Image found here |
I love the story of Cinderella, so of course I wanted to see this New Adventures' ballet at the Kennedy Center. BUT, knowing my taste in dance and how I've felt about ballets based on other stories (ex. Dracula) before, I should have been prepared not to like the show. It's not that it was bad; it's just that these modern ballets tend not to focus on beautiful dancing, which is the whole point of ballet. It's more like a silent play with some musical-like dance numbers. Plus, this story is based in London during the 1940 Blitz, which is clearly a modern take on the original fairy tale (Prokofiev wrote the music for the ballet during World War II); an interesting spin on it, to be sure, but the story loses some of its magic that way. Every time I consider buying tickets to a ballet, I should ask myself, "Is it The Nutcracker or Swan Lake?" And if the answer is no, I probably shouldn't go because I won't like it
Here's a highlight reel you can watch:
Act I
Image found here |
This is not the family you picture in Cinderella. Image found here |
Does this look like pretty ballet dancing to you? No, I didn't think so. Image found here. |
Image found here |
Act II
The best part of this act (the entire show, really) was the beginning of the first scene. We're looking inside a building that has been destroyed by a raid; furniture is strewn all about, the building's structure is collapsed, and people are lying on the floor. But then they begin to move in slow motion, as if they were set to rewind, and they slowly move the furniture back into place, and the whole set comes back together until we're inside a dance hall called the Café de Paris. This whole part was very cool and effective. This set had much more color, with red linens on the tables and pink and purple sparkles to highlight the sign and stairs.
Image found here |
There was more dancing in this part than the first act; it is a dance hall after all. But I still wasn't thrilled with the choreography; they actually did the floss and something like the patty-cake game! Their “drunk” dance was kind of funny, but honestly, I'd rather watch people at the social dances I go to in real life. And when Cinderella makes her big entrance in a sparkly white and silver gown (and a horrible blonde wig), emerging from the dry ice smoke, barely anyone even notices. I thought she would make the room go completely still, or she'd get dirty looks from some of the other women, but none of that happened. It was quite anticlimactic.
Image found here |
Image found here |
She does find her "prince" at the club, and they go back to his place. This part was actually beautiful, looking into his bedroom bathed in orange light from the early sunrise (or sunset?). Their pas de deux was really the only thing about this show that was reminiscent of ballet. It reminded me of Christopher Wheeldon's "After the Rain," which is one of my favorite pieces of all time. Watch:
But the act ends with everything falling apart, since this was like a flashback. A brick wall falls, smoke and flames come up, the drapes and curtains come down along with the scaffolding. The way the set is destroyed is almost as cool as the rewind part at the beginning. Once the clock struck midnight, our Cinderella is back in her street clothes laying on a stretcher, and we see her soldier is still bandaged (which he was not wearing at the dance). So was all of this a dream?
Act III
This act was the most confusing part of the entire production. Since it strayed so far from the original story, there were times when I didn’t even know what was happening. Plus they crammed five scenes into 40 minutes, so it was a little all over the place!
Image found here |
Image found here |
Image found here |
All in all, I can’t say I liked this show. It wasn’t terrible, but it wasn’t what I wanted to see when I tell people, “I’m going to the ballet tonight!” I did think the modern twist was unique, and this production used surround sound along with the music (like the sound of airplanes overhead), so that was pretty neat. But in general, I wasn’t wowed. I mean, I was thinking about what I was going to have for breakfast the next morning, so that’s not a good sign. I already felt like the show was dragging on, and then the cast did a dance number during the curtain call and another one afterward! They just couldn’t let it go! End of scene, fin, stop!!!
*All gifs found here
No comments:
Post a Comment