Nutcracker 22 Homepage sizzle from Birmingham Royal Ballet on Vimeo.
Birmingham Royal Ballet The Nutcracker Royal Albert Hall, 31 Dec 2022 16:00
When I was young the London Festival Ballet converted the Royal Festival Hall into a theatre and staged The Nutcracker during the Christmas holidays. Because of the venue, those performances were less formal than those at Covent Garden, or Sadler's Wells. Probably they were also significantly less expensive because there were always lots of families at those shows. I was introduced to ballet at one of those performances as were many other young people. The Birmingham Royal Ballet continues that tradition by turning the Royal Albert Hall (London's other great concert hall) into a theatre and staging The Nutcracker there between Christmas and New Year's Eve.
Although the story, choreography, casts and costumes appear to be the same, a performance of The Nutcracker in the Royal Albert Hall is an altogether different experience from a performance of the same ballet at the Hippodrome. For a start, there is a narrator. The story is told by Simon Callow who is described as the "voice of Drosselmeyer". The performing space is large. The orchestra occupies a balcony above the stage. Scene changes such as the expanding Christmas tree are achieved by lighting and projection
The ballet is essentially about a young girl's dream. Clara (as she is called in this country) is given a nutcracker in the shape of a prince by Drosselmeyer, one of the guests at her parents' Christmas party. In her dream, the nutcracker comes to life and leads a detachment of toy soldiers against a pack of rodents. The rodents are about to gain the upper hand but Clara saves the day by thumping their king. As a reward, she is transported to a magical land where she is entertained by Spanish, Arabian and Chinese dancers representing chocolate, coffee and tea, cossacks, mirlitons, flowers and finally the Sugar Plum fairy and her cavalier. That is significantly different from the Russian version where the girl (known as Marie) becomes the Sugar Plum (see the "About the Performance" page on the Bolshoi's website).
One of the strengths of the Russian version is that audiences see the lead ballerina from the start. In the Birmingham and most other Western versions, she enters at the very end. Her pas de deux with her cavalier is little more than a divertissement, That always strikes me as a shame when Sugar Plum is danced by a principal. That is so different from Odette, Giselle, Aurora or any of the other great classical roles where audiences get to know the lead ballerina
I attended the 16:00 performance on New Year's eve which had a stellar cast. Céline Gittens was the Sugar Plum. Brandon Lawrence was her cavalier. Reina Fuchigami was Clara. Jonathan Payn was Drosselmeyer. Gittens is my favourite ballerina with that company, As I said in my review of her performance as Juliet, she has a quality that reminds me of her compatriot Lynn Seymour. Lawrence supported her gallantly as her cavalier.
Perhaps because it was the last performance of the year and they were looking forward to New Year's eve parties the artists seemed to dance with added energy and flair. I particularly liked the Spanish dance performed by Rosanna Ely, Louis Andreasen and Oscar Kempsey-Fagg. I also enjoyed the Snowflakes scene in the first act and the Waltz of the Flowers in the second. That is because I had performed those dancers, albeit after a fashion. Martin Dutton of the Hammond taught me the first snowflake's role at a KNT workshop in Manchester. I have also attended several of Jane Tucker's workshops on Waltz of the Flowers for KNT and Powerhouse Ballet. I learned more about The Nutcracker from those workshops than I had previously gained in a lifetime of watching it from the stalls.
There were some fun gimmicks on the set. Clara's brother was given a rat on wheels for Christmas. After that same brother had trashed the nutcracker Drosselmeyer was able to fix it remotely. I should have mentioned earlier that Drosselmeyer's store with his name in gothic writing appeared at the beginning.
A good ballet needs a good orchestra and this company has one of the best. Peter Murphy conducted them on New Year's eve to loud applause from both cast and audience.
Every major company in the UK has its version of The Nutcracker. I have seen them all at one time and another. We all have our favourites. This version is mine.
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