Ashton's
Great Innovation “Symphonic
Variations.” "A Month in the Country," "Les Biches"
The Royal Ballet
Royal Opera House
Covent Garden
London
June 2-18, 2005
by
John Percival
copyright
©2005 by John Percival
We
come to the final programme in the Royal Ballet’s season of homage
to Ashton, and what a programme it is. The centre-piece is what many think
his greatest ballet, and indisputably one of the most vital in his development,
“Symphonic Variations”. When he created it in the spring of
1946 as his first postwar ballet and his first for Covent Garden, we—the
big audience that grew up for Sadler’s Wells Ballet before and during
World War Two—had never before seen anything like it. Come to that,
Ashton himself had no precedent for it; remember that Balanchine’s
invention of pure classic ballet from “Serenade” onwards happened
unseen by us after he had left Europe for America. Ashton too had made
ballets with little or no plot as far back as 1928-30 for Rambert, and
his prewar works for Sadler’s Wells included “Les Rendezvous”
and “Les Patineurs”, where the slight themes of meetings or
skating were just a pretext for display dances. The expressionist manner
of his 1941 ballet “The Wanderer” to Schubert’s music
may have been influenced by Massine’s symphonic ballets, but all
that is really remembered from it is the new virtuosity he won from Margot
Fonteyn and the voluptuous sensuality of a duet for Pamela May and Michael
Somes. And those three were to make up half the cast of what effectively
was his next ballet five years later (I am omitting, as I imagine Ashton
too might prefer to do, the nationalistic fervour of “The Quest”,
a pageant-ballet for which he was granted leave from his war service in
the Royal Air Force).
So
Ashton had lots of time to brood on “Symphonic Variations”
and even, since the premiere was postponed by Somes’s injury, the
unprecedented opportunity to revise it before the first night. Hence this
totally new style, 18 minutes of continuous lyrical dance for a small
cast in an abstract setting by his long-time friend and colleague Sophie
Fedorovitch, with costumes like a beautiful white stylisation of superior
classroom wear. It is accepted that her decor evokes the English countryside,
a great inspiration for Ashton, and it occurs to me that the clothes in
effect were an infinitely more poetic version of the tights-and-tunics
uniform invented later by Balanchine for his plotless ballets.
Performances of ballets so exquisitely made for their original dancers
are hardly ever going to match the opening casts, but at least we have
got past the time when newcomers were inhibited by awe at what they remembered
or had been told of their predecessors. This time round we had two casts,
including one virtually new name well worth remembering, Steven McRae.
He is Australian born and trained, and graduated into the company only
this season after winning the Adeline Genée Gold Medal and the
Prix de Lausanne as a student. A late replacement because of a colleague’s
injury, he danced what we old hands call the Henry Danton role (doesn’t
that date me), his looks proving as lively and elegant as his technique,
and his style fitted right in. Here’s a real find. Federico Bonelli
in the Somes role uncannily reminded me at times of Somes—there’s
glory for you! Some of the other dancers were not so hot, but the ballet
itself again proved tremendously enjoyable.
In
“A Month in the Country”, Ashton's late-career Turgenyev adaptation,
Sylvie Guillem as Natalia Petrovna effectively danced and acted everyone
else right off stage, but Natasha Oughtred made a good Vera and Massimo
Murru an acceptable Beliaev. Darcey Bussell led the second cast; she waved
her arms about with energy. The rising young Rupert Pennefather made a
promising debut as Beliaev, and improvised bravely when Bussell sabotaged
his final gesture of kissing her ribbons by hugging them to her when they
should hang down her back. Paul Kay, another of this year's new young
men, danced dazzlingly as the son, Kolia; but although it’s good
to see someone so obviously enjoying his work, perhaps another time he
could refrain from grinning the whole time? And I still think it’s
a shame that when Anthony Dowell was inappropriately changing the designs
of so many ballets, he left this one as it was, overshadowed by Julia
Trevelyan Oman’s congested setting.
With
these two Ashton ballets Monica Mason placed “Les Biches”—a
far better juxtaposition than some of the season’s earlier programmes.
We probably owe this ballet’s survival to Ashton’s immense
admiration for its choreographer, Bronislava Nijinska, and his decision,
when he became director of the RB, to get her to mount it for them. At
that time I suspect it had been out of the repertoire since the Cuevas
Ballet’s performances in 1948 and might otherwise have been forgotten
or mis-remembered. I want to come back to “Biches” later when
I’ve caught up with a later cast; meanwhile I’ll just smile
in anticipation of a further viewing.
Photos, all by Dee
Conway:
First: Federico Bonellii and Alina Cojocaru (with Johan Kobborg in the
background) in "Symphonic Variations."
Second: Federico Bonelli in "Symphonic Variations."
Third: Rupert Pennefather as Beliaev in "A Month in the Country."
Fourth: Bennet Gardside, Zenaida Yanowsky, and Thomas Whitehead
in "Les Biches."
Volume 3,
No. 23
June 13, 2005
copyright
©2005
John Percival
www.danceviewtimes.com
|
|
Writers |
Mindy
Aloff
Dale Brauner
Mary Cargill
Christopher Correa
Clare Croft
Nancy Dalva
Rita Felciano
Marc Haegeman
George Jackson
Eva Kistrup
Gia Kourlas
Alan M. Kriegsman
Sali Ann Kriegsman
Sandi Kurtz
Alexander Meinertz
Gay Morris
Ann Murphy
Paul Parish
John Percival
Tom Phillips
Susan Reiter
Lisa Rinehart
Jane Simpson
Alexandra Tomalonis (Editor)
Lisa Traiger
Kathrine Sorley Walker
Leigh Witchel
|
|
|