The Bolshoi - "The
Big One" - is back in town with a three-week season that
looks set to banish all memory of its half-cocked London venture
in 2001. A decade of political and financial instability in
Russia had left Moscow's premier ballet company fragile to
the point of collapse. But with a fresh stable of performing
talent, a zillion-rouble restoration project under way, and
an earring-wearing dynamo newly installed in the driving seat,
the company has returned to its feistiest form.
It chose to flag up that form with Don
Quixote - a daft 19th-century warhorse that always sorts the
men from the boys. Remember - no, best try to forget - the
drear spectacle of the Royal Ballet's Don Q at the start of
Ross Stretton's tenure. This piece requires non-stop brio
and the kind of splashy physical heroics that come naturally
to the Russians. Dramatic subtlety? Forget it. Even the music
is naff. The whole purpose of this cod-hispanic romp is bravura,
bravura, bravissimo, and the larger-than-life Bolshoi style
is just the ticket.
Yet Monday's opening night almost came
a cropper when, 10 minutes into the show, all the lights went
out. For a bizarre 30 seconds the corps danced on, jiggling
black shapes in the gloom. Did someone forget to feed the
meter? Who can say. This isn't the first time Covent Garden's
state-of-the-art stage technology has gone clunk. After a
depressingly long pause, lighting and sanity were restored,
and if the glitch dimmed the dancers' spirits, they were determined
not to show it.
A wild succession of chest-slapping townspeople,
cape-furling toreadors, guitar-hurling gypsies and steamy
femmes fatales career through Alexei Fadeyechev's traditionally
based 1999 staging with a profusion that tests the dimensions
of the Opera House stage. The production's claim to introduce
"logical coherence" however, is a lot of rot. Any
story that purports to describe a knight's quest for courtly
love but spends two and a half hours pursuing a flirtation
between a Barcelona barmaid and a barber called Basil is beyond
the reach of logic. But do we care? Not a hoot, when there's
dancing as brilliant as this.
Only in a Russian production could you
find Act II character solos that threaten to steal the principals'
thunder. An unearthly flamenco cameo by the slinky Ilze Liapa
- pure hokum, but very sexy - is rendered even sexier by the
desultory purr of castanets. Another Spanish dame with fishnet
sleeves and an apparently rubber spine (Anna Antropova) drew
gasps with swooping back bends that flipped her like a fish.
I couldn't tell you what Yulianna Malkhasyants's exotic rant
was about (a dead child, a lost lover, excruciating toothache?)
but its sheer passionate conviction drew roars as well as
cheers.
But in the end it's the leading couple
from which any 19th-century ballet takes its cue, and Maria
Alexandrova's Kitri (pictured) was as bright, brassy and daring
as it's possible to imagine. Her tilted arabesques at the
end of Sergei Filin's one-handed lifts barely registered being
seven feet off the ground. And her multiple hops on point
(two dozen? I was too dazzled to count) seemed to grow ever
more weightless.
But for my money the more seductive Filin
claimed the evening's laurels with his raffish, devil-may-care
attack. No Bolshoi beefcake, Filin's Basil is the boy-next-door
who is flash enough to repeatedly lift a ballerina above his
head and let go her waist for a split second each time, waggling
his empty hands like a prankster thumbing his nose. A circus
act? Certainly. The Bolshoi season may continue with soberer
pleasures, but it started with a corker. |