Culture: Dancing Ancient Egypt
Egypt

Culture: Dancing Ancient Egypt


Free Times, Columbia (Ron Aiken)

With priceless artifacts from ancient Egypt on display at the Columbia Museum of Art as part of the museum’s 10th anniversary celebration, it only made sense to Columbia City Ballet artistic director William Starrett to capitalize on the timing of its Main Street neighbor with an Egyptian-themed production of his own, Cleopatra.

The brand-new ballet is scheduled for three performances — this Friday, Feb. 1 at 7:30 and Saturday, Feb. 2 at 3 and 7:30 p.m. — and takes place both in Alexandria and Rome, no small feat for technical director Barry Sparks.

“We originally considered renting a huge set co-owned by companies in Houston, Boston and Pittsburgh, but that would have cost us $40,000 for a one-time rental and what’s more, after seeing it, William and I really didn’t like it,” Sparks says. “We thought we could do something ourselves more colorful, tell our own story and make budget.”

That decision led the pair to hit both the history books and the silver screen for ideas.

“We looked at all the resources, the historical accounts, and came up with a storyline that we could create scenes for,” Sparks says.

The State, South Carolina (Natasha Derrick)

“This is the first three-animal show I’ve done,” said technical director Barry Sparks. “The snake will not be an asp, of course, but a similar small snake.” Abraham, Columbia’s resident camel, will appear in Act I. A white cat will be used in the bedroom scene.

The “Cleopatra” sets are some of the largest Sparks has worked on in his 20 years with the ballet. The showpiece is Cleopatra’s bedroom, which features four 13-foot columns painted Egyptian Nile blue with gold and white accents, a massive canopy bed, 8-by-12-foot archways and a detailed sculpture of the goddess Isis.

Made by local artist Brandon McIver, the sculpture took nearly a week to complete and is made entirely of a durable packing material called ethafoam. The sculpture will be painted gold and flanked by smoking urns.





- Overlooked Statue Found To Represent Children Of Mark Anthony And Cleopatra
Discovery News  (Rossella Lorenzi) Cleopatra's twin babies now have a face. An Italian Egyptologist has rediscovered a sculpture of Alexander Helios and Cleopatra Selene, the offspring of Mark Antony and Cleopatra VII, at the Egyptian museum...

- Exhibition: Cleopatra In California
Virtual Press Office The west coast premiere of Cleopatra: The Search for the Last Queen of Egypt, featuring the largest collection of its kind ever assembled in the U.S., will open at the California Science Center May 23, 2012. More than 150 priceless...

- Exhibition: Where's Cleo?
Archeaology Magazine (Mark Rose) Cleopatra’s reputation as a seducer of emperors—Julius Caesar, Mark Antony, and Octavian (later Caesar Augustus)—and her suicide by snake bite have made her one of the ancient world’s most intriguing characters....

- Exhibition: More Re Excavating Egypt At Columbia
Free Times (Ron Aiken) Sometime in or about the year 2400 B.C., a wealthy Egyptian noblewoman rose from her bed in the ancient capital of Thebes, greeted the morning sun and donned a beautiful beaded-net dress — likely the best she owned — to wear...

- Nyu Hires Renowned Classicist
http://tinyurl.com/2naj5p (chronicle.com)"New York University has taken a page from the empires of antiquity by carrying off a prize from a rival kingdom. The prize is a renowned professor at Columbia University who, in an announcement expected today,...



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