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Theatre

A ballet about the Shoah — for teens

Joy Sable reports on Northern Ballet's new production, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas

May 26, 2017 10:39
Mlindi Kulashe in rehearsals for The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas

ByJoy Sable, Joy Sable

3 min read

Are there any subjects completely off limits for ballet? For an audience fed a diet of swans and sylphs, a ballet based on the horrors of the Holocaust might, literally, be a step too far. So a trip to see the new work by Northern Ballet’s artistic associate Daniel de Andrade, based on John Boyne’s book for children The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas promises to be a challenging and thought-provoking night out.

It is not the first time the Holocaust has provided inspiration for a choreographer: Valley of Shadows, created in 1983 by Sir Kenneth MacMillan and based on the novel The Garden of the Finzi-Continis by Giorgio Bassani, contained several scenes in a concentration camp. De Andrade’s ballet is set on a smaller scale, and has its premiere this week in Doncaster, before touring around the country.

Wanting to create something for teenage audiences, the Brazilian choreographer originally thought of adapting The Diary of Anne Frank. He turned to The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas when Northern Ballet’s artistic director David Nixon suggested he read the novel.

“Because it is seen through a child’s eyes, it carries that innocence all the way through,” says De Andrade. “There is another very practical reason that I chose The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas: we have some very talented young men in the company who have been with us for a while but they are not as tall as the average Swan Lake or Sleeping Beauty prince. As good as they are, they don’t get to do leads in our ballets, so David thought it was a brilliant opportunity to use the main roles of Shmuel and Bruno to highlight the talent we have in the company.”