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You are here: Home / Events / Tulsa Ballet: Made in America

Tulsa Ballet: Made in America

May 14, 2026 (2026-05-14T12:51:32+01:00) by Teresa Guerreiro Leave a Comment

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Last Updated on May 14, 2026

A UK Debut for Oklahoma’s Premier Ballet Company

3.5 out of 5.0 stars

Tulsa Ballet, Oklahoma’s largest performing arts organisation, brought a large dose of American showmanship to the Linbury with Made in America, a triple bill of very distinctive works that illustrate the company’s talent, technique and versatility.

American dancers possess unique attack and a very special way of engaging the audience by appearing to look straight into our eyes, inevitably drawing us in and keeping us focused.  All three works in Made in America build on those qualities, and if I have quite a few quibbles about all three, I have absolutely no reservations about the dancers, whose performances I found thrilling.

The programme for Tulsa Ballet’s first ever visit to the UK opened with San Francisco choreographer Yuri Possokhov’s Classical Symphony, set to Prokofiev’s Symphony No 1 in D Major, Opus 25 ‘Classical’.

Shot from above, six couples pose in a geometric pattern, the men all in black, the women in flimsy patterned tutus
Classical Symphony. Photo: Jessie Kenney, courtesy of Tulsa Ballet

It’s a neo-classical work, which shows off the dancers’ impeccable, often exuberant, classical technique, both in pair work and in its very many individual variations.  However, after a neat opening movement, where the dancers moved in unexpected, interesting groupings and formations, the choreographer appeared to run out of ideas, so that the ensuing movements lost structure and progression, to become merely academic successions of party tricks.  Sandra Woodall’s costumes – all black for the men, flimsy, two-layer printed tutus for the women – were flattering and easy on the eye.  And although all 14 dancers performed to a high level, I was particularly impressed with Nao Ota and Jun Masada, who danced the opening pas de deux.

The second piece was Divenire (Italian for ‘becoming’) by Nicolo Fonte, who drew his inspiration from the music of Ludovico Einaudi.

A group of dancers wearing shimmering leotards in shades of pink and purple form a tableau
Divenire. Photo: Jessie Kenney, courtesy of Tulsa Ballet

The Italian Einaudi, whose stated aim is to create emotionally accessible music, is a prolific composer, perhaps more widely known for his soundtracks for film (Nomadland, The Father) and TV, and there is a cinematic quality to the score for this 25-minute piece, created for the dancers of Tulsa Ballet.  

The curtain goes up on an arresting image: on an otherwise dark stage, the only light falls on the tilted head, torso and outspread arms of a woman held high by another dancer.  It’s a brief tableau, which dissolves as she is brought down and the dancers flood the stage, costumed in unisex, long, flowing black trousers, which throughout the piece they will wear or discard in favour of shimmering leotards for no discernible reason (costume designer Anaya Cullen).

The choreography searches for sweeping, emotion-evoking movement, building on the women’s elastic extensions.

Two male dancers lift a female with one leg standing on a man's thight, the other stretched on a 180 degree angle
Divenire. Photo: Jessie Kenney, courtesy of Tulsa Ballet

To start with, the women are in soft shoes, but they will later swap those for pointe shoes.  The purpose of this change is not clear.  In fact, a lot of where this overlong piece is going is unclear, and for all that it was danced with commitment and feeling, it left me unmoved.  The most striking moments were those where the dancers formed brief, well-composed tableaux.

The final piece in Made in America brought a complete change of mood and more than a whiff of Broadway.  Also created on these particular dancers, it is the work of Andy Blankenbuehler, best known for his Tony Award-winning choreography in Hamilton.

A male dancer in pants and blue shirt lifts a blond female wearing a fifties printed dress
Remember Our Song. Dancers Teague Applegate & Giulia Canavese. Photo: Jessie Kenney

Entitled Remember our Song, it’s a 15-minute narrative piece set aboard a submarine in wartime.  Although its narrative is unclear – it’s hard to tell, for example, which sections are in the present and which are the enactment of memories – and far too short, this piece has much to recommend it.  I was impressed with the way in which, in the absence of set and props other than a ladder and some stools, the work efficiently created the sense of claustrophobia of the narrow enclosed space of a submarine, through the sole use of movement.

A group of men surround one who climbs the ladder they are holding
Remember Our Song. Photo: Jessie Kenney

When men and women dance together, they shimmy and jive, and turn and lift with the ease of practised Broadway hoofers, and the piece brims with joy and vigour.

I see from their website that Tulsa Ballet has a long and varied repertoire, including full-length pieces such as Cinderella.  Its UK debut left me wanting to see a lot more from this interesting company.

Tulsa Ballet: Made in America is at the RBO Linbury 13 – 17 May

RBO
Bow Street
London WC2E 9DD

Check out our London Dance Previews – January to July 2026

Filed Under: Events, Dance Tagged With: dance

About Teresa Guerreiro

Teresa Guerreiro is a Portuguese journalist, who moved to London after completing her MA in English at the classical university of Lisbon, and has been living in London for most of her life. During her career as a broadcast journalist with the BBC World Service radio she won two international journalism awards; but her life-long passion has been dance, particularly ballet. Since leaving the BBC she's become increasingly involved with dance, both running her own website and as Dance Editor of the now defunct online magazine Culture Whisper. She's also written for The Times, for Dancing Times and was commissioned to write an article for a Royal Ballet performance programme.

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