Showing posts with label A Christmas Carol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Christmas Carol. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 January 2025

The Other Christmas Carol

Standard YouTube Licence

Finnish National Ballet A Christmas Carol YouTube Arte Concert 23 Dec 2024

In this country, we hear much about the Royal Danish Ballet and the Royal Swedish Ballet, but not much about their neighbours across the Gulf of Bothnia.  One of the artists I saw on my recent visit to Tallinn was Francesca Loi who danced Cinders's stepmother in Cristiano Principato's CinderellaI looked her up and found that she was with the Finnish National Ballet.  I explored her company's website and discovered it was founded just over 100 years ago.  It performs in a beautiful modern opera house.  It has a very interesting repertoire and its Artistic Director is Javier Torres,  Mr Principato, a soloist with the Estonian Ballet, has urged me to break my journey in Helsinki and watch the Finnish National Ballet on stage the next time I am in his area. 

One of its productions that I would love to have seen is David Bintley's A Christmas CarolIt was performed in Helsinki between 30 Nov and 30 Dec 2024.  The next best thing to a live performance is watching them on TV.  That has just become possible because a recording of their performance will be hosted on Arte Concdert's YouTube channel until 27 Feb 2925.  I watched the video last night less than a month after seeing Northern Ballet's production at the Leeds Grand Theatre.  As I said in A Christmas Carol - A Reflection of a Golden Age 19 J\n 2025, Northern Ballet's production is one of my favourite ballets.  It is impossible to compare a video with a work on stage but if I could see Bentley's work in a theatre I believe I would admire it just as much.

Apart from the similarities that are to be expected in a ballet that is inspired by the same novella and shares the same leading characters Bintley's ballet is quite different from Gable and Moriconi's.  The score is by Sally Beamish who also wrote the music for David Bintley's The Tempest and David Nixon's The Little Mermaid.  I described her score for The Tempest as "enchanting" in my review of that ballet and I think her score for The Little Mermaid is one of the reasons for my headline Nixon's Little Mermaid - Perhaps His Best Work Yet in my review of Nixon's work.  Beamish discusses her score for A Christmas Carol in From a Sinister Atmosphere to Joyful Christmas Sounds.  The sets, costumes and projection design were by Anna Fleischle and some of the scenes were arresting.  The Christmas Yet To Come scene was literally spine-chilling even on a flat-screen telly.  Mark Henderson designed the lighting which was mood-changing even in the recording and would have been even more so in the theatre,

Bentley followed Dickens's story faithfully but he introduced some additional scenes such as Ali Baba, Long John Silver and Dox Quixote from Scrooge's childhood imaginings.  In his flashbacks to Scrooge's childhood and youth, Bintely explains how Scrooge developed as he did.  Something that I never fully appreciated from the original text.  Bimntley weaves in interesting new characters like three Jack Tars who are introduced by Tiny Tim's "I Saw Three Ships,"   Bintley's divertissements are often the strongest features of his ballets and they certainly distinguished this ballet.

In the film, Paul Murphy of Birmingham Royal Ballet conducted the Finnish National Opera Orchestra but I think Aku Sorensen directed them most other nights,  Scrooge was danced by Johan Pakkanen, Young Scrooge by Martin Nudo, Belle by Abigail Sheppard, Bob Cratchit by Frans Valkama and Tiny Tim by Janne Kouhia. I surmise that he is a student at the National Opera and Ballet School.  He discharged a very demanding role for a young artist with flair.  It included singing the first lines of a traditional English carol and calling for a blessing in a foreign language,  No doubt that is why he warned one of the loudest cheers at the curtain call. 

I strongly recommend this recording to my readers and I hope that the powers that be will bring this interesting company to London one of these days. There are some great photos and videos on the National Ballet's website including a short talk by Bintley.  Bintley comes from the next village but one from mine in the Holme Valley and I have twice had the pleasure of meeting him at the London Ballet Circle.  I was a frequent visitor to the Hippodrome when he was the Birmingham Royal Ballet's Director, and I am probably one of his biggest fans.

Sunday, 19 January 2025

A Christmas Carol - A Reflection of a Golden Age

John Leech Marley's Ghost

 Northern Ballet  A Christmas Carol Leeds Grand Theatre, 31 Dec 2024

Although I read in Dance and Dancers about a performance at the Royal Northern College of Music by a new company called Northern Dance Theatre when I was an undergraduate at St. Andrews, it was only in 1987 that I saw them for the first time.  I could not have had a better introduction because it was Gillian Lynne's A Simple Man with Christopher Gable as L S Lowry and Moira Shearer as the artist's mother.

They were two ballet heroes from my childhood.  Shearer had retired before I took an interest in ballet though clips and photos of her remained long afterwards.  Gable, on the other hand, was one of the biggest stars in the 1960s when I started to attend the ballet.  I saw him several times and admired him greatly.

At about the same time as I saw A Simple Man or perhaps shortly afterwards Gable was appointed Artistic Director of the company now known as Northern Ballet.  As I said in my review of Moriconi and Gable's Romeo and Juliet on 5 April 2024, "[s]ome of my favourite works were created while Gable was the Artistic Director of the company and I have always regarded that time as a golden age."  I added that it gave me great pleasure to see Romeo and Juliet again and that I very much looked forward to seeing A Christmas Carol again in November.

I actually saw it on the last day of the year and I was not disappointed.  We had an excellent cast:

The rest of the cast and indeed the casts of the other performances in Leeds are here.   For those who do not know the ballet or even Dickens's novella, the role of each of those characters is introduced on the Christmas Carol Characters web page and the synopsis is on the Christmas Carol Story page,  There are some lovely videos and photos.   Lez Brotherston's designs were as fresh as ever as was Carl Davis's score.

I have waited a long time to see this show again.   The company danced to packed houses most nights in Leeds.   I hope it will keep its place in the repertoire.

Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Christmas Carol - "A Fine Performance Filled with Joy"

Standard YouTube Licence 

Northern Ballet A Christmas Carol Alhambra, Bradford, 16 Nov 2013

The Bradford Alhambra is a lovely theatre in a magnificent position:  just across the road from the National Media Museum, a few minutes walk from St George's Hall and overlooking the City Park with some of the finest 19th century architecture in the world. Bradfordians love to dis their city. I don't know why.  "Try living here!" is their usual response when challenged. Well, perhaps.  But I am glad to see when something important happens to their community they unite whether it is something bad like the anniversary of the disaster at Bradford City football ground in which 56 spectators died or something good when that same football club played triumphantly at Wembley a few days later.

And Bradfordians clapped and cheered their hearts out in  the Alhambra last Saturday when Northern Ballet danced A Christmas Carol.  As one of Bradford's most famous daughters tweeted, it was a "fine performance filled with joy." All my favourite dancers were there: Tobias Batley, Hannah Bateman, Matthew Broadbent, Martha Leebolt, Pippa Moore, Kevin Poeung, Hironao Takehashi and Javier Torres but the evening provided an opportunity for Sebastian Loe to shine as Scrooge. I had no idea that he was such a talented character dancer.

A Christmas Carol is one of the oldest works still in the repertoire of Northern Ballet. Created by the great dancer and actor Christopher Gable who was Northern Ballet's artistic director and also founder of Central School of Ballet with a magnificent score by Carl Davis, a spectacular set by Lez Brotherston  and sparkling choreography by Massimo Moricone it was one of the ballets that made the company's reputation (another being A Simple Man which I discussed on 14 Sep 2013).

Based on Dickens's novel there are tugs for every emotion from Tiny Tim's song (a prodigiously talented Oscar Ward who is still at Sara Packham Theatre School) to the joy of Christmas morning when Scrooge doles out the goodies to the Cratchit family. Everyone has his or her favourite bit and for me it was the pas de deux between young Scrooge (danced by Batley) and Belle (danced by Leebolt).

The production is now at the Palace in Manchester until the 23 Nov. The company was founded in Manchester and has at least temporarily come home.  Do welcome them back!