Nostalgia

Fonderia Reggio Emilia
20 January H 18.00

Nostalgia: the return to the Fonderia stage of two former Aterballetto dancers.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026 – 6:00 PM – Open rehearsal

Wednesday, January 21, 2026 – 8:30 PM – Performance

Fonderia – Via della Costituzione 39, Reggio Emilia

Nostalgia by Giovanni Insaudo is an emotional journey suspended between the final gesture on stage and the first applause. A poetic investigation into the desire to hold on to the moment, to what remains when the performance ends—or perhaps never truly ends. Moving between dance and performative docufilm, time shatters like memory, creating an immersive experience that draws the audience into the dancer’s most intimate emotions.

Starring two former Aterballetto dancers, Sandra Salietti Aguilera and Hélias Tur-Dorvault.

https://vimeo.com/1075239301?fl=pl&fe=sh

Choreography, concept, and direction: Giovanni Insaudo
Assistant choreographer: Sandra Salietti Aguilera
Dancers: Sandra Salietti Aguilera, Hélias Dorvault
Dramaturgy: Giovanni Insaudo, Giulia Menti
Video: Alfonso Fernández Sánchez
Lighting design and costumes: Giovanni Insaudo
Music: WoodkidSeen That Face Before / Minus Sixty One, Son LuxSever, BFRND & Vladimir CauchemarHedge Fund Trance part.1, Jerskin FendrixBella and Max | Poor Things (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Organization and management: Giulia Menti
Production: DANCEHAUS più
With the support of I Vespri, TanzLabor ROXY Ulm
With the support of Twain_Direzioni Altre, Palcoscenico Danza

Giovanni Insaudo is an acclaimed choreographer and the founder of I VESPRI | Giovanni Insaudo, a platform that has enabled him to shape a distinctive artistic language and movement identity. He has danced with companies such as Dantzaz Konpania, Balletto dell’Esperia, Gärtnerplatz Theater, and Luzerner Theater. His works are presented at international festivals and competitions.

In 2024, he was awarded the Danza&Danza Award as Emerging Choreographer of the Year and received the Città di Foligno Award for choreographic merit. He has created works for numerous international companies, including Landestheater Linz, Semperoper Dresden, Theater Lüneburg, Palucca Hochschule Dresden, Opera di Graz, Konzert und Theater St. Gallen, CCN/Aterballetto, Theater Trier, Theater Nordhausen, Gärtnerplatz Theater, Hung Dance, Tanz Luzerner Theater, Compagnia Opus Ballet, Tanz Labor / Roxy Theater Ulm, Eko Dance Project, Contemporary Bachelor ZHdK Zurich, Oriol Martorell Conservatory Barcelona, D.A.F. Roma, and Nuovo Balletto di Toscana.

TICKETS

Open rehearsal
€3 for everyone / free admission for children under 6

Performance
Full price: €10
Reduced price (under 30, dance schools, Liceo Coreutico Matilde di Canossa, over 65, CRAL members of the Municipality of Reggio Emilia): €6
Reduced price (under 8): €3


TICKET PURCHASE

Tickets can be purchased online at www.biglietteriafonderia39.it.

The Fonderia box office is open one hour before the start of the performance.

Tickets are not numbered.


CONTACTS

Mobile & WhatsApp: +39 334 1023554

Nostalgia

Fonderia Reggio Emilia
21 January H 20.30

Nostalgia: the return to the Fonderia stage of two former Aterballetto dancers.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026 – 6:00 PM – Open rehearsal

Wednesday, January 21, 2026 – 8:30 PM – Performance

Fonderia – Via della Costituzione 39, Reggio Emilia

Nostalgia by Giovanni Insaudo is an emotional journey suspended between the final gesture on stage and the first applause. A poetic investigation into the desire to hold on to the moment, to what remains when the performance ends—or perhaps never truly ends. Moving between dance and performative docufilm, time shatters like memory, creating an immersive experience that draws the audience into the dancer’s most intimate emotions.

Starring two former Aterballetto dancers, Sandra Salietti Aguilera and Hélias Tur-Dorvault.

https://vimeo.com/1075239301?fl=pl&fe=sh

Choreography, concept, and direction: Giovanni Insaudo
Assistant choreographer: Sandra Salietti Aguilera
Dancers: Sandra Salietti Aguilera, Hélias Dorvault
Dramaturgy: Giovanni Insaudo, Giulia Menti
Video: Alfonso Fernández Sánchez
Lighting design and costumes: Giovanni Insaudo
Music: WoodkidSeen That Face Before / Minus Sixty One, Son LuxSever, BFRND & Vladimir CauchemarHedge Fund Trance part.1, Jerskin FendrixBella and Max | Poor Things (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Organization and management: Giulia Menti
Production: DANCEHAUS più
With the support of I Vespri, TanzLabor ROXY Ulm
With the support of Twain_Direzioni Altre, Palcoscenico Danza

Giovanni Insaudo is an acclaimed choreographer and the founder of I VESPRI | Giovanni Insaudo, a platform that has enabled him to shape a distinctive artistic language and movement identity. He has danced with companies such as Dantzaz Konpania, Balletto dell’Esperia, Gärtnerplatz Theater, and Luzerner Theater. His works are presented at international festivals and competitions.

In 2024, he was awarded the Danza&Danza Award as Emerging Choreographer of the Year and received the Città di Foligno Award for choreographic merit. He has created works for numerous international companies, including Landestheater Linz, Semperoper Dresden, Theater Lüneburg, Palucca Hochschule Dresden, Opera di Graz, Konzert und Theater St. Gallen, CCN/Aterballetto, Theater Trier, Theater Nordhausen, Gärtnerplatz Theater, Hung Dance, Tanz Luzerner Theater, Compagnia Opus Ballet, Tanz Labor / Roxy Theater Ulm, Eko Dance Project, Contemporary Bachelor ZHdK Zurich, Oriol Martorell Conservatory Barcelona, D.A.F. Roma, and Nuovo Balletto di Toscana.

TICKETS

Open rehearsal
€3 for everyone / free admission for children under 6

Performance
Full price: €10
Reduced price (under 30, dance schools, Liceo Coreutico Matilde di Canossa, over 65, CRAL members of the Municipality of Reggio Emilia): €6
Reduced price (under 8): €3


TICKET PURCHASE

Tickets can be purchased online at www.biglietteriafonderia39.it.

The Fonderia box office is open one hour before the start of the performance.

Tickets are not numbered.


CONTACTS

Mobile & WhatsApp: +39 334 1023554

NOTTE MORRICONE

Théâtre de Liège Liège
23 January H 21.00

In the prestigious setting of the Pays de Danses Festival in Liège, Aterballetto performs Notte Morricone by Marcos Morau on January 23 and 24, 2026.

“I, Ennio Morricone, am dead,” wrote the composer before taking his leave. His music, however, cannot die. This is how creators and artists always leave us without ever truly leaving, and how memory takes care to keep them alive, to keep them safe. Notte Morricone is my gift, a devoted tribute to the beauty he gave to the world.
Notte Morricone unfolds in the twilight of an ordinary night in the life of a creative spirit who, alone and dazed before his papers, jots down notes and envisions melodies for films that do not yet exist, bringing stories back to life in the rarefied air of his room.
Marcos Morau – Director and Choreographer

It is impossible to describe Notte Morricone, a masterful work that washes over the spectator in waves, embraces them with emotional currents, and captivates them with the memory of timeless melodies that have long outlived the images that first inspired them. Equally enchanting is the finely chiselled, ever-poetic choreography, composed with meticulous attention to detail: legs and necks seem jointless, bending and snapping rhythmically like metronomes.
Maria Luisa Buzzi – Danza&Danza

Duration: 90 minutes
Find out more »

The performances are held in collaboration with the Directorate General for Public and Cultural Diplomacy of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and with the Italian Cultural Institute of Brussels.

NOTTE MORRICONE

Théâtre de Liège Liège
24 January H 18.00

In the prestigious setting of the Pays de Danses Festival in Liège, Aterballetto performs Notte Morricone by Marcos Morau on January 23 and 24, 2026.

“I, Ennio Morricone, am dead,” wrote the composer before taking his leave. His music, however, cannot die. This is how creators and artists always leave us without ever truly leaving, and how memory takes care to keep them alive, to keep them safe. Notte Morricone is my gift, a devoted tribute to the beauty he gave to the world.
Notte Morricone unfolds in the twilight of an ordinary night in the life of a creative spirit who, alone and dazed before his papers, jots down notes and envisions melodies for films that do not yet exist, bringing stories back to life in the rarefied air of his room.
Marcos Morau – Director and Choreographer

It is impossible to describe Notte Morricone, a masterful work that washes over the spectator in waves, embraces them with emotional currents, and captivates them with the memory of timeless melodies that have long outlived the images that first inspired them. Equally enchanting is the finely chiselled, ever-poetic choreography, composed with meticulous attention to detail: legs and necks seem jointless, bending and snapping rhythmically like metronomes.
Maria Luisa Buzzi – Danza&Danza

Duration: 90 minutes
Find out more »

The performances are held in collaboration with the Directorate General for Public and Cultural Diplomacy of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and with the Italian Cultural Institute of Brussels.

Il combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda

Palazzo Bentivoglio Gualtieri
25 January H 15.00

Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda arrives at Palazzo Bentivoglio in Gualtieri.

Sunday, January 25, 2026
3:00 PM and 5:00 PM

The Fondazione Museo Antonio Ligabue has a dream: to transform the Salone dei Giganti of Palazzo Bentivoglio into a living theatre. More than that, it envisions the frescoes depicting scenes from Gerusalemme liberata by Torquato Tasso coming to life through the dance of Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda, curated by the Centro Coreografico Nazionale / Aterballetto.

This is not just a performance. It is a one-of-a-kind site-specific event. The Sala dei Giganti houses the very frescoes that narrate the tragic duel between Tancredi and Clorinda. Painted art and performing art will face each other directly.
Myth will become flesh, breath, and movement.

Would you like to help make this ambitious dream a reality and become part of the myth?

Join the crowdfunding campaign here!

 

https://youtu.be/mjZQdcn1fgc

The theme of love overwhelmed by war and death, inspired by the story of Tancredi and Clorinda as told by Torquato Tasso in Gerusalemme Liberata (whose 450th anniversary of its first draft falls in 2025) and set to music by Claudio Monteverdi (1624), retains a striking relevance today.

The CCN/Aterballetto interprets this legacy through dance—its privileged language for conveying the work’s intensity and dramatic power—in a performance created by Fabio Cherstich and Philippe Kratz, performed by dancers Alessia Giacomelli and Kiran Gezels, tenor Matteo Straffi, and harpsichordist Deniel Perer.

The performance is preceded and followed by talks by Antonio Audino, theatre critic and journalist for Radio Rai 3, who, with his characteristic clarity, will cast a contemporary light on what are considered “sacred texts” of Italy’s cultural heritage.

 

Direction and visuals: Fabio Cherstich
Choreography and stage movement: Philippe Kratz
Music: Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda by Claudio Monteverdi
Dancers: Alessia Giacomelli, Kiran Gezels
Singer (tenor): Matteo Straffi
Harpsichord: Deniel Perer

Co-production: Fondazione Nazionale della Danza / Aterballetto, Teatro Regio di Parma / Festival Verdi, Torinodanza Festival – Teatro Stabile di Torino – Teatro Nazionale, GhislieriMusica – Centro di Musica Antica

Premiered in September 2024, Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda is a project aimed at enhancing live performance activities within cultural institutions and heritage sites, promoted by the Directorate General for Museums and co-funded by the Directorate General for Performing Arts.

For the realization of the project, the National Museums of Perugia – Regional Directorate of National Museums of Umbria—and in particular the National Archaeological Museum and Roman Theatre of Spoleto—established, with the support of the Directorate General for Museums, a partnership shared with five other major cultural sites: Villa Pisani in Stra, the Castle and Park of Racconigi, the Castello Svevo in Bari, the Certosa di San Martino in Naples, and the Archaeological Park of Venosa.
Castel Sant’Angelo in Rome later joined the project, hosting the initiative as part of the summer program Sotto l’angelo di Castello 2024.

 

The project is part of Italia Danza, a co-designed initiative by the Directorate General for Public and Cultural Diplomacy of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MAECI) and CCN/Aterballetto, aimed at promoting Italy’s artistic heritage abroad.

In my vision of Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda, I imagine a confined, circular space, where the proximity and resemblance of bodies play a fundamental role. Together with choreographer Philippe Kratz, we explore the idea of bodies as mirrors, thus narrating an humanity struggling against itself. Eros and Thanatos emerge as equally powerful forces, creating a paradoxical atmosphere in this perfectly balanced struggle between human beings.
In our vision, Tancredi and Clorinda are contemporary warriors, indissolubly bound to one another, forced to fight and to enact a story that has already been written.

A single voice brings three characters to life: the text itself, Tancredi, and Clorinda merge into the body and sound of a single singer. This estranged sound, constrained within a circular path, creates a sense of constant repetition, underscoring the endless cycle of this story of love and death—tragically destined to repeat itself through the centuries and reach us today with all its force, as an emanation of the poetic power of Tasso’s words and the sublime music of Monteverdi.

Fabio Cherstich, Director

In Tasso’s narrative, set to music by Claudio Monteverdi, the most obvious themes are the struggle between woman and man and religious conversion. Yet these are also the aspects I find least intriguing: translating them into dance would risk reducing the work to a narrative of factual circumstances.

A more philosophical or psychoanalytic reading of this struggle—one from which both protagonists emerge defeated, deceived, and alone—appears far more compelling to me. Within the opposition of the two roles there already exists an entire world: seeking one another, confronting one another, and wounding one another. The dynamic is that of a warlike, conflictual ritual between two entities that draw closer. The absurdity of the act becomes evident when one of the two loses their life and we realize that the other, in any case, has not won… a deep, shared wound that remains on both bodies.

So are these two people fighting each other, or is it perhaps one person struggling with themselves?

Philippe Kratz, Choreographer

 

 

NOTTE MORRICONE

Théâtre de Liège Liège
25 January H 16.00

In the prestigious setting of the Pays de Danses Festival in Liège, Aterballetto performs Notte Morricone by Marcos Morau on January 23 and 24, 2026.

“I, Ennio Morricone, am dead,” wrote the composer before taking his leave. His music, however, cannot die. This is how creators and artists always leave us without ever truly leaving, and how memory takes care to keep them alive, to keep them safe. Notte Morricone is my gift, a devoted tribute to the beauty he gave to the world.
Notte Morricone unfolds in the twilight of an ordinary night in the life of a creative spirit who, alone and dazed before his papers, jots down notes and envisions melodies for films that do not yet exist, bringing stories back to life in the rarefied air of his room.
Marcos Morau – Director and Choreographer

It is impossible to describe Notte Morricone, a masterful work that washes over the spectator in waves, embraces them with emotional currents, and captivates them with the memory of timeless melodies that have long outlived the images that first inspired them. Equally enchanting is the finely chiselled, ever-poetic choreography, composed with meticulous attention to detail: legs and necks seem jointless, bending and snapping rhythmically like metronomes.
Maria Luisa Buzzi – Danza&Danza

Duration: 90 minutes
Find out more »

The performances are held in collaboration with the Directorate General for Public and Cultural Diplomacy of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and with the Italian Cultural Institute of Brussels.

Il combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda

Palazzo Bentivoglio Gualtieri
25 January H 17.00

Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda arrives at Palazzo Bentivoglio in Gualtieri.

Sunday, January 25, 2026
3:00 PM and 5:00 PM

The Fondazione Museo Antonio Ligabue has a dream: to transform the Salone dei Giganti of Palazzo Bentivoglio into a living theatre. More than that, it envisions the frescoes depicting scenes from Gerusalemme liberata by Torquato Tasso coming to life through the dance of Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda, curated by the Centro Coreografico Nazionale / Aterballetto.

This is not just a performance. It is a one-of-a-kind site-specific event. The Sala dei Giganti houses the very frescoes that narrate the tragic duel between Tancredi and Clorinda. Painted art and performing art will face each other directly.
Myth will become flesh, breath, and movement.

Would you like to help make this ambitious dream a reality and become part of the myth?

Join the crowdfunding campaign here!

 

https://youtu.be/mjZQdcn1fgc

The theme of love overwhelmed by war and death, inspired by the story of Tancredi and Clorinda as told by Torquato Tasso in Gerusalemme Liberata (whose 450th anniversary of its first draft falls in 2025) and set to music by Claudio Monteverdi (1624), retains a striking relevance today.

The CCN/Aterballetto interprets this legacy through dance—its privileged language for conveying the work’s intensity and dramatic power—in a performance created by Fabio Cherstich and Philippe Kratz, performed by dancers Alessia Giacomelli and Kiran Gezels, tenor Matteo Straffi, and harpsichordist Deniel Perer.

The performance is preceded and followed by talks by Antonio Audino, theatre critic and journalist for Radio Rai 3, who, with his characteristic clarity, will cast a contemporary light on what are considered “sacred texts” of Italy’s cultural heritage.

 

Direction and visuals: Fabio Cherstich
Choreography and stage movement: Philippe Kratz
Music: Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda by Claudio Monteverdi
Dancers: Alessia Giacomelli, Kiran Gezels
Singer (tenor): Matteo Straffi
Harpsichord: Deniel Perer

Co-production: Fondazione Nazionale della Danza / Aterballetto, Teatro Regio di Parma / Festival Verdi, Torinodanza Festival – Teatro Stabile di Torino – Teatro Nazionale, GhislieriMusica – Centro di Musica Antica

Premiered in September 2024, Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda is a project aimed at enhancing live performance activities within cultural institutions and heritage sites, promoted by the Directorate General for Museums and co-funded by the Directorate General for Performing Arts.

For the realization of the project, the National Museums of Perugia – Regional Directorate of National Museums of Umbria—and in particular the National Archaeological Museum and Roman Theatre of Spoleto—established, with the support of the Directorate General for Museums, a partnership shared with five other major cultural sites: Villa Pisani in Stra, the Castle and Park of Racconigi, the Castello Svevo in Bari, the Certosa di San Martino in Naples, and the Archaeological Park of Venosa.
Castel Sant’Angelo in Rome later joined the project, hosting the initiative as part of the summer program Sotto l’angelo di Castello 2024.

 

The project is part of Italia Danza, a co-designed initiative by the Directorate General for Public and Cultural Diplomacy of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MAECI) and CCN/Aterballetto, aimed at promoting Italy’s artistic heritage abroad.

In my vision of Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda, I imagine a confined, circular space, where the proximity and resemblance of bodies play a fundamental role. Together with choreographer Philippe Kratz, we explore the idea of bodies as mirrors, thus narrating an humanity struggling against itself. Eros and Thanatos emerge as equally powerful forces, creating a paradoxical atmosphere in this perfectly balanced struggle between human beings.
In our vision, Tancredi and Clorinda are contemporary warriors, indissolubly bound to one another, forced to fight and to enact a story that has already been written.

A single voice brings three characters to life: the text itself, Tancredi, and Clorinda merge into the body and sound of a single singer. This estranged sound, constrained within a circular path, creates a sense of constant repetition, underscoring the endless cycle of this story of love and death—tragically destined to repeat itself through the centuries and reach us today with all its force, as an emanation of the poetic power of Tasso’s words and the sublime music of Monteverdi.

Fabio Cherstich, Director

In Tasso’s narrative, set to music by Claudio Monteverdi, the most obvious themes are the struggle between woman and man and religious conversion. Yet these are also the aspects I find least intriguing: translating them into dance would risk reducing the work to a narrative of factual circumstances.

A more philosophical or psychoanalytic reading of this struggle—one from which both protagonists emerge defeated, deceived, and alone—appears far more compelling to me. Within the opposition of the two roles there already exists an entire world: seeking one another, confronting one another, and wounding one another. The dynamic is that of a warlike, conflictual ritual between two entities that draw closer. The absurdity of the act becomes evident when one of the two loses their life and we realize that the other, in any case, has not won… a deep, shared wound that remains on both bodies.

So are these two people fighting each other, or is it perhaps one person struggling with themselves?

Philippe Kratz, Choreographer

 

 

NOTTE MORRICONE

Theater Gütersloh Gütersloh
28 January H 19.30

On January 28 and 29, 2026, Aterballetto performs Notte Morricone by Marcos Morau at Theater Gütersloh in Germany.

“I, Ennio Morricone, am dead,” wrote the composer before taking his leave. His music, however, cannot die. This is how creators and artists always leave us without ever truly leaving, and how memory takes care to keep them alive, to keep them safe. Notte Morricone is my gift, a devoted tribute to the beauty he gave to the world.
Notte Morricone unfolds in the twilight of an ordinary night in the life of a creative spirit who, alone and dazed before his papers, jots down notes and envisions melodies for films that do not yet exist, bringing stories back to life in the rarefied air of his room.
Marcos Morau – Director and Choreographer

It is impossible to describe Notte Morricone, a masterful work that washes over the spectator in waves, embraces them with emotional currents, and captivates them with the memory of timeless melodies that have long outlived the images that first inspired them. Equally enchanting is the finely chiselled, ever-poetic choreography, composed with meticulous attention to detail: legs and necks seem jointless, bending and snapping rhythmically like metronomes.
Maria Luisa Buzzi – Danza&Danza

Duration: 90 minutes
Find out more »

 

NOTTE MORRICONE

Theater Gütersloh Gütersloh
29 January H 19.30

Il 28 e 29 gennaio 2026, Aterballetto danza Notte Morricone di Marcos Morau al Theater Gütersloh in Germania.

“Io, Ennio Morricone, sono morto”, scrisse il compositore prima di congedarsi. La sua musica, invece, non può farlo. Ed è così che i creatori e gli artisti sempre ci lasciano senza lasciarci, ed è in questo modo che la memoria si preoccupa di tenerli vivi, di tenerli al sicuro. Notte Morricone è il mio regalo, un devoto tributo alla bellezza che ha donato al mondo.
Notte Morricone si svolge nel crepuscolo di una notte ordinaria nella vita di un creativo, che solo e stordito davanti ai suoi fogli, prende appunti e visualizza melodie per film che non esistono ancora, riportando in vita storie nell’aria rarefatta della sua stanza.
Marcos Morau – Regista e coreografo


Impossibile descrivere Notte Morricone, pezzo magistrale che arriva a flutti allo spettatore, lo abbraccia con onde emotive, lo cattura nella memoria di melodie intramontabili sopravvissute di gran lunga alle immagini che le hanno generate. Incantevole pure la coreografia cesellata e sempre poetica, composta con maniacale attenzione al dettaglio: gambe e collo sembrano privi di giunture, si flettono e scattano ritmicamente come metronomi.
Maria Luisa Buzzi – Danza&Danza

Scopri di più »

Durata 90′

 

Rhapsody in blue / Solo Echo / Glory Hall

Royal Theatre Victoria
6 February H 19.30

Aterballetto performs in Canada as part of the Dance at the Royal Series by Dance Victoria on February 6 and 7, 2026.

On stage: Rhapsody in Blue by Iratxe Ansa and Igor Bacovich, a lively and playful choreography echoing Gershwin’s famous score. This is followed by Crystal Pite’s Solo Echo, which, through Brahms’ sonatas for piano and cello, invokes winter to express something essential about acceptance and loss. The final piece, Glory Hall, is a new creation by Diego Tortelli, offering the company and the audience a fresco of sensuality and overwhelming vitality.

 

Rhapsody in blue / Solo Echo / Glory Hall

Royal Theatre Victoria
7 February H 19.30

Aterballetto danza in Canada all’interno del Dance at the Royal Series di Dance Victoria il 6 e 7 febbraio 2026.

In scena Rhapsody in blue di Iratxe Ansa e Igor Bacovich, coreografia divertente, vivace, come l’omonimo brano di Gershwin. A seguire Solo Echo di Crystal Pite che, attraverso le sonate per pianoforte e violoncello di Brahms, invoca l’inverno per esprimere qualcosa di essenziale sull’accettazione e la perdita. L’ultima coreografia Glory Hall è la nuova produzione firmata da Diego Tortelli, che regala alla compagnia e al pubblico un affresco di sensualità e travolgente vitalità.

Rhapsody in blue / Solo Echo / Glory Hall

Memorial Auditorium Stanford
11 February H 19.30

Aterballetto performs at Stanford, California, on February 11 and 12, 2026.

On stage: Rhapsody in Blue by Iratxe Ansa and Igor Bacovich, a playful, vibrant choreography echoing Gershwin’s iconic score. This is followed by Crystal Pite’s Solo Echo, which, through Brahms’ sonatas for piano and cello, summons winter to express something essential about acceptance and loss. The evening concludes with Glory Hall, a new creation by Diego Tortelli, offering both the company and the audience a fresco of sensuality and overwhelming vitality.