After a choreographer's suicide, ballet confronts tough questions
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, December 22, 2024


After a choreographer's suicide, ballet confronts tough questions
Liam Scarlett in 2020. Scarlett killed himself after he was accused of misconduct. Now the dance world is grappling with the aftermath. Via Bayerisches Staatsballett via The New York Times.



MUNICH.- Choreographer Liam Scarlett’s “With a Chance of Rain,” a lush, expansive ballet set to a melodic Rachmaninoff piano score, would hardly seem a risky piece of programming. But it was still notable when the Bayerisches Staatsballett performed it last weekend at the Cuvilliés Theatre in Munich.

The company is one of the few to continue to present work by Scarlett, who was a precociously successful choreographer when he took his own life in April, at 35, after several prominent institutions cut ties with him in the wake of accusations of misconduct.

His death shocked and divided the dance world, even though many details remain unknown. The Royal Ballet in London, which suspended him and began an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct involving students at its school, said last year that it had found “no matters to pursue” but that Scarlett would “no longer work with, or for, the Royal Ballet.” Other companies, too, parted ways with him: His death was announced the same day that the Royal Danish Ballet said it was canceling his full-length ballet “Frankenstein,” citing other allegations of misconduct.

Some in the ballet world saw these moves as a sign that dance companies were at last taking allegations of sexual misconduct seriously. Others saw them as evidence of cancel culture run amok.

Scarlett’s rise to choreographic prominence was as fast as his fall from grace. A former Royal Ballet dancer, he won acclaim early with his debut work, “Asphodel Meadows,” in 2010 for the Royal Ballet, and became its artist-in-residence in 2012. While still in his 20s, he was attracting commissions from major companies all over the world.

Then came the allegations and, later, the jolting news of his death. Although no cause of death was given at the time, a coroner’s report in May confirmed widespread speculation that it was a suicide. And while it can be difficult to say why someone takes their own life — experts agree that suicide is not occasioned by a single event but by complex accumulations of elements — the dance world teemed with opinions and theories.

Reactions were complicated by the ambiguity of the Royal Ballet’s statement, which, as Luke Jennings wrote in a recent essay in The London Review of Books, found Scarlett “innocent and guilty at the same time,” declaring that there was nothing untoward to pursue while cutting ties with him.

On Saturday, the Royal Ballet reiterated that the investigation had “found that there were no matters to pursue in relation to students at the Royal Ballet School” but added that “this was only part of the matters under investigation.” The company said that it would be “inappropriate for us to comment further on the specifics of the investigation.”

There’s still much that we don’t know: why the Royal Ballet ended its relationship with Scarlett, or the particulars of the allegations regarding the students. Scarlett never spoke publicly about the allegations, the Royal Ballet has refused to comment further, and none of the students have come forward. Nor do we know the specifics of what happened at the Royal Danish Ballet, although Kasper Holten, director of the Royal Danish Theatre, spoke in general terms of Scarlett’s “unacceptable behavior” and of prioritizing “the well-being and safety of our employees.”

In an interview, Igor Zelensky, director of the Bayerisches Staatsballett, said he had been talking to Scarlett about staging a piece in Munich for years. They agreed on “With a Chance of Rain” early last year, with the prospect of Scarlett later creating a full-length work for the company.

“Then after the whole thing happened with him, the agreement with me stayed,” Zelensky said. “To tell you the truth, I didn’t really follow it. I wasn’t into the details, although Liam told me the Royal Ballet didn’t want to work with him. He said, ‘I am going through difficulties emotionally.’”

Dance critic Graham Watts, writing in The Spectator magazine, said, “Scarlett’s career was effectively ended without a trial or any transparent due process. A duty of care to students should be at the highest level of secure robustness, but a duty of care to the accused is also required.”

Others were more impassioned. Choreographer Alexei Ratmansky, expressing his shock at the news on social media, blamed Scarlett’s death directly on cancel culture.

“I did hear one director saying: ‘I can’t program his ballets, I’ll be eaten alive,’” Ratmansky wrote. “Liam knew he has no future as a choreographer. That killed him. It should not have happened. This cancel culture is killing.”




Others argued that this was too simple, effectively blaming the victims of abuse — and the company directors who were trying to protect them — as they attempted to speak out about long-buried put persistent issues.

“My thoughts are with the few ballet leaders who have the courage to reverse centuries of ballet tradition, who are working hard to prioritize the dancers over the dances, the artists over the art, the workers over the work,” Chloe Angyal, author of “Turning Pointe: How a New Generation of Dancers Is Saving Ballet From Itself,” wrote in an online essay.

In his article, Jennings suggests that Scarlett was replicating his own experiences of abuse, quoting an unnamed Royal Ballet dancer who describes Scarlett’s actions as “learned behavior.” The implications in these arguments are of systemic dysfunctional power dynamics in the ballet world that go beyond any single case.

Those dynamics aren’t new in ballet — or in any field where, as Jennings puts it, “isolation from the outside world and a highly competitive atmosphere create conditions in which the powerful can behave toward the young with impunity.”

What has changed — in ballet and elsewhere — is the power of social media to transmit news at lightning speed, to amplify voices and acquire the power to condemn. Despite the Royal Ballet’s silence about the reasons for Scarlett’s departure, chatter on social media was enough to establish widespread judgment and rumor about his actions.

Zelensky, who seems impervious to such judgments — he hired star dancer Sergei Polunin when other companies wouldn’t after Polunin abruptly left the Royal Ballet and made provocative statements about liking drugs — said he hadn’t asked his dancers how they felt about working with Scarlett or performing his ballet and that the company hadn’t encountered any negative media or public reactions.

And some of his dancers expressed their support for staging Scarlett’s work.

“I feel, who are you to judge someone else, especially when you have no knowledge?” said Laurretta Summerscales, a principal dancer, who added that she had “a really good time” working with Scarlett when she was a member of English National Ballet and had been happy to work with him again when he came to stage the ballet last year.

Madeleine Dowdeny, a corps de ballet member who had worked with Scarlett at the Royal Ballet School, said the dancers “tried to keep it very professional.” They knew “there might be talk” about working with him, she said. “But that was out of our control.”

Both dancers talked about Scarlett’s musicality and the pleasure of dancing “With a Chance of Rain,” an elegiac work for eight dancers set to six Rachmaninoff Preludes and an Elegy for piano. The piece, first created for American Ballet Theatre in 2014, has no discernible narrative, but a bare-chested man (Emilio Pavan), who first moves amid the scattered ensemble on a darkly lit stage, is an enigmatic central figure around whom the action seems to crystallize and dissolve.

Scarlett’s skill in creating complex, ever-changing groupings with seamless fluency is notable, as is the inventiveness of the partnering work. The final sections are more melancholy; a double pas de deux mutates into a duo that ends on a note of uncertainty: On a darkening stage, Pavan stretches his hand forward beseechingly with a woman at his feet.

A ballet can be many things and have many meanings: personal, public, symbolic, unconscious. There will doubtless be more dance world conversations about the appropriateness of performing Scarlett’s work in the future. Has the Bayerisches Staatsballett led the way? Will the choreographer’s death soften public perceptions? Who gets a second chance? Time and programming will tell.



If you are having thoughts of suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255 (TALK) or go to speakingofsuicide.com/resources for a list of additional resources.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

October 1, 2021

Symbolism Represented in Antique Caucasian Rugs (Part 3)

The Cleveland Museum of Art announces new acquisitions

Met Museum to return ancient sculpture to Nepal

Hindman sets new world auction record for Martin Wong work, selling for $1.1 million

Yale says its Vinland Map, once called a Medieval treasure, is fake

Auction Technology Group to complete acquisition of LiveAuctioneers

Amicable solution for restitution claim: Ketterer Kunst to offer Emil Nolde painting with notable provenance

Elvis vs. Lenin: A superpower confrontation on canvas

Christie's Classic Week features 5 live and 3 online auctions

New major artwork by renowned artist Conrad Shawcross launches in Ramsgate

Minnesota Street Project announces arts leader, Madison Cario as CEO

Milestone's Oct. 2 Toy Spectacular a feast of European & American antique toys

Phoenix Art Museum receives $4 million grant from Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust

Thought-provoking installation unveiled at City Hall, Jersey City

Review: A choreographer stakes an independent claim

Review: Bill T. Jones' oceanic vision

Positive coronavirus cases halt 'Aladdin' a day after it reopened

Lonnie Smith, soulful jazz organist, is dead at 79

After a choreographer's suicide, ballet confronts tough questions

After a Met Opera Milestone, 'Boris' brings another

In Paris, it's literary scandal season again

Laumeier Sculpture Park explores remembrance, connection, and strength of community in new exhibition

Academy Museum of Motion Pictures opens in Los Angeles

Christie's eyes $2 mln for Wallis Simpson bangle at auction

How You Can Keep Your Washing Machine Well Maintained

Make the Right Health Insurance Choice For You and Your Family in Switzerland

Pop Culture and the Fan Art Phenomenon




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Houston Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful