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View of Bangor University and the Pontio Centre Author Andrew Woodvine Licence CC NY-SA 2.0 Source Wikimedia Commons |
Ballet Cymru Giselle relaxed performance Pontio Centre 14 Jun 2025
The great David Plumpton knows that there are two ways to revive me when I am flagging in class. One is to play Khachaturian's adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia from Spartacus. The other is to play The Day We Went to Bangor (see Our Anniversary Company Class 26 May 2029 and Magic 26 May 2024 Powerhouse Ballet), Bangor occupies a special place in my affections, not least because it reminds me so much of my alma mater, which Andrew Lang celebrated in his Almae Matres.
Just below the main university buildings lies the Pontio Arts and Innovation Centre. It is important not just for the University and the city but also for Wales. I have tried to explain its importance in Ballet Cymru's Dylan Thomas Programme: The Company's Best Work Ever 12 Dec 2018, Ballet Cymru at the Bangor Pontio Centre, 24 Nov 2019, Ballet Cymru's Outreach Work 8 Jun 2020, Ballet Cymru's DUETS Programme and why it is important, 14 Feb 2022 and Dance for Parkinson's in the Pontio Centre 2 Feb 2023).
Yesterday, the Pontio Centre hosted Ballet Cymru's relaxed performance of their new production of Giselle, which I reviewed in Ballet Cymru's Giselle 3.0. A relaxed performance is designed for very young children and some adults who, for one reason or another, are inhibited from sitting in a darkened auditorium for 2 hours or more watching a full-length ballet. The idea of a relaxed performance is best explained by Birmingham Royal Ballet in their Cinderella Relaxed Performance page and their YouTube video.
I have attended two relaxed performances by Ballet Cymru: yesterday's Giselle and last year's Romeo a Juliet, which I did not get around to reporting. Those shows are a vade mecum to the appreciation of ballet. Between 1864 and 1976, the Royal Ballet operated a relaxed performance programme called "Ballet for All" which toured village halls, factory canteens and other makeshift auditoriums around the country. It brought ballet into the lives of 70,000 people a year, according to Wikipedia. I think my love of ballet was ignited by one of those performances.
Yesterday, the Pontio Centre was thronged by children and their parents, though there were more than a few unaccompanied adults like me. They mobbed Louise's exhibition spot to touch the pointe shoes, Myrtha's twigs, Giselle's headdress and other props from the performance. They gathered around a screen showing the storyboard as though it were an ice cream van. Some were jumping, humming snatches of the score and attempting pirouettes and arabesques. When the artists appeared in costume, I was reminded of the entry of Micky and Minnie in Disneyland. I met several and congratulated them. I also firmed up the arrangements for Powerhouse's visit to Mold, Ballet Cymru's workshop in Leeds and Isobel Holland's masterclass.
Bangor could be regarded as the intellectual and cultural capital of Welsh-speaking Wales. Last year, only a handful of the dancers introduced themselves and their characters in Welsh. This year they all did so llongyfarchiadau mawr to them. Ceris Matthews once described Ballet Cymru as "the pride of Newport and the pride of Wales." I could not agree with her more.
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