• ABOUT US
    • History
    • Our Team
    • Advertising
    • Subscription
  • CONTACT US
Georgia Today
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • Social & Society
  • Sports
  • Culture
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • Social & Society
  • Sports
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Georgia Today
No Result
View All Result

Dance: Bright Future

by Georgia Today
December 6, 2023
in Blog, Business & Economy, Culture, Magazine
Reading Time: 3 mins read
"Lord of the Wolves," dating from 1990, a children’s national ballet by [David] Potskhishvili. Photos by Tony Hanmer

"Lord of the Wolves," dating from 1990, a children’s national ballet by [David] Potskhishvili. Photos by Tony Hanmer

A Georgian friend informed my wife and I some weeks ago that she had bought us tickets to a Georgian dance spectacle in the Griboedov Theater at Liberty Square. We gladly accepted, and I took along my GEORGIA TODAY press card, hoping to have the freedom to take photographs for this article. The director agreed, and someone showed me where I could operate, which was actually in quite a lot of space on both the main and second levels. Our tickets were front-row, and as the show began I took a few shots from this close-up point, but then moved back for some more distant shots with a longer lens, careful not to obscure the viewing of the audience.

If this is the future of Georgian dance and theater, it is in good hands. Shows like this deserve to go international

The show is called Mamber (Lord of the Wolves), dating from 1990, and its booklet describes it further as a “children’s national ballet by [David] Potskhishvili”. I had never heard of it, or him, so was glad for the story breakdown and production details. The instructor and choreographer is Nino Kartvelishvili. The dancers are soloists of the Metekhi national ballet and the national children’s ballet. Georgia’s Ministry of Culture, Sports and Youth is a main supporter. The event was for one night only, October 29, so we were very happy to have the chance to see it.


The show’s story concerns King Mirdat of Kartli and Queen Sagdukhti, and their son Vakhtang, who will come to have the second name Gorgasali and will found the city of Tbilisi, over 15 centuries ago (his main statue, on horseback, is in the courtyard of Metekhi Church in the Old City). Plots against them ensue: poisoning of the king, kidnappings, the escape of the young prince, his conflict with a pack of wolves, rescue and mentoring by Mamber, their Lord. Eventually Vakhtang, now a young man, rescues his widowed mother, defeats the evil, takes his throne and strengthens the kingdom.


The action and music were thrilling, a mix of traditional Georgian dance, ballet, synthesis of the two, and some modern elements seamlessly blended in. The spectacle was only 55 minutes in length, although there have been longer versions too. But it held our attention from beginning to end, spellbound. As the cast and director were coming out to a rapturous standing ovation, a little girl of perhaps three was released by her mother onto the stage to run to them and present a big bouquet of flowers to one of the young ladies and give her a hug. She, too, obviously unafraid and committed to this action, won our hearts.
True to my style in photographing dance, I mostly used a slow shutter speed of 1/8 to 1/30 of a second. I do this to allow motion blur, either keeping the camera still or moving it; because my idea is that dance is all about motion, and frozen photos of dancers do little to convey this. Let the movement show! I also processed the photos in black and white only, not wanting the colors to distract from the forms, tones and compositions of the photos. Out of nearly 280 shots, I chose about 130 as usable, with a few special ones from that set. The music, lighting and smoke effects really added to the mood of the show, along with beautifully painted backdrops and the magnificent costumes. Among these, the lupine heads of the wolf-children really stood out.


If this is the future of Georgian dance and theater, it is in good hands. Shows like this deserve to go international, and I hope it gets its chance to shine abroad and introduce people all over the world to the wonders of this little country’s culture, which should be much more famous than it already is. Viva!

BLOG by Tony Hanmer

Tony Hanmer has lived in Georgia since 1999, in Svaneti since 2007, and been a weekly writer and photographer for GT since early 2011. He runs the “Svaneti Renaissance” Facebook group, now with over 2000 members, at www.facebook.com/groups/SvanetiRenaissance/
He and his wife also run their own guest house in Etseri: www.facebook.com/hanmer.house.svaneti2

Tags: danceGeorgian balletLord of the WolvesMamberPotskhishviliTony Hanmer
ShareShareTweet

Related Posts

Business & Economy

June 23, 2025
EBRD: Georgia’s economy grew 9.4% in 2024
Business & Economy

EBRD: Georgia’s economy grew 9.4% in 2024

June 23, 2025
Polish Musicians Join Forces with Tbilisi Youth Orchestra in Concert Marking EU Presidency
Culture

Polish Musicians Join Forces with Tbilisi Youth Orchestra in Concert Marking EU Presidency

June 23, 2025

Recommended

Putin, Xi, and allied leaders mark Russia’s Victory Day at Moscow parade

Putin, Xi, and allied leaders mark Russia’s Victory Day at Moscow parade

2 months ago
Experience Seamless Connectivity with Silknet eSIM in Georgia

Experience Seamless Connectivity with Silknet eSIM in Georgia

12 months ago
Champion Karateka Luka Khvedeliani on the Benefits of Georgian Karate for Georgia’s Youth

Georgia to Celebrate First Europe Day with European Union Candidate Status

1 year ago
Georgian Foreign Minister Holds Farewell Meeting with French Ambassador to Georgia

Georgian Foreign Minister Holds Farewell Meeting with French Ambassador to Georgia

3 years ago
Natia Mezvrishvili on Dealing with 2 Political Giants

Natia Mezvrishvili on Dealing with 2 Political Giants

3 years ago
Giorgi Gakharia: We were Told We Were Capable of Nothing – It’s All a Lie and Ukraine is a Great Example of This

Giorgi Gakharia: We were Told We Were Capable of Nothing – It’s All a Lie and Ukraine is a Great Example of This

3 years ago
GT Interview with Giorgi Badridze

GT Interview with Giorgi Badridze

3 years ago
Russo-Ukrainian War and Georgia – Analysis from security expert Kakha Kemoklidze

Russo-Ukrainian War and Georgia – Analysis from security expert Kakha Kemoklidze

3 years ago

Navigation

  • News
  • Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • Social & Society
  • Sports
  • Culture
  • International
  • Where.ge
  • Newspaper
  • Magazine
  • GEO
  • OP-ED
  • About Us
    • History
    • Our Team
    • Advertising
    • Subscription
  • Contact

Highlights

Zurab Japaridze sentenced to 7 months, banned from public office for 2 years

Trump declares US airstrikes “obliterated” Iran’s key nuclear facilities

EU Delegation urges end to attacks on media and democracy

CoE: Six Georgian journalists facing fines over social media posts

Ukraine Latest: Massive Russian Attack Kills 28, Injures 134 in Kyiv

Georgian NGOs Decry ‘Russian-Style’ Data Demands from Gov’t

Trending

Experience Seamless Connectivity with Silknet eSIM in Georgia
Business & Economy

Experience Seamless Connectivity with Silknet eSIM in Georgia

by Georgia Today
June 26, 2024

Why Silknet's eSIM could be your top choice in Georgia  Since its introduction, eSIM technology has become...

Photo by the author

Virtuosity and Versatility: Marc-André Hamelin Opens Tbilisi Piano Festival 2024

May 30, 2024
  • Where.ge
  • Newspaper
  • GEO
  • Magazine
  • Old Website

2000-2024 © Georgia Today

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business & Economy
  • Social & Society
  • Sports
  • Culture
  • International
  • Where.ge
  • Newspaper
  • Magazine
  • GEO
  • OP-ED
  • About Us
    • History
    • Our Team
    • Advertising
    • Subscription
  • Contact

2000-2024 © Georgia Today