附註:"A Seaver book."
The photographs -- Anthony Dowell -- Natalia Makarova -- Patri Dupond -- Patricia McBride -- Alexander Godunov -- Ghislaine Themar -- Peter Martins -- Cynthia Gregory -- Fernando Bujones -- Martine Van Hamel.
摘要:"To the large and devoted American ballet audience [of the 1980s], the names of these ten dancers are among the most magical--stars at the peak of their fame. Dance photographer Pierre Petitjean has captured in 200 poetic and candid pictures the real people behind their theatrical presences. Petitjean is mesmerized by the dance in the same way that Degas was, and his lens can make one 'see' dance as the painter's brush could. His fascination is with the totality of dance, its many facets both away from the footlights and in performance. He has traveled with these dancers for months at a time, in Europe and in the United States, to see them at home and far from home, in class and in rehearsal, in the electric final moments backstage before curtain time. He has succeeded in revealing the extraordinary transformation from person to performer that is the dancer's way of life. , Here are Patricia McBride and Peter Martins of the New York City Ballet; Anthony Dowell, Natalia Makarova, Alexander Godunov, Cynthia Gregory, Fernando Bujones, and Martine Van Hamel of the American Ballet theatre; and Patrick Dupond and Ghislaine Thesmar of the Paris Opera Ballet. You will see them behind the scenes and in pictures that record the fleeting moments of great performance which dancers must perpetually re-create. Their biographies, based on personal interviews with Holly Brubach, display the individuality of each of them, which is as striking as the passion they share for their difficult art. By juxtaposing the public and private sides of these stars of contemporary ballet, [this book] doubly illuminates the art. After seeing Pierre Petitjean's photographs, no one can watch these or even other dancers without a sharply heightened sense of what they bring to each dazzling appearance on the stage. , In Holly Brubach's words, 'lf the story these pictures tell has a moral, it is that dancing isn't the mystical business it's so often made out to be, that ballet, for all its romantic illusion, is in fact a carefully conceived plan. Like architecture, it takes into account physical limitations and the law of gravity. Ballet may fulfill our longing to be other than we are, and, at the same time, make us realize how fine it is to be human. It is that contradiction which lies at the heart of great performances and of these pictures.'"--Jacket.