This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Latest

Human Touch
SCREEN DANCE | Sarah Elgart

Human Touch

I was first introduced to the work of Margot Gelber when she submitted a film she choreographed and directed to the Dare to Dance in Public Film Festival (D2D), the LA based, international Dance Film Festival that I founded.

Continue Reading
Breaking the Bank
REVIEWS | Eoin Fenton

Breaking the Bank

Every year since 1881 in the forests of northern California, a secretive club of male elites in the world of politics, finance, and culture gather to burn an effigy in front of a giant statue of an owl in order to leave behind the worries of the past.

Continue Reading
Into the Spirit World
REVIEWS | Victoria Looseleaf

Into the Spirit World

Men: You can’t live with ‘em, and you can’t let ‘em die! Seriously, “Giselle,” the über-Romantic dance that premiered in Paris in 1841 and was the peak of the pre-Tchaikovsky ballets (before, for example, “Swan Lake”), was first presented by Los Angeles Ballet in its fifth season.

Continue Reading
Stepping Out of the Ring
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

Stepping Out of the Ring

What gives a dance staying power? What makes any work of art continue to be relevant over time? These are questions I pondered while revisiting Andrea Miller’s “Blush,” performed by her company, Gallim, at 92NY’s Harkness Mainstage Series this spring.

Continue Reading

Raymonda Revival

Raymonda Revival

Asami Maki’s 2004 reworking of Marius Pepita’s “Raymonda” for the National Ballet of Japan dials up the wow-factor at every level.

Performance

National Ballet of Japan: “Raymonda” by Asami Maki after Marius Petipa

Place

New National Theater Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, April 26, 2026

Words

Kris Kosaka

Continue Reading

Gift Subscription

$139.95

Gift a year of world-class dance journalism. Recipients will receive full access to Fjord's wide diversity of reviews, interviews, articles & podcasts.

Gala Style
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

Gala Style

The New York City Ballet’s orchestra tackled two new pieces at this year’s Spring Gala: Edouard Lalo’s “Symphonie Espagnole,” with the star violinist Hilary Hahn debuting alongside them in the pit—her first time ever performing while submerged in subterranean darkness—and the Rolling Stones’ “Satisfaction.”

Continue Reading
Numbers Game
REVIEWS | Valentina Bonelli

Numbers Game

Almost mirroring the geopolitical situation, contemporary dance in the West—already in the USA and soon in Europe—is showing signs of wear and tear, if not decline.

Continue Reading

Romeo Revealed

Romeo Revealed

Rudolf Nureyev’s “Romeo and Juliet” is built with a finely calibrated balance of choreographic structure, theatrical intelligence, and historical awareness.

Performance

Paris Opera Balllet: “Romeo and Juliet” by Rudolf Nureyev

Place

Ópera Bastille, Paris, April 2, 2026

Words

Elsa Giovanna Simonetti

Continue Reading
Pretty as a Picaresque
REVIEWS | Sara Veale

Pretty as a Picaresque

“Too much sanity may be madness!” Carlos Acosta’s “Don Quixote” revival is proudly, fittingly quixotic—a confetti cannon of cheerful characterisations and vibrant visuals that culminate in an actual confetti cannon.

Continue Reading
Breaking Bread
REVIEWS | Sophie Bress

Breaking Bread

As a journalist and critic, I am often privy to an artist’s process before viewing their work. This insight pays off as an audience member, offering new ways of allowing a piece to come to life before my eyes.

Continue Reading
An Original Giselle
REVIEWS | Rachel Howard

An Original Giselle

We ballet fans grow irrationally attached to the productions of the classics we grow up with—taking in a different “Swan Lake” or “Giselle” from the one we know can make us feel like sensitive children refusing to eat the non-Kraft-brand mac ‘n cheese.

Continue Reading
Sculptural Lines
REVIEWS | Elsa Giovanna Simonetti

Sculptural Lines

The idea of bringing together the Louvre’s Michel-Ange / Rodin. Corps vivants exhibition, on view from mid-April to late July, and an evening of pas de deux danced by Paris Opéra Ballet soloists is so wonderfully potpourri-like that it invites reflection even where reflection may not have been the point.

Continue Reading

New Frontiers

New Frontiers

Crystal Pite, Medhi Walerski and Johan Inger belong to a shared artistic milieu, and each has cultivated a significant relationship with Ballet British Columbia, directed by Walerski himself since 2020.

Performance

Ballet BC: Crystal Pite's “Frontier” / Medhi Walerski’s “Silent Tides” / Johan Inger’s “Passing”

Place

Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Paris, April 17, 2026

Words

Elsa Giovanna Simonetti

Continue Reading
Power Couple Energy
REVIEWS | Lorna Irvine

Power Couple Energy

There's something glorious about watching a married couple dancing in sync. It's the shared looks, smiles, in-jokes and sense of being completely intuitive, working in symbiosis.

FREE ARTICLE
Tranquil Intrigue
REVIEWS | Sara Veale

Tranquil Intrigue

The title of this dance interpretation of The Tempest highlights a notable departure from canon. In “We Caliban,” Shobana Jeyasingh imagines Shakespeare’s titular native in the collective sense—a tribe, a spirit and a place at once.

Continue Reading
Rare Birds  
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

Rare Birds  

It is rare for George Balanchine’s grand, bedazzled “Symphony in C” to open a program. Its champagne-popping finale for 52 dancers tends to be a nightcap.

Continue Reading

Firebird Rising

Firebird Rising

Long before the dancers take the stage, Dance Theatre of Harlem’s season at New York City Center feels like one of the most energizing cultural events of the spring.

Performance

Dance Theatre of Harlem: “Higher Ground” by Robert Garland / “Nyman String Quartet No. 2” by Robert Garland / “The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactidue” / “Firebird” by John Taras

Place

New York City Center, New York, NY, April 16, 2026

Words

Rebecca Deczynski

Continue Reading

subscribe to THE LATEST IN DANCE

“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”


  • Weekly articles from the world of dance
  • Wide diversity of reviews, interviews, articles & more
  • Support for quality art journalism

Already a paid subscriber? Login

"This extraordinary little magazine has grown to become a cultural mainstay, not just a valued critical source, but a cultural communicator, critic, review, booster and historian."

Brenda Way

ODC/Dance

frequent questions

What's the difference between a physical and digital subscription?

With a physical subscription you'll get a physical magazine twice a year along with full site access. With a digital subscription, you'll only get access to articles and podcasts.

Will I get access to podcast content with a subscription?

Yes.

With either a physical or digital subscription, you'll get access to podcast content.

How do I get full access to articles?

With either a physical or digital subscription.

You just need a subscription to get full access to articles.

Good Subscription Agency