Posts Tagged ‘Mao’s Last Dancer’

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The Black Swan Effect: Fleeting Chimera, Or a Catalyst for a Second Dance Boom?

February 17, 2011

Guest writer: Andrew Edmonson, Houston Ballet director of marketing and public relations

After being dismissed by many as a high-culture relic in danger of imminent extinction, suddenly ballet is hot in American popular culture, due in large part to the popularity of Darren Aronofsky’s dark psychological thriller Black Swan. For the past few months, a film about BALLET, of all things, has been one of the top-five highest grossing films in the nation. Natalie Portman won the Golden Globe Award for best actress; the buzz is that she’s a front-runner for a Best Actress Oscar. The airwaves are full of interviews about the hermetic world of ballet, and audiences are flocking to cinemas, sometimes returning to Black Swan for repeat viewings. In London, movie goers reportedly called the Royal Opera House to find out when Portman would be dancing during the Royal Ballet’s current run of Swan Lake.

In ballet circles, a tantalizing question has generated much excitement and speculation: Is Black Swan the new Turning Point, the 1977 film that helped to popularize ballet and ushered in the high summer of “the dance boom” when Americans seemed to fall in love with dance? Could Black Swan ignite a second great love affair between Americans and classical ballet in the 21st century? 

As The Turning Point proved so decisively in the 1970s, films that reach a broad crossover audience can greatly raise the visibility of what is sometimes misperceived as an elitist art form. But based on my experience as marketing director at Houston Ballet over the past 10 years, I’m a bit more bearish in my prognostication about the long-term impact of Black Swan and its ability to develop a lasting audience for ballet that will be in concert halls watching dance long after 2011.

Here in Houston, we had a smashing example of how a high-profile movie with ballet subject matter can drive traffic to our live performances in August with the Houston premiere of Mao’s Last Dancer, which recounted the story of the celebrated Chinese dancer Li Cunxin’s dramatic defection from China to Houston Ballet. The film opened to great PR hoopla in Houston two weeks prior to the opening of our 2010-11 season. At our box office, we offered 50 percent off grand tier and balcony seats to anyone presenting a ticket stub from Mao’s Last Dancer to our season opener, Body, Soul & Gershwin. We saw a strong response to this promotion, sold many tickets to the performance, and ultimately ended up exceeding our ticket sales goal for this program by 62 percent.
 
The timing on the release of Black Swan is much more tricky in that its visibility has risen greatly at the end of December and in early January – just as the company goes on its layoff weeks after the two-show-a-day grind of The Nutcracker. We are not back in performance (and therefore don’t really have an advertising presence) until the end of February, so it’s difficult for us to capitalize on the interest and excitement surrounding the film now.
 
In a perfect world, we would be reviving Swan Lake during our February and March performances, and could run a campaign along the lines of, “You’ve seen the film version of Black Swan. Now see the original in all its glory in a spectacular live performance.” Unfortunately, we performed Swan Lake last in 2009, so it’s too early for us to bring it back into our rep.
 
However, even in Houston, ballet has suddenly acquired a sizzle. The Houston Chronicle did a feature this past month looking at “what’s out/what’s in.” At the top of the list of “in” items were ballerinas, with a photo of Natalie Portman from the film. In Houston prior to this point, ballet hasn’t crested to the top of the heap of mass popular culture, so I was a bit taken aback – and pleasantly surprised – to see ballet’s new pride of place. Instead of being elitist and old-school (the complaints often leveled against high art forms), we are suddenly trendy!
 
As the director of PR for one of America’s largest ballet companies (and as someone who loves the art of ballet), I’m a bit troubled by Black Swan’s dark focus on some of the worst stereotypes that have accrued around the ballet world (that may no longer be so accurate anyway):  the obsessive drive to perfection among some dancers that can wreak havoc with their emotional lives; the warped body images and eating disorders; sexual harassment from company directors who indulge in the droit de seigneur. This is certainly not our reality at Houston Ballet, and I cringe to think that mainstream America is getting the impression that this is the reality for American ballet companies.

Although ballet companies can certainly offer promotions that can get fans of Black Swan through the door to experience live dance, I am ultimately pessimistic about how “sticky” these customers would be over the long term. In 2008, the League of American Orchestras conducted a highly influential study of nine major symphony orchestras that showed that more than 90 percent of first-time concertgoers never return for another performance. I would like to believe in “dance exceptionalism,” which posits that because our art form is so highly visual and features artists with beautiful bodies in sensual motion, we have a much greater chance at luring cinema goers who saw Black Swan (and presumably respond to highly visual aesthetic experiences) to a live dance performance.

But I look at our data on customers for our production of The Nutcracker, and I am not encouraged. Nutcracker buyers are an audience similar in many ways to that of Black Swan: “first-time tryers” of a dance concert who may not attend many other arts events regularly. Our studies show that 75 percent of Houston Ballet’s Nutcracker customers attend The Nutcracker, and never return (despite the fact that we aggressively extend discounted “bounce back” offers to productions with similar subject matter such as The Sleeping Beauty or Swan Lake.)

According to the Oliver Wyman study of first-time attendees to symphony concerts, the issue of customer attrition “is the same customer churn phenomenon that afflicts businesses dependent on repeat-purchases and subscriptions, such as mobile phone operators, cable TV companies, airlines, and banks, and fast food restaurants.” Thus realistically, I don’t believe that dance would be immune to the same patterns of high rates of attrition that are common to many industries and sectors.

So, in a recessionary environment where arts budgets are very tight and our administrative staff hasn’t had a raise in two years, it would be hard for me to justify taking already scarce audience development dollars to invest in a program to attempt to educate and retain fleeting ticket buyers who have little likelihood of becoming long-term customers and supporters of Houston Ballet.

I don’t want to rain on the parade of Black Swan. I hope that Natalie Portman wins the Oscar for Best Actress, and that many more Americans are introduced to the fascinating world of ballet through Aronofsky’s fever dream of a film. But I believe that Black Swan’s impact on building a long-term audience for ballet that endures will be fleeting at best. Individual movies – and fads – come and go, but ballet as an art form has been around for centuries. American ballet companies from New York to San Francisco to Houston needn’t rely on faddish movie nominations, magazine covers, and top-ten lists to put out good work, build and engage audiences, and maintain a cultural legacy.

-Andrew

This article was originally published in From the Green Room, Dance/USA’s eJournal.  You can learn more about Dance/USA on their website.

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Chi Cao of Mao’s Last Dancer Guest Starring as Nutcracker Prince

December 16, 2009

Beginning this Friday, Chi Cao, a principal dancer with England’s Birmingham Royal Ballet and star of the internationally acclaimed film Mao’s Last Dancer, will perform the role of the prince in The Nutcracker at 7:30 pm on Friday, December 18; 2:00 pm on Sunday, December 20; 2:00 pm on Tuesday, December 22; and 2:00 pm on Wednesday, December 23.

“Chi has incredible classical and virtuoso technique. He has been very well trained by the Beijing Dance Academy, the same school that trained Li Cunxin, and we are excited to have him perform the Prince in The Nutcracker,” commented Houston Ballet Artistic Director Stanton Welch.

In Mao’s Last Dancer, Cao portrays Houston Ballet’s beloved former dancer Li Cunxin as an adult. Directed by the acclaimed film director Bruce Beresford, the cinematic version of Mao’s Last Dancer debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival in September, was released to great acclaim in Australia in October, and is slated for distribution in the U.S. in 2010.

Read more about Mr. Cao in the Houston Chronicle

Chi Cao as Li Cunxin in Mao's Last Dancer. Photo by Simon Cardwell.

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Mao’s Last Dancer Trailer Released

August 11, 2009

Can’t wait!

For the background on Houston Ballet’s involvement with the making of this movie, you can look at past blogs.

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On the set of Mao’s Last Dancer

June 27, 2008

Guest writer: Andrea Sanmiguel, interim public relations associate

Houstonians driving by the Wortham Theater center last week might have noticed a limousine complete with police escort driving up to the box office entrance with great fanfare and wondered: what VIP must be coming in to town?  Had they stayed to watch a bit longer, they would have noticed that the limo never drove farther than four yards and that it kept making that same trip numerous times. Then they might have realized that the cameras didn’t belong to paparazzi but to the film crew of the Bruce Beresford movie Mao’s Last Dancer.

After 14 weeks of non-stop filming throughout China and Australia, the story of Li Cunxin has once again made its way to Houston. For one week the movie’s crew enjoyed the humid air, burning sun and killer traffic of our fair city in order to get every last shot that was needed.

While being on a movie set was very exciting, it didn’t always involve all the action one might have expected. The crew was setting up and taking photographs in the eye of a very angry sun and then had to wait the rest of the afternoon for the sun to go down in order to actually film the scenes they needed, since most were set at night.

Filming took place in the evenings outside the Wortham Theater Center, in the afternoon at the Galleria, and in the early (I mean early!) morning hours of the weekend on the I-10 highway. Bruce Beresford himself showed me shots of Bruce Greenwood (who portrays Ben Stevenson) and Chi Cao (who portrays Li) inside a car against a green screen onto which the images of Houston’s highways will be displayed. I must say that both actors are good matches for the characters they portray.

Top row from left to right: actor Chi Cao, former Houston Ballet principal Li Cunxin, actor Bruce Greenwood; 2nd row: Houston Ballet artistic director emeritus Ben Stevenson

There are a lot of current and former dancers acting in this movie and many notables in the dance world are involved as well. Production teams from Australia, China, and the United States have also come together to make this project a reality. Houston Ballet is proud to be a part of the team that is bringing Li Cunxin’s amazing story to the big screen. We will all wait anxiously until 2010, when we can finally enjoy the finished movie in theaters.

-Andrea

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KUHF Interview with Bruce Beresford

June 23, 2008

While director Bruce Beresford was in Houston shooting scenes for the major motion picture Mao’s Last Dancer, he found time to stop by KUHF and discuss the movie.  Take a listen at KUHF’s website.

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Be an Extra in Mao’s Last Dancer!

June 20, 2008

Looking for a fun way to spend your Friday evening?  Be part of Mao’s Last Dancer, a Bruce Beresford feature film for general audiences shooting in part at Miller Outdoor Theatre this evening, June 20, 2008. If you’re interested in being an extra for the movie, please report to the garden center rose garden across from Miller Theatre at 6:30 p.m.

You will be extras as part of an “audience” in a scene. The crew needs two different types of audience members:
     -The first group must dress in 1982-style casual but stylish clothing. These people will sit on the hill and can bring blankets or lawn chairs if they wish.
     -The second group will sit closer to the stage and will need to wear cocktail attire. Only the top half of your body will be visible in shots.

It is up to you which group you prefer to be in. A performance by the Houston Symphony will be going on during shooting.

Enjoy!

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Mao’s Last Dancer

April 14, 2008

Guest writer: Andrea Sanmiguel, interim public relations associate

Production has begun on the movie Mao’s Last Dancer, an adaptation of the best selling novel of the same name.  The incredible rags-to-riches story is one that is very near and dear to Houston Ballet.

Li Cunxin was born into abject poverty in a small village in rural China, but through an incredible accident found himself under the direction of Emperor Mao’s wife, studying ballet for the communist government. Ben Stevenson, then the artistic director of Houston Ballet, was invited to go to China to teach master classes and became very impressed with the male dancers of the Beijing Dance Academy, Li Cunxin in particular. He would later invite Li, along with another pupil, to attend Houston Ballet’s Ben Stevenson Academy for one summer on a full scholarship. 

No one could have expected the sequence of events that would unfold, including a 21-hour standoff at the Chinese Embassy when the young Li Cunxin decided to marry and remain in the United States against the will of the Chinese government. When Li first set foot in Houston, Texas, his experience was flooded with cultural misunderstanding and a great deal of confusion.  He became a true embodiment of the American dream and danced with Houston Ballet for 16 years.

Former artistic director Ben Stevenson with Li Cunxin in the 1980s

It is a daunting task to tell a story as varied as Li’s on the big screen, but the wonderful production crew is doing a fantastic job. Filming has already begun in China and will soon begin in Australia and Houston. Research has been ongoing and Houston Ballet has collaborated closely with the production and art departments to ensure that the story the world sees is as close to reality as possible.

The journey into the era of Li has been an incredible one involving digging through picture archives, studying old posters, reading old newspaper clippings and even looking through dancewear catalogs of the time. The clothes dancers wore, the pieces they were dancing to, and the places they were traveling to can’t simply be invented and are integral to the story. The contrasts are particularly stark when compared to the academy in China, where Li remembers a much different experience.

It has been a very nostalgic journey to remember the Houston Ballet of twenty years ago, a Houston Ballet without a Wortham Theater Center and one in which Ben Stevenson still had not created his ballets Romeo and Juliet or Coppélia. This collaboration has helped us to recover our history in a wonderful way.

The production and art departments are committed to the integrity of their project and determined to be as historically accurate as possible, which makes our communication extremely important. Of course, when the people you are communicating with live in a country separated from yours by a time difference of 17 hours, the job can sometimes be easier said than done!

-Andrea

For more information about the casting for Mao’s Last Dancer, visit this website.

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