Don Quixote at the Joffrey Ballet
by Stella Atrium
by Stella Atrium

Attending ballet in Chicago is all about going to the Auditorium at Roosevelt University, often claimed in our reviews as America's most beautiful theater. Nestled among the buildings for Roosevelt, Columbia College, and DePaul University, the Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan masterpiece is a banquet of arches and ornamentation.

The jeweled setting puts the patron in a mood for great art, and the Joffrey Ballet seldom disappoints.
Yesterday we attended the matinee for Don Quixote where the aging Spanish knight doesn't dance. He is shown on his deathbed three times, so jumping up to perform leaps and turns would seem awkward.
The sidekick Sancho Panza (Derrick Agnoletti) completes some slapstick, and they have an oversized puppet horse that looks like a theatre school group project. The elements of the story are pushed aside anyway, so the star dancers Carlos Quenedit, who plays a barber named Basilio, and Victoria Jaiani as the baker's daughter Kitri can shine.
This
somber story is enlivened by scenes in the square where a street
dancer, played by Joanna Wozinak, and toreador Matthew Adamczyk provide
the few moments of Spanish flavor. These are almost in competition
with the romantic leads who barely acknowledge their presence. But, we attend ballet for pretty girls in tutus and high leaps from men wearing 18th century military uniforms.
The
several solo bits from Basilio and Kitri displayed a commitment to high
discipline, taut physicality, and displays of prowess for practiced
movements that brought frequent applause and hoops of delight from the
audience. Often for ballet I sit down front at the Auditorium to absorb the details of set decoration and costume design. This ballet, though, is just as enjoyable from the mezzanine.
Time was... the outrage I felt when reading a novel or viewing a movie in my favorite genre was not reinforced by friends. The
Part
of the reason I cannot call myself a feminist is because I fear the
adults will send us to another room to complain while they go about the
business of managing the world. Until you have been disregarded in a
business setting as not ready to sit at the table where decisions are
made, or automatically called a trouble-maker, this sense of righteous
indignation may escape you. I make no apology.
SYNOPSIS:
A mute woman along with her young daughter, and her prized piano, are
sent to 1850s New Zealand for an arranged marriage to a wealthy
landowner, and she's soon lusted after by a local worker on the
plantation. (source: internet movie database)
The
outspoken Bell was in the middle of world events then that led to our
current morass. She spoke out in the company of Winston Churchill and
was in community with many Middle Eastern leaders at a time when women
were without voice in those countries. 