“Allegro Brillante", "La Source", "Firebird"
New York City Ballet
David H. Koch Theater
New York, New York
January 25, 2020 matinee
by Carol Pardo
copyright © 2020 by Carol Pardo
There may have been four debuts on the cast list, but at this performance, the most vivid and memorable performances came from veterans of their parts. After ten months away due to injury, Tiler Peck is back in the rotation, partnered superbly by Tyler Angle. "Allegro Brillante" -- as Balanchine famously said, "All I know about classical ballet in thirteen minutes" -- is often danced as a literal reflection of its title: fast and brilliantly, often with a hard, sharp edge like a faceted gemstone. Here, for whatever reason (that injury, conductor Andrew LItton's choice in the pit) the focus was on flow, rising and waning sumptuously, without descending to slow or stodgy. Consequently, there was time to notice details that otherwise fly by: the gust of air under a jump, the shape of a step revealed, the suddenness with which the corps disappears before the ballerina's solo. Peck, one of the most articulate dancers around, took full advantage of that flow, also looking extremely happy to be back on stage. The audience was equally happy to see her there.