The last ballet of the
Bolshoi's London season, The Pharaoh's Daughter, sits firmly
in the Cecil B DeMille tradition of entertainment. Between
processions, it finds room for two lions, an ape, a (real)
horse and a boat that glides briskly across the stage. The
heroine sinks (on wires) to the bottom of the Nile, and an
unlucky servant is executed by the bite of a glove-puppet
cobra.
This spectacle isn't quite a 19th-century
ballet. Pierre Lacotte has based the production on Petipa's1862
ballet - his first big Russian ballet, years before Swan Lake
and The Sleeping Beauty. Lacotte has made his own dances "in
the spirit of" the 19th century, adjusting the plot and
Cesare Pugni's rum-ti-tum score to fit.
Early on, Lord Wilson turns up in his
pith helmet to sketch some ancient monuments. As a storm blows
up, he and his guides are forced to take shelter inside a
pyramid, where they smoke opium.
The rest of the ballet is Lord Wilson's
dream sequence: he becomes Taor, an ancient Egyptian, and
falls in love with Aspicia, the Pharaoh's daughter. Her father
wants her to marry the King of Nubia (Andrei Melanin). Aspicia
throws herself into the Nile to escape the king, which gives
Petipa, and now Lacotte, the chance to stage an underwater
divertissement. The Ruler of the Nile returns Aspicia to the
surface, where all is explained and forgiven before Taor wakes
up.
Our first sight of ballet-Egypt is a
hunting scene: girls galloping in yellow tunics and tutus,
bows in hand. Groups of dancers cross and re-cross the stage
in diagonals, with fast, buoyant footwork. Lacotte started
his reconstruction-cum-recreations with early 19th-century
ballets, and he uses that vocabulary here. His Pharaoh's Daughter
is full of the quick jumps and beaten steps of Romantic ballet,
with showcases for the men as well as for the women.
As the ballet goes on, Lacotte does use
later style: fouette; turns, overhead lifts, and kisses between
principals.
The Bolshoi is known for big, dynamic
dancing, but it plunges eagerly into Lacotte's quick little
steps. There are dozens of solos, and some terrific solo dancing.
As Lord Wilson/Taor, Sergei Filin has beautifully fast, light
footwork, and he phrases crisply to the music. His Aspicia,
Svetlana Zakharova, dances strongly but with less focus. She
has a good technique and lovely proportions, but doesn't give
dances dramatic or musical shape. She lacks resonance, and
Lacotte's steps can't do the job for her.
19th-century ballet is sometimes very
silly, but it can be powerful in the theatre. Compare The
Pharaoh's Daughter to La Bayadere, another exotic melodrama,
and Lacotte's pastiche looks very thin indeed. We rush through
the dotty plot without coming to care for its characters,
and the dance scenes don't give the ballet a distinctive character.
Lacotte's choreography can be charming, but it is never magical.
His best scene is his underwater divertissement.
The grotto set (also by Lacotte) is greenish-blue, the lighting
is blueish-green, and the corps de ballet are grouped for
a romantic vision. The solos for visiting rivers are the highlight
of the evening - a Spanish number for the Guadalquivir, Russian
for the Neva. I don't think the Congo had any particular national
flavouring, but Ekaterina Shipulina's dancing was gorgeous:
featherlight turning jumps, arched feet and soft, flowing
movement. It's the most memorable moment in a lightweight
evening. Lacotte's ballet is fun, but it doesn't stay in the
mind. |