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Theatre

Dance review: More MacMillan celebrations

Joy Sable enjoys the Northern Ballet's celebration of Sir Kenneth Macmillan

October 31, 2017 13:04
Artists of the Northern Ballet in Gloria
1 min read

The Royal Opera House paid tribute to Sir Kenneth MacMillan, who died 25 years ago, with another triple bill performed by dancers from the Royal Ballet and other top British companies.

Gloria, MacMillan’s lament for a lost generation, inspired by Vera Brittain’s Testament of Youth, takes a harsh look at the futility of war. Set to Poulenc’s soaring score, the piece starkly portrays life in the trenches. MacMillan’s father had fought in the Great War, and this was the choreographer’s attempt to depict the pain and loss which occurred on the battlefields.

Danced for the first time on the Covent Garden stage by Northern Ballet, the company did full justice to the demands of the choreography.

The dancers – clad in ragged, blood-spattered body tights or ghost-like shifts – group together in sorrowful poses, their bodies sometimes arcing backwards as if suddenly injured. The final moment, when a soldier glances over a precipice before jumping into oblivion, never fails to move.