![]() Call the PNB Box Office for details.) Featuring students of Pacific Northwest Ballet School. Premiere: October 18, 2012, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Premiere: June 17, 2015, Dutch National Ballet The double bill also includes David Dawson’s ( A Million Kisses to my Skin) powerfully athletic Empire Noir, set against a massive, curving sculpture. The rapidly-expanding Seattle fan base for Alejandro Cerrudo ( Little mortal jump, Silent Ghost) eagerly anticipates PNB’s premiere of One Thousand Pieces, a large-scale ensemble work inspired by artist Marc Chagall. Premiere: May 31, 1994, Pacific Northwest Ballet Staging: Kent Stowell and Francia Russell There, Cinderella and her prince shimmer like diamonds at the center of a scarlet-clad waltz in one of PNB’s most spectacular scenes. PNB Founding Artistic Director Kent Stowell’s Cinderella combines storytelling, choreography, Prokofiev’s haunting score, and superb costume and scenic design, to transport the lonely heroine from her wistful fireside dreams to a dazzling palace ball. Petersburgīalanchine Production Premiere: February 2, 1954, New York City Ballet ![]() Original Lev Ivanov Production Premiere: December 6, 1892, Imperial Ballet, St. Staging: Judith Fugate, with Peter Boal and Garielle Whittle Tickets go on sale July 22.) The Northwest’s favorite holiday tradition! PNB’s production of the iconic Balanchine ballet features sets and costumes designed by children’s author and illustrator Ian Falconer ( Olivia the Pig). Music: Nadia Boulanger, Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre, Fanny Mendelssohn, Clara Schumann Donald Byrd, artistic director of Spectrum Dance Theater and a Tony-nominated ( The Color Purple) and Bessie Award-winning ( The Minstrel Show) choreographer, shares the program with Eva Stone, founder/producer of CHOP SHOP: Bodies of Work and PNB company dancer Miles Pertl, taking his first choreographic turn on the mainstage following creations for NEXT STEP and PNB School. PNB turns with pride to local talent for a triple bill of new works. Premiere: October 5, 1993, Pacific Northwest Ballet Aldredge, additional costumes by Larae Theige Hascall Premiere: December 1, 1957, New York City BalletĬostume Design: Theoni V. To open the season, Carmina Burana’s 2,500-pound golden wheel rotates above more than 100 dancers, musicians, and singers in Kent Stowell’s powerhouse production, paired with Agon, the pinnacle of George Balanchine’s legendary collaboration with Igor Stravinsky.Ĭhoreography: George Balanchine © The George Balanchine Trust For more information, visit PNB.org.Ģ019-2020 SEASON LINE-UP (programming subject to change) : All programming and dates are subject to change. Discounted subscription rates are available for senior citizens and students with ID. ![]() For further information, contact the PNB Box Office by phone at 206.441.2424, online at PNB.org, or in person at 301 Mercer Street. PNB is currently accepting season subscription renewals and new full-season subscription orders, and subscribers will have access to purchase additional tickets before they go on sale to the general public single tickets to the season, and George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker ®, go on sale to the public on Monday, July 22. For family audiences, PNB is also presenting a new production of Beauty and the Beast (performed by students of the Pacific Northwest Ballet School) and, of course, George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker ®. The line-up concludes with the return of works by Crystal Pite and Twyla Tharp, with a world premiere from Edwaard Liang. Highlights include George Balanchine’s masterful Agon on a double-bill with Kent Stowell’s powerhouse production of Carmina Burana world premieres by local choreographers Donald Byrd, Eva Stone, and Miles Pertl the return of classic and crowd-pleasing story ballets Cinderella and Giselle and the PNB premiere of One Thousand Pieces, a large-scale work by Alejandro Cerrudo, accompanying David Dawson’s enthralling Empire Noir. Artistic Director Peter Boal has announced the line-up for Pacific Northwest Ballet’s 47th season, running from September, 2019 to June, 2020.
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