Although Nathaniel Hawthorne called himself "the obscurest man in American letters," his achievements in fiction, both as short-story writer and novelist, offer models fashioned too well for contemporary and later writers to ignore. Even though fame was...
When Nathaniel Hawthorne was born in Salem, Massachusetts, on our most patriotic holiday in 1804, his ancestral roots were already deeply planted in New England. Writing in The Scarlet Letter (1850) of his sentimental affection for the town of his birth,...
In sketches, tales, and romances published in the second third of the nineteenth century, Nathaniel Hawthorne chose mainly American materials, drawing especially on the history of colonial New England and his native Salem in the time of his early America...
La Sylphide; The Lesson; Les Rendezvous The Royal Ballet, Royal Opera House It was with the 1832 ballet La Sylphide that Marie Taglioni acquired international repute and legendary status. Her angel-like, gravity-defying dancing earned her the affectionate appellation 'Christian' dancer, which sits somewhat...
The three Sylphs Boston Ballet has fielded so far in its production of Bournonville's "La Sylphide," at the Wang Center for the Performing Arts through Sunday, have each taken quite a different view of the quintessentially 19th century romantic role. No matter what else...