| It's not often that you
hear booing at the ballet, but booing there unmistakeably
was as the director, Declan Donnellan, and the choreographer,
Radu Poklitaru, of the Bolshoi's new Romeo and Juliet took
to the stage after the London premiere.
Shakespeare's play has inspired two flagship
Bolshoi productions, Leonid Lavrovsky's in 1940 and Yuri Grigorovich's
in 1979, so there was considerable expectation riding on this
one. A lack of directorial and choreographic inventiveness,
however, allowed the piece to sink like a stone.
In order to highlight the hostility of
the other characters towards the lovers (Denis Savin and Maria
Alexandrova) Donnellan has the corps de ballet on stage for
almost all of the 90 minutes of the action, and the massed
ranks of the Montagues and Capulets repeatedly act as physical
barriers to the lovers' union. That love can be thwarted by
the expectations of family and society is worth stating once,
but it is too obvious a concept to bear constant repetition.
Of the protagonists, only Alexandrova's
disco-bunny Juliet is able to build any kind of character,
forcing life into Poklitaru's inert choreography by her sheer
force of will. Savin's Romeo does his best, but comes across
as if he were Gareth from The Office, and he is unconvincingly
roused to a frenzy of stabbing when Denis Medvedev's spivvy
Tybalt murders Yuri Klevtsov's cross-dressing Mercutio.
There is no attempt at leitmotif , nor
any attempt at expressing individual personality through dance.
All of the steps are drawn willy-nilly from the same modernistic
grab-bag, and include borrowings reminiscent of, among other
sources, Jerome Robbins's dances for West Side Story and the
ballets of Mats Ek.
That the production ever saw the light
of day suggests a troubling lack of discrimination on the
part of Alexei Ratmansky, the Bolshoi's new director. His
dancers clearly saw the way the wind was blowing - of the
13 principals on this tour, only Alexandrova has had anything
to do with it. The single star rating above this review is
hers. For valour.
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