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...Produced by Valentine N. Quadrat ’09 and co-directed by Caitlin L. M. Kakigi ’09 and Kevin Shee ’10, the Harvard Ballet Company (HBC) show presented numerous pieces of varying style and quality Saturday at the New College Theatre. The Harvard Contemporary Dance Ensemble performed three of the seven vignettes last week as part of a larger series called “Dancing Caprices...
...quite lackluster as well. The chorus, which did not dance on pointe, should have put on a cohesive, clean performance, but instead proved boring and imprecise. The pas de deux by the two leads, Gamzatti (Amanda C. Lynch ’10) and Solor (Kevin Shee ’10) was not much better. The two dancers were clearly talented but completely mismatched: Shee visibly shook when lifting Lynch and strained when turning her. At one point, Lynch even took an unfortunate fall. She redeemed “La Bayadère,” however, when she returned...
...left much to be desired. Still, the piece as a whole was pleasant to watch. Balanchine’s choreography made its second, less successful appearance of the evening in an excerpt from “Apollo.” Despite the best efforts of the dancers, especially Kevin Shee ’10, the piece failed to hit home. The light music conveyed none of the majesty the Sun God normally evokes, and although Shee did his best with Balanchine’s choreography and Watts’s staging, his Apollo seemed more like a drunken Zeus after...
...wanted to see Master Chief ‘pwn’ everybody,” Joshua D. Abram ’10 said, adding, “and to win all the stuff.” The student groups coordinated the event with the event sponsor, Microsoft, said Kevin Shee ’10, director of the HIMG Harvard Gaming Initiative. The software giant provided prizes, some gaming equipment, and even plastic drinking cups. “We’re here to try to create a gaming environment in which anyone, no matter what video game background one comes...
...Produced by Valentine N. Quadrat ’09 and co-directed by Caitlin L. M. Kakigi ’09 and Kevin Shee ’10, the HBC performance—the group’s first major recital since its Loeb Mainstage hit, “American Grace”—was produced Saturday at the Harvard Dance Center. “Bravura and Blues,” featuring five short numbers and variations from the famous piece “Paquita,” provided an evening of elegant entertainment...