San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

‘Nutcracker­s’ make pivots

City Ballet will offer a filmed version and a live, drive-in performanc­e as dance companies make safety adjustment­s

- BY MARCIA MANNA Manna is a freelance writer.

Imagine being onstage during a profession­al ballet production of “The Nutcracker.” ■ Fantasy and reality would collide. ■ There would be scenes not visible from any theater seat, like the raised eyebrows of the Cavalier, as he lifts the Sugar Plum Fairy into the air, or the sweat glistening on the forehead of the Russian dancer as he demonstrat­es the athletic prowess of the exuberant trepak, or folk dance. ■ Instead of watching from a distance, one could see the defined musculatur­e of the dancers responding to the complex demands of the music, and the rich hues of satin corsets, glistening tulle and jeweled bodices.

City Ballet choreograp­her Geoff Gonzalez, who is helping to present “A Masquerade Nutcracker” this month as both a streaming event and as a live, drive-in production at the Del Mar Fairground­s, says audiences will enjoy a “more immersive experience.”

“The idea behind everything we have been filming in digital format is to shoot it so that you would never be able to see it that way unless you were a dancer, live onstage,” says Gonzalez, who is known for his rendition of last year’s popular “Carmina Burana.”

“Watching ballet is usually frontal and two-dimensiona­l, so I used my gut instincts to show people a 360-degree format. It’s really exciting for me to have you see it from all perspectiv­es and angles, because there is so much more life in the movement and in the human touch. You are so close that you can feel that energy.”

City Ballet of San Diego,

founded in 1993 by the husbandand-wife team of Steven and Elizabeth Wistrich, brings “A Masquerade Nutcracker” to the stage as part of the aptly named “A Season Like No Other.”

It’s a family-run operation with principal ballerina Ariana Gonzalez playing the Sugar Plum Fairy and her husband, Geoff, assuming multiple roles, dancing the parts of the Nutcracker Prince and Clara’s dad, in addition to being resident choreograp­her and, now, videograph­er.

As with every dance organizati­on in San Diego, the pandemic has forced unexpected and often uncomforta­ble changes.

Everyone in “A Masquerade Nutcracker,” for example, wears a tailored mask that matches his or her costume, which is particular­ly demanding for dancers performing athletic movement.

But some challenges have opened the door for new perspectiv­es and enhanced creativity — especially in the digital realm.

City Ballet invested in new technology and profession­al filmmaking equipment, and on its website, one can purchase tickets to view the season’s online dance production­s through 2021.

Assisting with filming responsibi­lities is dancer and videograph­er Jaroslav Richters, who Gonzalez refers to as his “No. 1” when it comes to managing multiple camera shots.

Richters was born in the Czech Republic, trained in Prague, and in addition to filming video, he performs in “A Masquerade Nutcracker” as the Russian dancer and as Mother Ginger, the character on stilts wearing a giant skirt.

Filming dance allows for doovers, an enticing option that doesn’t exist in live performanc­e.

But Richters had to learn to limit the number of his own performanc­e takes or face exhaustion.

“You are dancing for yourself with no feedback from an audience, and we judge ourselves very harshly,” Richters says.

“Not every step is perfect, so we edit how we want it to look. At some point, you start to get tired, so you have to make yourself do it perfectly the first or second time.”

Though filming a performanc­e has advantages, every profession­al dancer longs to perform in front of an audience again. Many have participat­ed in “The Nutcracker” throughout their careers — it’s a holiday tradition that guarantees an audience and garners enough ticket sales to keep ballet schools and dance organizati­ons solvent.

When CBF Production­s approached City Ballet with the idea of staging “A Masquerade Nutcracker” as part of its Concerts in Your Car drive-in series at the Del Mar Fairground­s, City Ballet considered the pros and cons.

“Negotiatio­ns went on for a month,” says choreograp­her and City Ballet co-founder Elizabeth Wistrich.

“It’s an entirely new experience, from beginning to the end. The concept is usually for rock concerts — it’s huge and so out of our comfort box.”

Instead of facing an audience at the opulent Spreckels Theatre, where City Ballet has performed accompanie­d by a live orchestra for decades, the company will dance outdoors, surrounded by a sea of more than 300 cars. Radios will be tuned to the familiar Tchaikovsk­y score, and instead of Victorian-era sets, gigantic LED screens will display an enlarged version of the live production. To enhance social distancing, performers travel to the stage by golf cart. There’s no green room; quick changes happen under the stage.

And instead of applause, cars honk.

Still, it’s a chance to dance. “There are a lot of adjustment­s we have to make, but we are wellequipp­ed,” Wistrich says.

“We are always up for a challenge. Our organizati­on lives by taking chances.”

“Behind the Mask”: Streams at 6 p.m. Saturday. Free. cityballet.org

“A Masquerade Nutcracker”: Streams Dec. 18 through Jan. 3. $29-$99. cityballet.org

“The Nutcracker” live: 5 and

8 p.m. Dec. 18. $99-$279. Del Mar Fairground­s, 2260 Jimmy Durante Blvd., Del Mar. Tickets are available only online, in advance.

Each ticket is valid for one car; the number of passengers cannot exceed the number of seat belts. concertsin­yourcar.com

More ‘Nutcracker­s’

Inspire School of Ballet: “Nutcracker Under the Stars” (film of the 2019 performanc­e) screens at 6 p.m. Tuesday. $22. Cinema Under the Stars, 4040 Goldfinch St., San Diego. eventbrite.com/e/nutcracker­under-the-stars-tickets-1255719661­31

Hip Hop Nutcracker: The familyfrie­ndly contempora­ry dance spectacle streams live at 7 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. next Sunday. $25-$50. sandiegoth­eatres.org

San Diego Civic Youth Ballet:

The “Nutcracker Project 2020”: Advanced students perform excerpts in Balboa Park. Two versions of the video with different casts will premiere at 2 and 7 p.m. Dec. 19. Streaming Dec. 19-Jan. 1. Access to view for 48 hours. $5. sdcyb.org

 ?? ANNA SCIPIONE ?? Ariana Gonzalez and Iago Breschi in City Ballet’s “The Nutcracker.” This year’s production, titled “A Masquerade Nutcracker,” will be filmed and streamed online.
ANNA SCIPIONE Ariana Gonzalez and Iago Breschi in City Ballet’s “The Nutcracker.” This year’s production, titled “A Masquerade Nutcracker,” will be filmed and streamed online.

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