SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. >> Show-goers got to experience some Argentinian culture last week, with the Spa City debut of Che Malambo at Saratoga Performing Arts Center. The all-male Argentina-based dance ...
Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Based in the rich Argentinian traditions of the gaucho, or South American cowboy, ...
The Argentine based company Che Malambo excites audiences through precise footwork and rhythmic stomping, drumming of the bombos, and singing and whirling boleadoras (lassos with stones on the end).
When choreographer Gilles Brinas ventured from Paris to Buenos Aires in 2005, intending to pluck a native art form from obscurity, it must've seemed like a quixotic pursuit even to him. Though ...
Che Malambo is making its debut at SPAC Thursday, July 20. The all-male Argentinian ensemble will be presenting its interpretation of the malambo, a competitive dance and artistic form popularized by ...
2 Watch: Next On Stage's High School & College Top 5 Revealed Che Malambo takes the stage at Popejoy Hall Friday, April 26, 2019 at 7:30 pm, showcasing the athleticism and grace of traditional ...
Trapped in a shoe store in Buenos Aires during an end-of-world hailstorm in 2001, I gritted as ice the size of ball bearings struck the steel roof like shotgun blasts. Imagine the scene described ...
They’re basically balletic gauchos. And like a wild horde, these 13 male dancers (half man/half horse, basically) prance and gallop around the stage with an infectious rhythm, energy and spirit. They ...
BECKET — Dancing Argentine cowboys — who knew? Ella Baff and dancer-choreographer Gilles Brinas know. Among Baff’s last duties after 17 years as director of Jacob’s Pillow Dance was planning this year ...
The Savannah Music Festival (SMF) is dedicated to presenting world-class celebrations of the musical arts by creating timeless and adventurous productions that stimulate arts education, foster ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by In “Che Malambo,” a Frenchman has taken a folkloric Argentine form and turned it into grand spectacle. By Brian Seibert Like riders charging across ...
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