At its best, the Bolshoi's
Don Quixote has gusto, a confidence in the Russo-Spanish-stage
gypsy world of this ballet. The heroine leaps airily backwards
into her partner's arms; the lead Gypsy roars in, like a silent
movie Cleopatra looking for the asp.
Don Quixote has been a Bolshoi speciality
for decades. The choreography, after Petipa, is all emphatic
fireworks: jumps and turns come along regularly to Minkus's
oompah tunes. With style and conviction, it's dashing entertainment;
Bolshoi stars have famously put these flash steps across,
giving them real bite.
This ballet opened the Moscow company's
first London season in five years. The first night of Alexei
Fadeyechev's production, wasn't quite a vintage performance,
but the Bolshoi still look at home.
The ballet leaves Cervantes a long way
behind. The Don and Sancho Panza are supporting roles, intervening
to help the heroine Kitri marry her beloved Basil rather than
the fop chosen by her father. Fadeyechev's production keeps
plenty of mime scenes. There are Spanish dances, folk and
gypsy dances, a classical vision scene where Quixote imagines
Kitri as his ideal woman.
Maria Alexandrova is a rising star at
the Bolshoi, but her Kitri is brassily short of nuance. She
has an elegant physique, with long legs and a long neck, and
she jumps and turns triumphantly. But she doesn't do much
to engage with her partner and she's careless with the music.
Sergei Filin paid a lot more attention,
to his ballerina and to his choreography. He has a crisp jump
and a clear line, and he does the pyrotechnics with some dash.
Leading the Vision Scene, Ekaterina Shipulina
dances with strong attack, stretching her feet boldly. There's
some tension in her lifted chin, but she's a striking stage
presence.
The character dances were scene-stealing.
The Spanish dance is all languishing backbends, but Ilze Liepa
dances it with style and a whipcord spine. The Gypsy Dance
is pure hokum, but Yulianna Malkhasyants gives it a huge,
melodramatic scale.
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