song a teenager or college student might have heard at the time. The needle drops bounce from Nine Inch Nails to Bush to, damn it, Sophie B. Hawkins. The songs are used a little the way Quentin Tarantino could do: to project the thoughts of characters, including lead actress Deena (Kiana Madeira), who in a moment of dissatisfaction with Garbag’s “I’m Only Happy When It Rains” is presented.

While there is no DeLorean here, the spirit of adventure and decades of understanding of revelation are reminiscent of Robert Zemeckis’ “Back to the Future” films. The third part of both trilogies takes us a long way back – to the Wild West in “Back to the Future” and to the season of the witch from the 17th century in “Fear Street”.

While the “Fear Street” films delve into all sorts of supernatural lore, knives and axes are the deepest elements of the threat. The 1978 summer camp backdrop can’t help but remind us of some good old-fashioned “Friday the 13th” Crystal Lake mayhem. The Netflix entry ticks off some creative kills that would make both Jason from those films and Michael Myers from “Halloween” proud.

“Fear Street” has a certain “meddling child” aspect to it, where a group of outsiders come together to solve age-old secrets. As the characters explore the city’s history and its often unsolved murders, you can feel Daphne and Fred from Scooby-Doo just outside the frame. Deena exudes Velma vibes and the film has its own shaggy in the character of Simon (Fred Hechinger), a slacker and trickster who finds himself in a few zoinks! Moments.

In recent years, a handful of celebratory romances with women have taken center stage, such as “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” and “Ammonite”. The trend was remarkable enough to be parodied on “Saturday Night Live”. Add Fear Street to the list of the emerging relationship between Sarah Fier (also played by Madeira) and Hannah Miller (Olivia Scott Welch) in 1666. The two keep their passions a secret, but their chemistry is as strong as the accents of time.

While there isn’t an ’80s entry on the series, John Hughes’ influence here is hard to shake, as Fear Street highlights and puts the underdogs at the fore. With her disaffected one-handed attitude, Deena is reminiscent of Allison Reynolds, Ally Sheedy’s dejected character from “The Breakfast Club”. And literal gamer Josh (Benjamin Flores Jr.) on Fear Street has a lot in common with Hughes creation Brian Johnson, played with classic geekiness from Anthony Michael Hall.

A horror staple, obsession – by ghosts, witches, or something worse – can add an interesting crease to a narrative. How can you argue with a murderer when he’s obsessed? (Answer: You can’t.) “Fear Street” has fun with this premise by turning some characters harmlessly into bloodthirsty ones from a moment on.

In the 1978 episode, the bloody prom prank from Stephen King’s novel (and the subsequent Brian De Palma film) stars in the mocked but resilient Ziggy Berman (Sadie Sink) who seeks revenge on those who wronged her the act one. But in “Fear Street” pig blood is replaced by a much stronger alternative. Nonetheless, Ziggy Carrie has qualities as an outsider who is often subjected to ridicule by other campers and who develops ways to defend himself. She doesn’t have to turn up the vengeance all the way to Carrie levels, however. The killer on the rampage can do that.

While the 1978 episode has its share of revenge and editing, there are plenty of exhilarating moments too. With its short shorts, rowdy advisors and crazy gimmicks, the film owes a lot of comedies such as Ivan Reitman’s “Meatballs”, David Wain’s “Wet Hot American Summer” and Ron Maxwell’s “Little Darlings”.

Janiak, the director, has said that her shooting style for the 1666 episode was inspired by Terrence Malick’s The New World. In fact, some of the open air ensemble scenes are reminiscent of the 2005 drama about the founding of Jamestown. But the rural setting, early English accents, and looming witchcraft are more reminiscent of “The Witch,” Robert Eggers’ meticulous and sober horror mystery from 2016. With dingy, candle-lit interiors and a dark but terrifying relationship with animals ( this time an uncomfortable handling of a pig instead of Eggers’ use of a creepy goat) this entry in “Fear Street” makes life in the 17th century look tedious and desolate.

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June Finch, Virtuoso Dance Trainer With a Humane Contact, Dies at 81

June Finch, a dancer, choreographer and teacher who specialized in the technique of the choreographer Merce Cunningham, imparting it to generations of students, died on June 18 in a hospital in Manhattan. She was 81.

The cause was lung cancer, her niece Amy Verstappen said.

Known for her sophisticated sense of rhythm, egalitarian spirit and fierce devotion to the Cunningham technique — a system of movement that Cunningham developed to prepare the body for his complex choreography — Ms. Finch began teaching at the Merce Cunningham Studio in Manhattan in the late 1960s.

Often one of the first instructors people encountered in their study of Cunningham’s work, she trained hundreds of dancers who passed through the studio, including many who went on to join the illustrious ranks of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. (Ms. Finch never joined the company herself.)

On March 30, 2012, three years after Cunningham’s death, as the school prepared to close, Ms. Finch taught the final class at its longtime home, on the light-filled top floor of the Westbeth Artists Housing complex in the West Village. About a hundred people came to dance and watch. “Thunderous applause greeted June when she entered to teach,” the choreographer Pat Catterson wrote in an account of the class for Dance magazine.

In the competitive environment of the Cunningham studio, where dancers were often vying for coveted spots in the choreographer’s company, Ms. Finch stood out for the attention she gave students regardless of their star potential. Ms. Catterson, who trained with Ms. Finch for decades beginning in 1968, said most teachers at the school did not offer individualized attention “unless you were company material in their eyes.”

“June was not like that,” Ms. Catterson said in a phone interview. “She was really there to teach everyone in the room.” That approach continued through her recent teaching at 100 Grand, a loft in SoHo where Ms. Finch offered Saturday morning classes until March 2020, when the pandemic forced her to stop.

The dancer Janet Charleston, also a respected teacher of Cunningham technique, attended those weekend classes, where no dancer was too seasoned to learn from Ms. Finch.

“It was so nice, after studying that technique for decades, that someone would still have this eagle eye and could give very, very experienced dancers really valuable feedback,” Ms. Charleston said. “She watched people like a hawk. She was just completely involved.”

In a concise letter of recommendation dated Jan. 9, 1989, Cunningham himself expressed a similar sentiment, summing up his esteem for Ms. Finch in a single sentence: “To Whom It May Concern: June Finch is a fine teacher, with a rare and direct concern for the individuals with whom she is working.”

June Gebelein was born on June 13, 1940, in Taunton, Mass., the youngest of three siblings. Her mother, Roberta (Seaver) Gebelein, did volunteer work for families in need. Her father, Ernest George Gebelein, ran a factory that made bags and boxes for silverware and was later the president of a bank. (His father was George Gebelein, a famed Boston silversmith.)

From ages 4 to 17, Ms. Finch studied ballet in Taunton and Provincetown. She also took piano lessons and, from her great-aunt, learned a bit of country folk dancing.

She attended Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, N.Y., where she earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in dance, studying with the revered dance composition teacher Bessie Schonberg. She began training at the Cunningham Studio in 1965 and within a few years joined the faculty. From 1969 to 1977, she danced in the company of Viola Farber, a distinguished founding member of Cunningham’s company, who started her own troupe in 1968.

She married Caleb Finch, a scientist who also played fiddle in a bluegrass band, in 1965. Ms. Finch — whose deep, melodic voice was a hallmark of her classes — occasionally sang with the band. She and Mr. Finch, who is now a prominent researcher of human aging, divorced in the early 1970s, when he accepted a job in California and she chose to keep dancing in New York.

From 1977 to 1982, she created work as the artistic director of June Finch and Dancers. Reviewing an evening of her choreography at the Cunningham Studio in 1979, Jennifer Dunning of The New York Times called it “a program of fluid and elegant dance, performed by an equally elegant company of eight men and women.”

One of those women was the choreographer Elizabeth Streb, who first took a class with Ms. Finch in the mid-1970s. Ms. Streb said in an interview that students flocked to Ms. Finch in part because of her ability to get to the root of a technical problem, in a rigorous yet humane way. “She knew what part to fix that allowed everything else to come into line,” Ms. Streb said.

Ms. Finch also reached dancers outside of New York, teaching and staging Cunningham’s work at universities around the country and internationally. She spent summers throughout her life on Cape Cod, where she developed a small but dedicated student following and organized performances in Provincetown.

A dancer of small stature and impressive power, Ms. Finch performed with choreographers including Margaret Jenkins, Meredith Monk and Jeff Slayton, in addition to her work with Ms. Farber. Ms. Jenkins, who also taught for many years at the Cunningham studio, described Ms. Finch’s dancing as “wild and clear at the same time.”

As a teacher, Ms. Jenkins added, Ms. Finch was deeply loyal to Cunningham’s aesthetic but, within that loyalty, “inserted her own wit and precision and rhythm that was uniquely hers.”

Ms. Finch is survived by her sister, Peggy Sovek, and her brother, Robert Gebelein.

Jennifer Goggans, the program coordinator for the Merce Cunningham Trust and a former member of Cunningham’s company, recalled the inspiring, almost daunting force of Ms. Finch demonstrating movement in class. “I remember her going across the floor and bounding through space,” she said, “and thinking to myself, ‘How am I going to do that?’”

Students were also drawn to Ms. Finch’s nuanced musicality, which infused the exercises she taught.

“A rhythmic phrase, when it’s right, has an inevitability to it,” Ms. Catterson said, “and she really understood that.”

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Lovecraft Nation Will Not Be Returning For a Second Season

Despite a terrifyingly good first season, Lovecraft Country has not been renewed at HBO. On Friday, the network announced its decision to end the series with season one. “We will not be moving forward with a second season of Lovecraft Country,” HBO confirmed in a statement. “We are grateful for the dedication and artistry of the gifted cast and crew, and to Misha Green, who crafted this groundbreaking series. And to the fans, thank you for joining us on this journey.”

Shortly after the news broke, Green, the showrunner, shared a glimpse of what she imagined season two would be about. “Wish we could have brought you #LovecraftCountry: Supremacy,” she tweeted, along with a screenshot of the next generation. “Thank you to everyone who watched and engaged.” According to the image, Lovecraft Country‘s “new world” is a reimagined “Sovereign States of America” divided by the Tribal Nations of the West, the Whitelands, the New Negro Republic, and the Jefferson Commonwealth.

A taste of the Season 2 Bible. Wish we could have brought you #LovecraftCountry: Supremacy. Thank you to everyone who watched and engaged. 🖤✊🏾 #noconfederate pic.twitter.com/BONbSfbjWg

— Misha Green (@MishaGreen) July 3, 2021

Judging by Green’s response and the cast’s past interview, this cancelation news came as a surprise. Although HBO does house a few limited series like The Undoing and Mare of Easttown, fans anticipated a continuation of Lovecraft Country. Perhaps we’ll see this world return on another network and another time, but for now, we’ll just have to imagine what hair-raising storylines Green had in store for future episodes.

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Retooling ‘La Bohème’ for Pandemic Performances

LONDON – It’s an evening of drinking and partying at Cafe Momus. A group of young men chats when a femme fatale tries to get their attention by jumping on tables and throwing underwear. But the nightclub isn’t as crowded as usual. There are only a few waiters and three guests are dining alone by the windows in the background.

It is the second act of a reduced production of Puccini’s “La Bohème” at the Royal Opera House. Given the pandemic restrictions, the orchestra has 47 players, up from the usual 74. The act starts with only 18 out of 60 choir members on stage, the rest singing from the grand piano and 10 (not 20) children on stage. There are four, not ten, waiters in the cafe.

“The café scene at the moment feels less like a ‘busy Belle Epoque café’ and more like a ‘lonely heart establishment’, simply because we can only have a limited number of people at Cafe Momus,” Oliver Mears, the opera director of the house said a few days before the premiere on June 19th. “It just adapts to the circumstances we faced.”

Mr Mears said opera is an art form that breaks any social distancing rule and focuses on “overcrowded pits,” large and dense crowds on stage, moments of intimacy between performers, singing (which can spread viral particles) and a sold-out audience leaves. “All of these things really work against us,” he said.

“If you were someone who hated opera and wanted to invent a disease that hits opera particularly hard, you would probably have something like Covid,” he added.

The global coronavirus outbreak has had a drastic impact on the performing arts and expensive opera has suffered badly. Many of the big houses in Europe have – in addition to the annual subsidies from taxpayers’ money – received government aid to avoid bankruptcy.

Closed for 14 months, the Royal Opera House received a government loan of £ 21.7 million (about $ 29 million) in December as part of a rehabilitation package for arts organizations. The house attracts an average of 650,000 people annually and has films and screenings in the UK and 42 countries around the world.

Last October, it sold a 1971 portrait by David Hockney of its former general manager David Webster for £ 12.8 million (about $ 18 million). But even that was not enough to avoid cuts, 218 employees were laid off.

Since the house reopened May 17, it’s been operating at roughly a third of capacity to provide socially detached seating – just over 800 spectators versus 2,225, Mr Mears said. He described the atmosphere in the house as “enthusiasm that was carefully subdued”. (Pandemic restrictions apply until at least July 19)

The Paris Opera, which also includes a world-famous ballet company, faced similar threats during the pandemic. In an interview, the director Alexander Neef said the opera house had received 41 million euros (about 47 million US dollars) in aid for 2020, leaving a deficit of 4 million euros.

This year, the Paris Opera is to receive a further 15 million euros in state aid to offset the projected annual loss of 45 million euros.

Updated

July 3, 2021, 2:56 p.m. ET

“Everyone is exhausted from more than a year of crisis,” said Neef. The Paris Opera reopened on May 19 and since the beginning of June has required all viewers to show a “Pass sanitaire” (health passport) confirming vaccination, a negative test or an immunity test according to Covid.

There was “a big appetite when we reopened,” he said on June 22, but “it’s a bit flat now,” be it because of the mandatory health passport or the good weather and the reopening of café terraces.

“There is still no perspective on how this can actually end,” he said. The hope was that “by autumn we will return to whatever this new normal will be. But there is currently no guarantee of that. We have no visibility. “

Opera houses in the United States, whose survival depends largely on private philanthropy and ticket sales, suffer even more. The Metropolitan Opera in New York, slated to reopen in September, announced on its website that it has lost $ 150 million in revenue as a result of the pandemic.

For the cast of “La Bohème,” which will end live on Tuesday but can be streamed online until July 25, the pandemic has only made the art form’s challenges worse.

Danielle de Niese, who plays Musetta, the femme fatale, said in an interview during rehearsals that without a pandemic it would be hard enough to do “the drunken table top” – hopping from one table top to another in a long, heavy dress to have to sing at the top of my throat. The coronavirus also means that we “have to do all of our samples with a mask, and that is a killer”.

“It’s incredibly challenging to sing in a material mask,” she said. “It basically kills your sound and it feels like you’re singing into a pillow.”

Ms. de Niese, a soprano, pulled out her special opera singer’s mask: a protruding face covering with an additional wire that made sure that she didn’t “go up my nose” with every breath. Masks were worn during the entire rehearsal period, and instead of the “natural camaraderie between colleagues” and between the acts, the performers had to sit on strictly distant chairs.

Ms. de Niese said she was concerned about “singers who are just starting out, who are not yet making the big bucks” and those who struggled financially during the pandemic had to take “a box packing job at Amazon.”

“We have to make sure that the next generation is still bringing their skin into play,” she said.

The next big show of the Royal Opera will be staged by Mr. Mears himself: a new production of Verdi’s “Rigoletto”, which will open this autumn. In his favor during a pandemic? It doesn’t have a choir, he emphasized.

Despite the prolonged downtime and logistical and financial problems, Mears said there was a silver lining: a regained appreciation for opera.

“We always thought this was something that would always exist, and now I think there is tremendous gratitude for the work we can do,” he said. “I don’t think we’ll ever take opera for granted again, and that can only be good.”

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In ‘Luca,’ a Character’s Incapacity Doesn’t Outline Him

In a small fishing boat on the glittering Mediterranean Sea, Alberto Scorfano’s eyes land on Massimo Marcovaldo’s right arm, which ends at his shoulder. Massimo catches him staring and Alberto’s eyes pop out. Massimo looks at his shirt sleeve, which is pinned up with a fishhook.

“A sea monster ate it,” he growls.

“Hm? What? ”Alberto gasps.

Massimo relaxes into a laugh. “Mom, no. That’s how I was born. “

He hauls in his fishing net, clamps a lost piece of driftwood between his teeth and slices it out of the net with his left arm.

“Whoah”, Alberto exhales.

This scene, which appears roughly in the middle of “Luca”, the latest Pixar film (streaming on Disney +), takes the rare step of depicting a character with different limbs – without making them a defining characteristic. The story takes place in the fictional coastal town of Portorosso on the Italian Riviera and tells the story of Luca Paguro (voiced by Jacob Tremblay) and Alberto (Jack Dylan Grazer), both young sea monsters who explore the human world.

In Portorosso, Luca and Alberto meet Giulia (Emma Berman), a red-haired outsider who is determined to win the city’s annual triathlon.

Enter Massimo (Marco Barricelli) – Giulia’s single father – an imposing fisherman who sings along with arias on the radio while he cuts off fish heads for dinner. At first glance, his stature and fish spears intimidate the two boys. After the boat scene, however, the tide begins to turn: Luca and Alberto find their way into Massimo’s big heart.

Since the movie was streamed last month, the internet has praised Massimo’s character for skillfully showing a limb difference on screen. The filmmakers said the decision that the fisherman was born with one arm was very deliberate.

“We really thought long and hard about how we could achieve a representation that was true to the place and time,” said director Enrico Casarosa. “When the Massimo idea came up, I think we came up with the idea pretty quickly.”

The film is set in post-war Italy, where Casarosa spent his childhood, and originally the director imagined that Massimo, modeled on the anti-fascist journalist Italo Calvino, fought the Italian resistance during World War II. Maybe he lost his arm in battle, thought Casarosa.

Or maybe he was born that way. To ponder the details of Massimo’s character, the “Luca” team – including Casarosa and producer Andrea Warren – decided to consult with disability rights activist and filmmaker Jim LeBrecht.

“It was a really rich conversation,” said LeBrecht, co-director of the Oscar-nominated documentary “Crip Camp,” which was released last year.

Together they concluded that the line “This is how I was born” felt right. Like Luca and Alberto, Massimo was born differently. The fisherman was skillful with his limbs all his life and remained a loved, respected and vital part of his community.

“Let’s go beyond these tragic stories, these ancient tropics where someone with a disability only appears in a story when it is about their disability,” said LeBrecht. “And let’s do what we’ve done with other marginalized communities over the years and let’s just say, ‘Let’s look, we’re part of the fabric of society.'”

LeBrecht was born with spina bifida, a disease of the spinal cord, and now uses a wheelchair. “Crip Camp” accompanies him and other former summer campers from Camp Jened in New York State, which was created for young people with disabilities, years later through their fight for accessibility laws.

“Jim shared some very difficult stories with people responding to his physical presence and asking children,” Warren said. “But sometimes there is this interaction with children looking or wondering.”

These stories helped shape Massimo’s response as Alberto responded to his disability. And it’s not an uncommon experience for people with limb differences.

Sheriauna Haase, 14, saw “Luca” the day it came out when she and her family were visiting Niagara Falls for Father’s Day. (Her two brothers, ages 4 and 5, had been demanding to see it all day.)

The aspiring high school student and dancer is a congenital amputation; she was born without her left hand. She immediately noticed the fishing boat scene and laughed at the line “A sea monster ate it”. Sometimes she finds her own answer to the question “What happened to your arm?”

“If they stared I’d say, ‘Yeah, I actually got into a shark attack. My arm was bitten by a shark, ”said Haase. “And after that I feel bad because the look on their faces is so shocked and scared. ‘Oh my god, I’m so sorry.’ And I say, ‘No, I’m kidding, I’m kidding. I was just born that way. ‘”

Representation is important to Haase. And with nearly 2 million people living limbless in the United States, Hollywood is starting to take care. But there’s a fine line between organic representation and forced tokenization, as producer Warren pointed out.

“You can’t tick every box on every movie,” she said. “It has to be authentic to make sense. That connection and that recognition won’t happen if it feels like it’s some kind of symbolic addition, something that’s been pushed into it. “

But the authenticity portrayed in films like “Luca” only comes about when people from the communities represented on the screen work behind the camera. Every week, LeBrecht hears stories from and about the disabled community that could make for engaging television and film.

“The industry needs to make the same diversity and inclusion efforts that it has made for other marginalized communities towards the disabled community,” LeBrecht said. “It’s not a wish. It’s not a charity. It’s good business. “

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Evaluation: Jacob’s Pillow Is Again, With a Tapping Tour of the Grounds

BECKET, Massachusetts – For the past year and a half, the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival has faced bigger challenges than the weather. Last summer, for the first time in its 88-year history, the festival had to cancel all performances in its idyllic home here in the Berkshires. Last November, when the pandemic was still raging, one of the festival’s two theaters was destroyed in a fire.

Jacob’s Pillow has recovered and has a full summer season of performances planned, both on-site and online. But the pandemic isn’t over yet, so all on-site shows are outdoors and subject to Covid protocols and weather. On Wednesday, the opening day, the main obstacle was the rain.

The festival hired a meteorologist to call a few hours before the show. The matinee took place on Wednesday, but the evening performance was not. That means I’ve only seen one of the two programs Dorrance Dance – the leading tap company for the past decade and a regular pillow type – has been preparing to kick off the season.

It was a happy reintroduction, especially since the matinee program is a kind of theme park tour of the grounds. (The video of this will be available for free on the festival website from July 15-29.) Spectators will be divided into small groups, marked with colored armbands, and each group will be guided by instructors to a series of stations, on which members of Dorrance Dance perform vignettes on a loop.

In the open-air pub we meet Aaron Marcellus, Claudia Rahardjanoto and Luke Hickey, who after the last call pretend they are squeezing in another jam session. Marcellus is a singer, a soulful and talented one, but at some point he also contributes a bit of tap. Hickey replaces him on the piano and Rahardjanoto, who plays bass, joins him in a tap-and-song duet. This circular trade is characteristic of Dorrance Dance and the playful, welcoming, and improvised spirit that makes the company a smart choice to welcome audiences back in.

The next piece in the Tea Garden shows a different side. In what looks like beekeeping suits, Warren Craft and Rena Kinoshita are tinkering with electronics and antennas and turning the faucet into an esoteric attempt at communication over potentially interstellar distances – or something like that. Is it the latest report on UFOs?

The science fiction theme is picked up later when we meet Michelle Dorrance, Leonardo Sandoval and Byron Tittle in overalls setting up a ladder and satellite dish. Nearby, chairs are arranged around a gravel pit, in which the three dancers with shovels and boots work out a small symphony in rhythm, paying attention to the tonal possibilities of the gravel: crunching, scratching, rattling.

Before that we visited Ephrat Asherie and Matthew West in the woods and performed a sad dance of separation to greyhounds. And we’ve spied on Josette Wiggan’s friend in a secluded and rustic cabin, hanging up the laundry to dry as she moves to Sarah Vaughan’s records in the heat and comes amazingly close to a dance equivalent of Vaughan’s voice. We end up finding the rest of the company (including the stellar trumpeter Keyon Harrold in a guest appearance) around more booths, pounding on washtubs and washboards, and having a great old time.

Where are we? When are we These vignettes have something to replace, something that is far too reminiscent of theme parks in backyards. The well-known scenarios also miss an opportunity, because the pillow has its own rich history of architecture and location. (Could the hut dances allude to the history of the place as a subway station?) The camp setups reinforce the feeling of thinness. As soon as the last party starts and we are set up to participate, we will be led away. The journey is over.

In these circumstances these mistakes are forgivable. Dorrance Dance offers a pleasant tour. Had I seen the other program with two new works for the festival’s open-air stage, the matinee might have seemed like the perfect starter. But the evening show on Thursday was also rainy and I had to go back to Brooklyn.

Fortunately, part of the program I missed – a premiere by Wiggan’s friend to music by Harrold – will be on July 9th and 10th at the Queens Theater in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. These shows are also held outdoors (but with an indoor backup plan, if it rains). I watch the weather.

Dorrance dance

See you Sunday at Jacob’s Pillow, Becket, Mass .; jacobspillow.org.

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Entertainment

Worry Avenue: Kiana Madeira Shares BTS Horror Sequence Particulars

Image source: Netflix

“Hello is someone there?” Usually the last lines are the characters brave enough to go looking for a masked serial killer. In honor of the publication of Angststrasse: 1984, the first film on Netflix Scared street Trilogy, inspired by the book series RL Stine, Kiana Madeira sat down with POPSUGAR to explain how her character Deena overcomes typical horror film stereotypes in the best way.

“She’s a true heroine … There’s something so empowering about playing characters like her, especially when she’s not just a young woman, but a young colored woman and a queer young woman.”

“I was drawn to Deena because she is so passionate,” said Madeira. “She is extremely loyal, she is ready to go through such extremes to protect the people she loves. And that’s something I’ve really connected with. She is fearless. She is a true heroine … not just being a young woman, but a young colored woman and a queer young woman. “

Filmed entirely in the summer of 2019, the trilogy follows Deena and her friends as they set out to put an end to a 300-year-old curse that has supernaturally ravaged their small town. As Deena, Madeira leads the way, staying strong and resilient as she helps her friends escape bloody horror scenes while also coping with her own relationship with her friend Samantha, played by Olivia Scott Welch. Off-screen, the co-stars would often hear Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car,” a song that captured their on-screen relationship perfectly. “That was a song we used a lot to delve into our circumstances,” she said. “And even now, when I hear this song, I think about the characters we’re playing in Scared street and it is very important to me. “

FEAR STREET PART 1: 1994 - (LR) KIANA MADEIRA as DEENA, FRED HECHINGER as SIMON, BENJAMIN FLORES JR.  as JOSH, JULIA REHWALD as KATE and OLIVIA WELCH as SAM.  Cr: Netflix © 2021Image source: Netflix

Although filming is complete, Madiera says that in her group chat she still stays in touch with her co-stars, including Benji Flores Jr. “Benji, who plays my younger brother in the film, feels like he’s in real life actually my little brother is. I love him so much, “she said, adding that alongside Ashley Zukerman, aka Sheriff Nick, he was also one of the biggest jokes on the set that led the cast to believe he was the only actor in a Set was supposed to pose by action hero dolls. “He was so serious about his delivery that we really didn’t know whether he was telling the truth or not,” she recalled.

The trilogy is a mish-mash of all of our favorite slasher films and is inspired by dynamic’s friendship dynamics The goonieswho have favourited The Terrible Events of M. Night Shyamalan The village, and the nostalgic 90s horror of movies like movies Scream and Nightmare on Elm Street. “You will find little Easter eggs that will definitely call you back to the classic horror scenarios,” Madeira said, adding that the creepy movie elements are no joke, especially when it comes to running away from the supernatural villains. “It’s not just like we’re doing three casual films; it’s three horror films and there are some crazy things going on in them. So it was pretty physically demanding, which I enjoyed.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=clZK2PqLWpI

Madeira who is a big fan of the goose bumps Growing Up Books also mentioned that RL Stine stopped by one day during filming to share his praise and give everyone a dose of nostalgia. “He’s so amazing and supportive,” she said. “He told me he couldn’t imagine a better person playing Deena. And I thought, ‘Oh my god, this means so much to me.’ He was really encouraging to all of us, and he had such a calm demeanor too, which made it a lot less intimidating because he’s like a childhood hero to so many of us. Meeting him was a great experience. “

“I think something unexpected is that there really is a love story at the core of all three films.”

While Fear Street: 1994 is an adventure 1978 is full of heartache, and 1666 is “extremely dark”, the trilogy itself fits together wonderfully. At its core, Madeira reveals Scared street is a love story that for once focuses on LGBTQ + characters as heroes and brings an unexpected love and hope to an otherwise chilling series. “I think something unexpected is that there really is a love story at the core of all three films. I haven’t seen that too often in horror, and that love story is strong enough to last through all three films… It’s strong “It’s powerful, it’s authentic, and it’s unconventional compared to what we often see on screen.”

On a scale from 1-10, Madeira is considered a trilogy Scared street 10/10 in terms of scary, indicating that the third film is their favorite because of the dark, twisted plot and the imagination it takes to mentally go back to 1666.[Director Leigh Janiak] Doesn’t shy away from showing the horror, which in my opinion definitely pushes [the movies] “Plus, the things these kids go through are really scary, and I think it’s great that the pictures go hand in hand with that … I think real horror fans will be very happy.”

Image source: Brendan Wixted