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A Fiendish Conversation with Lucien Postlewaite

The Pacific Northwest Ballet star just gave his notice—find out what’s in his future.

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Can you do that? Lucien Postlewaite holds a pose in Mark Morris’s Pacific. Photo courtesy Angela Sterling.

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Can you do that? Lucien Postlewaite holds a pose in Mark Morris’s Pacific. Photo courtesy Angela Sterling.

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Postlewaite and Noelani Pantastico in Romeo et Juliette. Photo courtesy Angela Sterling.

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A perfect pair Kaori Nakamura (right) and Lucien Postlewaite dance Jiri Kylian’s Petite Mort, part of Director’s Choice. Photo courtesy Angela Sterling.

Seattle’s dance community let out a collective groan last week when PNB principal Lucien Postlewaite announced that this his final season with the ballet. In August he’ll leave Seattle to join Les Ballets de Monte Carlo, home of director-choreographer Jean-Christophe Maillot, who worked with Postlewaite on a life-changing production of Roméo et Juliette in 2008. We’ve come to rely on Postlewaite to turn in emotionally charged, technically dazzling performances like clockwork, whether as a Balanchine prince or in a daring new modern commission. After nine years on stage at McCaw Hall—and two years dancing in husband Olivier Wevers’s company, Whim W’Him—his absence will be felt.

For now, Postlewaite is prepping for PNB’s double bill of Apollo and Carmina Burana, which opens on Friday (April 13), and his grande finale, June 10’s Season Encore. For our latest Fiendish Conversation, Seth Sommerfeld chatted with the dancer, who insists that this isn’t goodbye.

What roles are you dancing in Apollo and Carmina Burana?

I’m dancing Apollo, so that’s a highlight for me. In Carmina Burana, I’m dancing the Cour d’Amours, the sort of lead finale section. That’s a role I used to watch when I first joined the company and the dancers would give me chills every time. Now I’m kind of coming full circle and getting to dance this role that, when I got into the company nine years ago, I always dreamed of dancing.

How did you end up deciding to take a job with Les Ballets de Monte Carlo?

It just felt like the timing was right. Everything in my life was kind of pointing in this direction. I need a chance to reinvent myself artistically and to push myself. I have a relationship with the company over there and they were looking for dancers like me, so, of course, being wanted by another place and being asked to join is always a bit of an incentive. I’m ready for the next adventure.

What are the stylistic differences between Les Ballets de Monte Carlo and PNB that get you excited?

The director there, we mostly do his work. He’s a choreographer-director. I’m looking forward to that, because having a choreographer-director gives a really strong, clear vision for everyone and the look of a company. I’ve been really fortunate at PNB to dance all different kinds of roles—that’s one of the benefits of having a non-choreographer-director. [PNB] director Peter Boal brings in all different types of things. But I’m looking forward to having just a single, unified voice and learning how to work and dance in his style.

What is your most memorable performance during your time at PNB?

Because it’s kind of what has led me to this decision, I would say Roméo et Juliette. When we performed that, it really changed the way I danced. It changed the way I look at dance. It gave me a way to completely express every range of my emotion on stage.

You’ve also danced extensively with Whim W’Him. Do you plan to come back to dance with the company in the future?

Yeah, I’m working on that. It’s going to be a challenge to coordinate, but the director [at Monte Carlo] is trying to be flexible with letting me potentially come do some stuff with PNB as well.

Are there any up-and-coming Seattle dancers we should keep an eye on?

Andrew Bartee. He is a dancer at PNB, but also dances for Whim W’Him. He’s young—I think he’s been in the company a few years—and has an amazing maturity as an artist for his age.

What will you miss most about Seattle?

Well, everything. I’m not planning really on missing it too much though because I still feel like I will be connected to the city and I’m going to be coming back quite often. …[I’ll miss] the summers—not the winters.

Apollo and Carmina Burana
Apr 13–22, McCaw Hall, $28–$168

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Tags: PNB, Dance, McCaw Hall, Fiendish Conversation

Dance

Behind the Scenes of Don Quixote, the $3 Million Ballet

Pacific Northwest Ballets presents the U.S. premiere of this updated classic.

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Photo: Courtesy Dutch National Ballet.

What’s your story? Choreographer Alexei Ratmansky chants this like a mantra, asking it of each dancer during a recent Pacific Northwest Ballet rehearsal for Don Quixote. In this case, principal Seth Orza is being coached on the story he’s telling with his oversized red cape—a surprisingly unwieldy prop he bears in the role of Espada, a self-satisfied toreador. He whirls it up and over his head, once, twice, three times.

“And up! And up!” Ratmansky urges. Orza looks like he’s going through a CrossFit workout. “Use more of a swing, see how it flies… You should look like you’ve been doing this your whole life!Clap, clap, clap, clap. Ratmansky signals Orza to stop, and the dancer doubles over, panting.

“I just whipped myself,” Orza says, laughing. They’ve been doing cape work for about 20 minutes, and though spirits are still high, this speaks to the ambition of Ratmansky, the former artistic director of the Bolshoi Ballet and the man behind this $3 million update of the classical Petipa and Gorsky ballet (originally created for the Dutch National Ballet). The devil’s in the details—a story to be told with every whirl of the cape and flutter of the fan.

So when PNB presents the U.S. premiere of Don Quixote this weekend, the attention isn’t solely on actor Tom Skerritt, who’ll play the tragicomic hero, or the five different principal couples, or the lavish sets and costumes by Jérôme Kaplan. It’s a package deal. This is one of the most opulent productions in PNB’s history, with 46 company members and 24 PNBS students performing, 280 costumes, 46 wigs and hairpieces, one smiling moon—and one very discerning choreographer who’s breathing new life into the classics.

Don Quixote
Feb 3–12, Pacific Northwest Ballet, McCaw Hall

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Tags: PNB, Dance, Seattle Center, McCaw Hall

The Weekend Starts...Now.

Met Picks: Allen Stone and Seattle Rock Orchestra, The Callers, David Lynch Retrospective

The top 10 things to see or do this weekend.

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Photo courtesy WET.

The Callers: yet another reason to get out of the house.

THEATER

Thru Jan 15
West Side Story
Here come the Jets: The Broadway revival of West Side Story snaps, kicks, and Krupkes its way into Seattle, now with 10 percent of the songs and dialogue in Spanish. Paramount Theatre, $25–$80.

Jan 13–Feb 6
The Callers
WET playwrights Ali el-Gasseir and Ella Dorband examine the voices on the other end of a psychic hotline or phone sex chat in this world premiere, directed by Intiman’s new artistic director Andrew Russell. It’s a world of dial tones and busy signals (what, no call waiting?), with over 150 phones covering the walls in the black box theater. Washington Ensemble Theatre, $10–$25.

Jan 13–Feb 5
How to Write a New Book for the Bible
Bill Cain, who penned the 2009 Shakespearean drama Equivocation, borrows from his own life for his latest play. When the Jesuit priest goes home to care for his dying mother, he copes by writing the story of his family in Biblical style. Seattle Repertory Theatre, $12–$64.

CONCERTS

Jan 12
Craig Robinson and the Nasty Delicious
Fans of NBC’s The Office know Robinson, aka warehouse manager Darryl, plays a mean keyboard. When he’s not taping, the former elementary school music teacher tours with his jazz-funk group the Nasty Delicious. Paramount Theatre, $29.

Jan 14 & 15
Allen Stone and Seattle Rock Orchestra
Chewelah, Washington native Stone bears more of a resemblance to Napoleon Dynamite than Raphael Saadiq, but you won’t find a finer new soul act in town. He’s backed here by members of the 50-piece orchestra. Neptune Theatre, both shows have sold out.

CLASSICAL & MORE

Jan 14–28
Seattle Opera’s Attila
He can sing, he can sack countries. John Relyea stars as the King of the Huns in Seattle Opera’s debut performance of Verdi’s Attila. McCaw Hall, from $25.

FILM

Jan 13–19
In Dreams: The Films of David Lynch
SIFF Cinema samples from the oeuvre of director David Lynch for two weeks of twisted flicks, including Blue Velvet, The Elephant Man, Mulholland Dr., Dune, and a Twin Peaks screening. SIFF Cinema at the Uptown, $5–$10.

VISUAL ART

Thru Jan 22
Videowatercolors: Carel Balth Among His Contemporaries
Just a little over a week left to see Videowatercolors (video stills printed on watercolor paper or canvas) by Dutch artist Carel Balth. Examine his new media approach to landscape imagery in relation to more traditional photography and painting by contemporaries Gerhard Richter, Hiroshi Sugimoto, and Luisa Lambri (also on display). Henry Art Gallery, admission $6–$10.

EAT & DRINK

Jan 14
Chef’s Tour of the Market
Starting now, and continuing for the next month, a different Seattle chef will host a weekly tour of Pike Place Market. Simon Zatyrka of Cutters Bayhouse hosts the first tour. All tours are limited to 14 participants, and end with a cooking demo and light meal at kitchen showroom SieMatic Seattle. The next tour is led by Franz Junga of Il Fornaio. Pike Place Market, $75.

PUBLIC HOLIDAY

Jan 17
30th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Rally and March
Before Occupy Wall Street, we celebrated equality and economic justice for all on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Recapture the spirit of MLK with a march from Garfield High, through the Central District, and to the Federal Building. Free.

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Tags: Paramount Theatre, Met Picks, Weekend, Neptune Theatre, McCaw Hall

Opera

The Vocal Stylings of Attila the Hun

He can sing, he can sack countries.

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Image courtesy Rozarii Lynch (foreground) / Yossi Zwecker and Israeli Opera (background)

John Relyea sings the title role in SO’s Attila.

We fancy the king of the Huns a bass-baritone—so John Relyea is well suited to lead the hordes as they sack Italy in Seattle Opera’s upcoming production of Verdi’s Attila. The Toronto native has already impressed local audiences as a tragicomic hero (Don in 2011’s Don Quixote) and a sadist (Bluebeard in 2009’s Bluebeard’s Castle); this year he’ll further test his talents as a conqueror (Attila) and a servant (Leporello in the Met’s Don Giovanni).

Seattle Opera’s Attila
McCaw Hall, Jan 14–28

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Tags: Opera, Classical and More, Seattle Opera, McCaw Hall

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