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Theatre

Review: Triple bill at the Royal Ballet

The Royal Opera House offers us three modern works; The Human Seasons, After the Rain, and Flight Pattern, in one evening

March 22, 2017 11:45
Marianela Nunez and Thiago Soares in After the Rain
1 min read

It is unusual for the Royal Ballet to devote an entire evening of work to contemporary dance, but the company’s current triple bill is a treat for audiences more used to the classical repertoire.

The Human Seasons, created in 2013 by David Dawson, is inspired by a poem by John Keats. The dancers – looking superb in revealing leotards which display their finely honed musculature – rise to the challenge of the physically exacting choreography, but there is not enough light and shade within this emotionally bland work.

More successful is After the Rain, Christopher Wheeldon’s moving piece created in 2005 for the New York City Ballet dancers Wendy Whelan and Jock Soto. Now, other dancers have had the opportunity to put their own interpretation on the work. It begins with three couples moving in unison, the women bending time and again in a deep penchee, supported by their partners. The second part of the ballet is an extended slow pas de deux, of love, loss and moving on. Danced superbly by former husband and wife team Marianela Nunez and Thiago Soares, it assumes a particular poignancy.

The final ballet of the night is Flight Pattern, a new work by the acclaimed Canadian choreographer Crystal Pite.  This is the first time Pite has created a piece for the Royal Ballet, and it does not disappoint. Bravely, she has sought to interpret the humanitarian crisis which is rarely out of the headlines: the plight of refugees.