“The Unicorn” is an odd idea for...
- Share via
“The Unicorn” is an odd idea for a ballet. A unicorn appears in the middle of midtown Manhattan near Hell’s Kitchen. A television crew arrives, a mob follows and someone suggests making the beast a zoological curiosity.
“And the hunt begins,” said composer Lanny Meyers, who created the piece that makes a Long Beach Ballet world premiere at the Center Theater on March 16 and 17.
The ballet ends on an odd note as well: The unicorn, a symbol of peace and love, dies in a virgin’s lap. “Some view the unicorn as a Christ figure because the mob kills him and then regrets it afterward,” Meyers said. “The idea speaks to what’s going on in society right now.”
“The Unicorn” is a departure from the 8-year-old Long Beach Ballet’s usual repertoire of “Nutcracker Suite,” “Coppelia” or “Rite of Spring,” artistic director David Wilcox said. “It’s a new concept,” Wilcox explained, “a musical rock opera ballet.”
Composer Meyers, winner of five Emmy awards for television scores, wrote the 50-minute ballet after studying a medieval tapestry called “The Hunt of the Unicorn” in a New York City museum, The Cloisters.
On the same program, the ballet company will present two short works, “On Occasion,” a neoclassical suite of dances, and “Aymara,” a Peruvian folk ballet that premiered in Long Beach in 1986.
Tickets range from $11 to $21 with half-price admission for children. The Center Theater is at 300 E. Ocean Blvd. in Long Beach. Information: 427-5206.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.