Daily Dispatch

Millions to flow into EL

Royal Moscow Ballet en pointe with spectactul­ar Guild show MBSA to make three sporty new models

- By MBALI TANANA By MIKE LOEWE

AN INTERNATIO­NAL ballet production company brought its act to the Guild Theatre last night for a one-night only show in East London.

The world-renowned Royal Moscow Ballet brought 12 of its ballet dancers to grace South African stages with enchanting dances as they performed three acts in tribute to great Russian composers.

The company consists of graduates from the best Russian choreograp­hy schools.

Royal Moscow Ballet has toured successful­ly around the globe and countries visited include Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece, France, Austria, Sweden, the US, the UK, Canada, Germany, Finland, India, Switzerlan­d, China, Israel, Japan and Mexico.

Since its founding, the Royal Moscow Ballet has given more than 100 performanc­es.

Production director Edouard Miasnikov said the team was excited about being in East London and sharing the different acts which were danced to music composed by Sergei Rachmanino­v, Pyotr Tchaikovsk­y and Aleksander Borodin, composers the tour is currently honouring.

“The first act of the programme, Paganini, accompanie­d by a musical score by Rachmanino­v, is based on the memoirs, life and creative ideas of the musician,” Miasnikov said.

“Tchaikovsk­y’s Nutcracker stands alone as an artistic phenomenon, a symphony about childhood, while Aleksander Borodin is honoured through Polovtsian dances.”

The show started in Johannesbu­rg on March 4 and will be concluding in Port Elizabeth on March 18 before heading to Gaborone.

Misanikov said the production would return to South Africa in August to pay tribute to male ballet dancers of the 20th century. —

NEW motoring millions are pouring into Buffalo City with Mercedes-Benz SA yesterday announcing excellent figures and a suite of new cars to be built in their high-performing East London plant.

Executives stressed that the corporatio­n sailed to these successes against a volatile, even “stormy” global economy.

Outgoing MBSA CEO Arno van der Merwe was releasing the results at the Zwartkop Raceway near Johannesbu­rg before leaving to head up the company’s operation in China.

He said to applause that three Mercedes-AMG sport sedans will be manufactur­ed this year at the East London plant.

He announced that MBSA’s revenue was up by 10.8% from R66.2-billion in 2015 to R73.4-billion last year. Their R5.6-billion of earnings before interest and tax (Ebit) was 27.3% higher.

He did not know how many new jobs would be created but said: “There will be a lot more work, and a lot more complexity, more technology to handle. This can only bring positive results.”

The East London plant has earned many accolades for its high productivi­ty, harmonious work relations and innovation­s.

Since 2016, parent company Daimler, working through MBSA, has invested R660-million in the plant. Last year R416-million was spent, mainly on retooling for the C350 plug-in hybrid car.

“The revenue gains were, in large part, due to higher production volume out of the East London plant, as well as concurrent increase in export revenue generated from that plant,” MBSA said. In an interview with the Dispatch, Van der Merwe said: “Global competitio­n is fierce. “We have no time to work against each other. We have to cooperate and align ourselves.”

He said production of the Mercedes-AMG C 43 4MATIC, C63, C63S, as well as the C400 4Matic, will come online in the next few months.

Last year, 114 000 passenger vehicles rolled out of the plant, an increase of 12%, and 4 500 commercial vehicles were produced.

He said 90% of the vehicles were exported and sold around the world.

Much of this success was because of the trend-setting fiveyear “Siyaphambi­le Agreement” signed with labour last year.

He said their learning academy, which launched in March last year with funds from Treasury's Jobs Fund, has already seen 400 people trained there getting formal jobs, and another 100 were in the pipeline for employment placement.

The academy was training 230 shop-floor workers and 50 artisans a year, he said.

In a brief comment, Van der Merwe’s replacemen­t, Andreas Engling, who comes from Germany, said he was keen to learn about South African culture.

“Together we are better,” he said briefly.

New MBSA executives are given a 100-day period to settle in before speaking to the public.

Van der Merwe faced a question from the media about why the corporatio­n did not express greater disquiet over the threat of a downgrade caused by politics. He said: “The number one best thing business can do is to run our businesses well and this will support the political processes needed to create change.

“But it [politics] is not our predominan­t task.”

He was supported by Cheryl Carolus, an independen­t director of MBSA, who said: “We need to stick to the knitting.”

There will be a lot more work, more complexity, more technology

 ?? Picture: SIBONGILE NGALWA ?? POETRY IN MOTION: Ballet dancers from the Royal Moscow Ballet troupe show poise and grace during the spectacula­r dance routines at the Guild Theatre in East London last night. The production honours three great Russian composers, Sergei Rachmanino­v, Pyotr Iiyich Tchaikovsk­y and Aleksander Borodin. The production consists of three acts – ‘Paganini’, scenes from ‘The Nutcracker’, Sleeping Beauty’ and ‘Swan Lake’ and ‘Polovtsian Dance’
Picture: SIBONGILE NGALWA POETRY IN MOTION: Ballet dancers from the Royal Moscow Ballet troupe show poise and grace during the spectacula­r dance routines at the Guild Theatre in East London last night. The production honours three great Russian composers, Sergei Rachmanino­v, Pyotr Iiyich Tchaikovsk­y and Aleksander Borodin. The production consists of three acts – ‘Paganini’, scenes from ‘The Nutcracker’, Sleeping Beauty’ and ‘Swan Lake’ and ‘Polovtsian Dance’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa