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Chuncheon Ballet Company stages “The Barber of Seville” to lower the barriers many people associate with ballet, leaning on the well-known opera title to welcome new audiences. With rollicking music, vivid choreography and theatrical mime, the production carries viewers through its dramatic arc. Rather than presenting ballet as distant or forbidding, the company invites the audience in with broad humor, unfolding incidents and lively, character-driven storytelling.
The action opens on Seville’s streets. Count Almaviva sees Rosina at her window and falls instantly in love. He enlists Figaro, a barber and old acquaintance, to help him woo Rosina, who is under the watchful eye of Bartolo. Bartolo, who hopes to marry Rosina himself, becomes the chief obstacle while townspeople murmur about his designs.
Despite repeated meddling, Almaviva and Rosina confirm their feelings. Figaro cooks up schemes to unite them; Bartolo recruits the music teacher Basilio for support. Rosina nearly becomes ensnared in the plot before Figaro exposes the deception. Enraged, Bartolo challenges Almaviva to a duel. After Almaviva’s victory, preparations begin for the lovers’ wedding.

The production’s chief strength is its brisk dramatic momentum. Chuncheon Ballet Company shapes choreography so shifts in feeling and plot points read clearly onstage. Rather than relying solely on classical technique, the company augments narrative clarity with mime and expressive character movement, which amplifies the comedy.
Gioachino Rossini’s score supplies the piece’s rhythmic backbone. New arrangements and inserted passages in select scenes heighten its buoyant spirit. Quick reversals, misunderstandings and schemes play out to a light, accessible tempo.
The production first drew notice when it was invited to the 2024 Korea Ballet Festival. After regional runs, it has built both artistic credibility and audience appeal. This year’s festival staging returns with tightened choreography and a denser dramatic architecture honed through repeated performances.
Artistic director Baek Young-tae — a professor in the Department of Dance at Kangwon National University and head of Baek Young-tae Ballet Lyubov — leads the production. He serves as chairman of the Korea Professional Ballet Association and has been named the Korean Ballet Association’s Artist of the Year.
Overall direction is overseen by Park Ki-hyun, a professor at Kangwon National University who directs Park Ki-hyun Ballet Company and serves as vice chairman of the Korea Professional Ballet Association. His recent honors include the 2025 Korean Ballet Association Production Award and major prizes at the National Dance Festival.
Together, Baek and Park aim for both artistic refinement and accessibility. Their Barber of Seville leans on a familiar classical title while widening access through clear characterization and a theater-friendly dramatic structure.

Chuncheon Ballet Company comprises dancers based in Chuncheon who have energized the regional arts scene with original productions and varied programming. The company prioritizes community engagement and works to broaden appreciation for ballet’s artistic value.
A regional company’s appearance at the Korea Ballet Festival matters. Korea’s ballet landscape cannot be understood by looking only at major Seoul companies. As regional troupes create original works, revive repertoire and expand audience outreach, they strengthen the national ballet ecosystem.
The Korea Ballet Festival (BAFEKO) was launched in 2011 by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism. Embracing classical elegance, contemporary experimentation and homegrown Korean works, the festival has expanded the foundation of Korean ballet. Since becoming an Arts Council Korea public project in 2020, it has been selected seven years running as one of Korea’s representative performing-arts festivals.

This year’s theme, “Echo,” asks what resonance ballet can create in audiences’ emotions and social consciousness. Chuncheon Ballet Company answers with “The Barber of Seville (Bravo Figaro),” using humor, love, plotting and dance to narrow the gap between ballet and viewers.
Chuncheon Ballet Company will perform “The Barber of Seville (Bravo Figaro)” twice on May 27 at the CJ Towol Theater of the Seoul Arts Center, at 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Reported by News Culture M.J._mj94070777@nc.press











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