Joffrey Ballet – Anna Karenina

The Joffrey Ballet
“Anna Karenina”
Friday March 15, 2024
UC Berkeley, Zellerbach Hall

“Outrageous, Extravagant”…Excellent!

The Joffrey Ballet brought its huge company to the Zellerbach Hall this past weekend to amaze us with Yuri Passokhov’s choreography for the famous Tolstoy novel, “Anna Karenina”. It will take the usual reader several months, to read the book, to ‘get to know’ this complex tale. It took the Joffrey a little over two and a half hours, each minute packed with gorgeous dance.

Set in two acts, the narrative proceeds for ten scenes and an epilogue. We witness the joyful yet anguished love of Anna and Vronsky, the discipline and distinction of Karenin, Anna’s husband, (and their son Sertozha), the Moscow court, its protocol and dancers and the charming ultimately fulfilled love of Kitty and Kostantin. We also meet the Russian Society, Jockeys and Peasants. The dancers are all remarkable; the audience was attentive and appreciative, although sometimes more than a little overwhelmed.

Many dancers from the San Francisco Ballet company attended to admire their colleagues.

Kudos to the performers particularly Victoria Jaini (Anna) who accomplished remarkable skill both dramatic and technical in all scenes, from court appearances to sexy bedroom events. She is able to project the dramatic moments while executing extremely difficult technical movement when lifted, when on the floor, in intimate encounters and joyful moments. As Vronsky, Alberto Velazquez is her equal in both drama and skill, performing solo moments with overwhelming balletic display. Dylan Gutierrez portrayed a proud, powerful Karenin. The younger lovers, Kitty (Yumi Kanazawa) and Konstantin (Hyuma Kiyoswwa) portray their romance in a gentler mode, yet they are also powerful dancers . Dozens of others complete the cast.

The choreography by Yuri Possokhov and music by Ilya Demutsky (played by the Berkeley Symphony, conducted by Scott Speck) all must be awarded highest praise for amazing execution and performance. Lindsay Metzger provided vocal music.

This reviewer was amazed and impressed by all performers particularly Victoria Jaini, Alberto Velazquez and all the leading dancers. Kiyosawa is the last dancer on stage in an idyllic field full of flowers and crops. Is this Tolstoy’s message to us from the novel? That the decadent court may have its pride and passion, but that the peasant will prevail? More literate experts than I will provide the answer. The dancing was superb, the drama exciting, the production magnificent.

It was helpful to choose what to see and who to admire. It was often too much!