Royal Ballet Triple Bill, Royal Opera House, London
Monday 28 April 2008
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The Royal Ballet's latest programme sandwiches a baffling dramatic work between two displays of dancing. Kim Brandstrup's new work is called Rushes: Fragments of a Lost Story, so perhaps it's churlish to complain that this fractured story is confusing. The real trouble is that it lacks drama. Confrontations are blurred, emotions vague.
The big news of this production is the music. Brandstrup uses a recently rediscovered Prokofiev score, sketches for a film project that was never completed, arranged and expanded by composer Michael Berkeley. It sounds, well, like film music: some distinctive, astringent orchestration, some touches of melody, but mostly accompaniment.
Richard Hudson's designs give the ballet a movie background. Fringed curtains act as transparent screens. One sequence, full of angular grey patterns, suggests both a constructivist painting and the glowing shadows of a black and white film.
Brandstrup's dances are both thin and involved. Carlos Acosta seems to be torn between Laura Morera (red dress, clearly a Bad Girl) and Alina Cojocaru (a heroine in grey). That's a charismatic cast, but you wouldn't know it from this ballet. The steps wind and dither, barely touching the Prokofiev score. A corps of dancers walk through, watch and move on.
There's another fragmented story in Balanchine's Serenade, but this one is wholly satisfying. As soloists whirl out of the corps of women, they fall, dance with men, are parted. There are hints of fate, of death or transcendence. These moments flow out of the music, out of Balanchine's marvellous corps patterns.
If anything, the Royal Ballet dancers make too much of them, giving simple gestures an emphatic edge. Marianela Nuñez acts too much, but the sheer attack of her dancing is wonderful. She soars through buoyant jumps, dancing with abandon. Lauren Cuthbertson is speedy and bold, her footwork vivid in her turning solos. Mara Galeazzi is anonymous in the third solo role. The corps gain speed and authority as the ballet continues.
Homage to the Queen is a long parade of dances by four choreographers. It's episodic, with a queen, a court and a little ballet for each of four elements, all leading up to a camp royalist tableau. Momentum is easily lost, particularly since the dancing is variable. Feet look fudgy in David Bintley's fiddly "Earth" section. Frederick Ashton's lovely "Air" pas de deux is let down by Alexandra Ansanelli, who lacks authority. Michael Corder's "Water" section sparkles, with clean dancing from all the principals. Barry Wordsworth's conducting makes the most of Malcolm Arnold's score, with loving attention to its lyrical sections.
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