Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
Nevada Ballet fills ‘Nutcracker’ void with TV series, exhibit
It’s the worst thing to happen to The Nutcracker since the arrival of The Mouse King.
COVID-19 is keeping both of them — along with Clara, the Sugar Plum Fairy and all the toy soldiers — from making their annual holiday appearances. But Nevada
Ballet Theatre is bringing “The Nutcracker” to as many Las Vegans as possible through a three-part television series and a museum exhibit.
“The Nutcracker: Home for the Holidays” episodes will look at the titular ballet and its 39-year history in Las Vegas, the production choreographed by James Canfield in 2012 specifically for the
Reynolds Hall stage, and the experiences of children in the ballet and those watching from the audience.
“They’re obviously focused on the same ballet and the same production of that ballet,” artistic director Roy Kaiser says of the episodes, “but they’ll show three very different aspects of it.”
Thus was born “Home for the Holidays,” which incorporates interviews with behindthe-scenes footage and performance pieces.
The series premiered last week on the Cox YurView platform, Channels 14 and 1014. New episodes can be seen at 6 p.m. Tuesday and Dec. 15, with rebroadcasts at 6 p.m. Thursday and Dec. 17 and 2 p.m. Saturday and Dec. 19. Three-episode marathons are scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Dec. 2224. The Review-Journal is a partner in the series, and episodes can be seen at lvrj.com/nutcracker once they premiere.
It’s impossible to replace “The Nutcracker” in the Nevada Ballet Theatre schedule. Some 20,000 patrons see it live each year, and the production accounts for $1.5 million in ticket sales, money that essentially supports the rest of the season. But the group is doing what it can to fill the “Nutcracker”-sized hole in holiday traditions across the valley.
One thing that wasn’t an option, especially following this summer’s release of “Hamilton” on Disney+ with its variety of camera angles that seemingly put viewers onstage with the cast, was simply airing a recording of a previous year’s production.
“Unless a performance is really being shot specifically to be broadcast, I think it’s really difficult to have an effective program,” Kaiser says. “So we started to think about some of the different stories we could tell about ‘The Nutcracker’ and around ‘The Nutcracker’ and ‘The Nutcracker’ experience.”
Thus was born “Home for the Holidays,” which incorporates interviews with behind-the-scenes footage and performance pieces.
“My hope,” Kaiser says, “is that we will reach people in the valley who are not familiar with us. … Maybe it will put us on the radar screens of some new people who, once this is all behind us, will say, ‘Hey, why don’t we go check out the ballet.’ ”
Elsewhere, “The Nutcracker Extravaganza: Behind the Scenes” will present the rare chance to see about a dozen set and prop pieces and about 25 costumes from the Nevada Ballet production up close.
The exhibit will be on display Dec. 19-Jan. 3 at the Discovery Children’s Museum.
“It’s a very unique opportunity,” Kaiser notes, “because, unfortunately, we’re not onstage.”
Nevada Ballet Theatre faces a long road back from the pandemic. Kaiser still hasn’t seen his dancers in person for any type of training.
“It’s got to be a very frustrating time for them. They have short careers anyway, and they’re losing a lot of time,” he says. “It’s going to take a lot of time, once we are able to be back in the studios and functioning full out. It’s going to take a lot of time to get back to where they need to be as performing artists.”
Until then, Kaiser’s just happy to have some semblance of “The Nutcracker” out there this holiday season.
“It’s been a lot of work by everybody involved,” he says of the productions. “We’re just pleased that we will be able to have a ‘Nutcracker’ presence in a couple of different ways.”