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ABT 2018 메트오페라하우스 시즌(5/14-7/7, 2018)

서희씨가 내년 5월 14일 아메리칸발레시어터(ABT)의 오프닝 공연 '지젤'에서 코리 스턴과 공연한다. 이어 '라 바야데르'에서 데이빗 홀버그와 호흡을 맞춘다. 이외에세계 초연작 '애프터라이트(AfterRite)' '백조의 호수' '로미오와 줄리엣' '돈키호테' '휩드 크림' 등에 출연한다. ABT의 코르드발레 안주원씨도 '라 바야데르'에서 솔로르로 캐스팅되어 무희 역의 수석 무용수 디본 토이셔와 무대에 오를 예정이다. 안주원씨는 지난해 '해적'에서 노예 역으로 공연한 바 있다. 메트오페라하우스 시즌은 7월 7일까지 8주간 계속된다. http://www.abt.org

WORLD PREMIERES OF AFTERITE BY WAYNE McGREGOR AND HARLEQUINADE BY ALEXEI RATMANSKY TO HIGHLIGHT AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE’S 2018 SPRING SEASON, MAY 14-JULY 7, AT METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE

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American Ballet Theatre’s 2018 Spring season at the Metropolitan Opera House,
May 14-July 7, will feature the World Premieres of AFTERITE by Wayne McGregor and
Harlequinade by ABT Artist in Residence Alexei Ratmansky, it was announced today by ABT
Artistic Director Kevin McKenzie.
Principal Dancers for the 2018 Metropolitan Opera House are Stella Abrera, Roberto
Bolle, Isabella Boylston, Jeffrey Cirio, Misty Copeland, Herman Cornejo, Marcelo Gomes,
David Hallberg, Sarah Lane, Alban Lendorf, Gillian Murphy, Hee Seo, Christine Shevchenko,
Daniil Simkin, Cory Stearns, Devon Teuscher and James Whiteside.

2018 Spring Gala Performance and World Premiere of AFTERITE
American Ballet Theatre’s 2018 Spring Gala on Monday, May 21 will feature the World
Premiere of AFTERITE by Wayne McGregor, Resident Choreographer at The Royal Ballet. In
his first work for ABT, McGregor will create a new scenario set to Igor Stravinsky’s The Rite of
Spring. AFTERITE will be brought to the stage by set and costume designer Vicki Mortimer,
with video designs by Ravi Deepres and lighting by Lucy Carter, all of whom have previously
collaborated with McGregor.
The 2018 Spring Gala will also feature excerpts from Ratmansky’s Harlequinade. The
all-new production of Harlequinade, staged by Ratmansky after the original by Marius Petipa,
will be given its World Premiere by American Ballet Theatre on June 4, 2018. A comic ballet in
two-acts, Harlequinade is set to music by Riccardo Drigo and first premiered in 1900 in St.
Petersburg, Russia. The new production will feature sets and costumes by Robert Perdziola and
lighting by Brad Fields. Following its World Premiere, the ballet will be given seven
performances during the 2018 Spring season. A co-production with The Australian Ballet,
Harlequinade is ABT’s first full-length production of the ballet. For more information on
ABT’s 2018 Spring Gala, please call the Special Events Office at 212-477-3030, ext. 3310.

McGregor’s AFTERITE will share the program with Ratmansky’s Firebird for seven
performances through Saturday, May 26. The one-act Stravinsky classic with original
choreography by Ratmansky, features scenery by Simon Pastukh, costumes by Galina Solovyeva,
lighting by Brad Fields and projections by Wendall K. Harrington. Ratmansky’s production of
Firebird was given its World Premiere at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Costa Mesa,
California on March 29, 2012, danced by Natalia Osipova (Firebird), Marcelo Gomes (Ivan),
David Hallberg (Kaschei) and Simone Messmer (Maiden). Ratmansky’s Firebird, cocommissioned
by American Ballet Theatre and Dutch National Ballet, is American Ballet
Theatre’s fourth production of the ballet.


Full-length Ballets
American Ballet Theatre’s 2018 Spring season opens with eight performances of Giselle
beginning Monday evening, May 14, led by Hee Seo in the title role, opposite Cory Stearns as
Albrecht and Gillian Murphy as Myrta. Guest Artist Natalia Osipova will perform the title role on
Friday, May 18 opposite David Hallberg as Albrecht.

Set to music by Adolphe Adam, with scenery by Gianni Quaranta, costumes by Anna Anni
and lighting by Jennifer Tipton, Giselle features choreography after Jean Coralli, Jules Perrot and
Marius Petipa and has been staged for ABT by Artistic Director Kevin McKenzie. The world
premiere of Giselle, one of the oldest continually-performed ballets, occurred at the Theatre de
l’Academie Royale de Musique in Paris on June 28, 1841. The ballet was first presented by ABT
(then Ballet Theatre) at the Center Theatre in New York City on January 12, 1940 with 

choreography by Anton Dolin and scenery and costumes by Lucinda Ballard. The leading roles
were danced by Annabelle Lyon and Anton Dolin. American Ballet Theatre’s sixth production,
featuring scenery by Gianni Quaranta and costumes by Anna Anni, was created for the film
Dancers, produced in 1987 by Cannon Films. This production’s first public performance was
given on March 20, 1987 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California, with Marianna
Tcherkassky as Giselle and Kevin McKenzie as Albrecht. The current staging is by McKenzie,
using the Quaranta and Anni designs.

The first of seven performances of La Bayadère on Tuesday, May 29 will be led by Hee
Seo as Nikiya, David Hallberg as Solor and Gillian Murphy as Gamzatti. Choreographed by
Natalia Makarova after Marius Petipa, La Bayadère is set to music by Ludwig Minkus, specially
arranged by John Lanchbery, and features scenery by PierLuigi Samaritani, costumes by Theoni V.
Aldredge and lighting by Toshiro Ogawa. The full-length La Bayadère received its World
Premiere by the Imperial Ballet at the Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre in St. Petersburg on February 4,
1877. La Bayadère, Act II (The Kingdom of the Shades) was first performed in the West by the
Leningrad-Kirov Ballet in 196l. Natalia Makarova first staged The Kingdom of the Shades scene
for American Ballet Theatre in 1974, and it received its premiere at the State Theater in New York
City on July 3 of that year, danced by Cynthia Gregory as Nikiya and Ivan Nagy as Solor.
Makarova subsequently produced and choreographed the complete version of La Bayadère (in
three acts) for American Ballet Theatre, which received its World Premiere on May 21, 1980 with
Natalia Makarova as Nikiya, Anthony Dowell as Solor and Cynthia Harvey as Gamzatti.
Kenneth MacMillan’s Romeo and Juliet will be given eight performances beginning
Monday evening, June 11 with Gillian Murphy as Juliet, Marcelo Gomes as Romeo and Daniil
Simkin as Mercutio. Set to the score by Sergei Prokofiev, Romeo and Juliet features scenery and
costumes by Nicholas Georgiadis and lighting by Thomas Skelton. Romeo and Juliet received its
World Premiere by The Royal Ballet in London on February 9, 1965 and was given its ABT
Company Premiere at the Metropolitan Opera House on April 22, 1985 with Leslie Browne and
Robert La Fosse in the leading roles.

Eight performances of Swan Lake, choreographed by Kevin McKenzie after Marius
Petipa, will be given beginning Monday, June 18 with Devon Teuscher and Marcelo Gomes
leading the opening night cast. Swan Lake is set to the score by Peter Ilyitch Tchaikovsky and 
features scenery and costumes by Zack Brown and lighting by Duane Schuler. This production
of Swan Lake premiered on March 24, 2000 at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in
Washington, D.C. with Julie Kent (Odette-Odile), Angel Corella (Prince Siegfried) and Marcelo
Gomes (von Rothbart).

Don Quixote will begin the first of eight performances on Monday evening, June 25 led
by Isabella Boylston as Kitri, Daniil Simkin as Basilio, Hee Seo as Mercedes and James Whiteside
as Espada. The ballet is staged by Kevin McKenzie and Susan Jones, with choreography after
Marius Petipa and Alexander Gorsky. Don Quixote is set to music by Ludwig Minkus and
features scenery and costumes by Santo Loquasto and lighting by Natasha Katz. The
McKenzie/Jones staging of the current production was first performed by ABT on June 12, 1995.
Last season’s World Premiere production of Whipped Cream returns to the stage of the
Metropolitan Opera House for eight performances beginning Monday, July 2 featuring Daniil
Simkin, Stella Abrera, David Hallberg and Sarah Lane in the leading roles. Choreographed by
Alexei Ratmansky, the ballet features scenery and costumes by artist Mark Ryden and lighting
by Brad Fields. Whipped Cream, with a libretto and score by Richard Strauss, is based on the
two-act ballet originally created as Schlagobers, which premiered at the Vienna State Opera in
1924. Ratmansky’s production received its World Premiere by ABT on March 15, 2017 at
Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa, California. Whipped Cream will be given eight
performances at the Metropolitan Opera House through Saturday evening, July 7, including a
special matinee performance on Friday, July 6 at 2:00 P.M.

ABTKids
ABTKids, American Ballet Theatre’s annual one-hour introduction to ballet, is scheduled
for Saturday morning, May 19 at 11:30 A.M. All tickets for ABTKids are $25.
Subscriptions for American Ballet Theatre’s 2018 Spring Season at the Metropolitan
Opera House, on sale beginning Wednesday, November 1, are available by phone at 212-362-
6000, or online at ABT’s website www.abt.org.
ABT 2018 SPRING SEASON AT THE MET ANNOUNCED – Page 5
American Airlines is the Official Airline of American Ballet Theatre. Northern Trust is the Leading
Corporate Sponsor of the American Ballet Theatre Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School. ABT is supported, in
part, with public funds from the National Endowment for the Arts; the New York State Council on the Arts
with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature; and the New York City
Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.
American Ballet Theatre's performances of Giselle are generously supported through an endowed gift from
Sharon Patrick.
La Bayadère is generously supported by an endowed gift from Drs. Philip and Marjorie Gerdine. In loving
memory of Caroline Newhouse.
American Ballet Theatre's performances of Romeo and Juliet are generously underwritten through an
endowed gift from Ali and Monica Wambold.
Firebird is generously supported through an endowed gift from The Toni and Martin Sosnoff New Works
Fund.
Swan Lake is generously underwritten by R. Chemers Neustein. Costumes for Swan Lake are generously
sponsored through Ellen Everett Kimiatek Costume Preservation Trust.
Don Quixote is generously supported through an endowed gift from Anka K. Palitz in memory of Clarence Y.
Palitz Jr.
Leadership support for The Ratmansky Project, including Harlequinade and Whipped Cream, has been
generously provided by Avery and Andrew F. Barth, the Blavatnik Family Foundation, Mr. and Mrs.
Hamilton E. James, and The Ted and Mary Jo Shen Charitable Gift Fund. Additional major support has
been provided by Linda Allard, Sarah Arison, Lisa and Dick Cashin, Lloyd E. Rigler - Lawrence E. Deutsch
Foundation, The Susan and Leonard Feinstein Foundation, William J. Gillespie, Brian J. Heidtke, Howard S.
Paley, Bernard L. Schwartz, Melissa A. Smith, The H. Russell Smith Foundation/Stewart R. Smith and Robin
A. Ferracone, and the Martin and Toni Sosnoff Foundation. ABT gratefully acknowledges Dr. Joan Taub
Ades, Steven Backes, Mark Casey and Carrier Gaiser Casey, Linda and Martin Fell, Vicki Netter Fitzgerald,
John Leland Sills and Elizabeth Papadopoulos-Sills, and Barbara and Sedgwick Ward for their generosity