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Theatre

My dance of inner peace

The prospect of a world premiere at the Royal Opera House always has the capital's dance fans licking their lips in anticipation.

March 19, 2015 14:41
19032015 PA 22147762

ByJoy Sable, Joy Sable

3 min read

The prospect of a world premiere at the Royal Opera House always has the capital's dance fans licking their lips in anticipation. When the work being created for the Royal Ballet is by award-winning Israeli-born choreographer, Hofesh Shechter, there is even more excitement - and curiosity.

What one of the leading lights of contemporary dance will do with one of the world's foremost classical ballet companies is keeping everyone guessing. For an audience more accustomed to a diet of swans, sylphs and demented village virgins, Shechter's piece - part of a triple bill alongside works by George Balanchine and Kenneth MacMillan - will provide an exciting addition to the company's repertoire.

"This is my first collaboration with an entirely classical ballet company," says Shechter. "I first saw them dance four or five years ago - I have seen them in the very classical repertoire to more contemporary pieces and I was very curious about their superb bodies. Kevin O'Hare [the director of the Royal Ballet] floated the idea of creating something around that and it excited me. I love the idea of working with a lot of bodies on stage - it makes it interesting for me."

One of the major challenges for Shechter will be translating the raw energy of his style into something the classical dancers, more used to the lush romanticism of Frederick Ashton and the sinuous eroticism of Kenneth MacMillan, can interpret. He says their current repertoire is "worlds apart from what I'm doing". So, in rehearsals, out goes the French academic vocabulary the dancers have been brought up with and in comes a language which is "more simple", he says.