Best of 2014: Dance & Ballet

BEST OF 2014: DANCE & BALLET A dozen unforgettable events from a rich year

A dozen unforgettable events from a rich year

You usually know a good piece or performance when you see one, but sometimes you only identify a great one as such significantly after the fact. What better way to test a work's durability, then, than by seeing what remains of it in the memory after six or 12 months? I admit this "best of" exercise is pretty subjective, but 2014 was such a rich year for dance that I've had to be ruthless: an item only makes my list if I still feel excited when I recall it.

Edward Scissorhands, New Adventures, Sadler's Wells

EDWARD SCISSORHANDS, NEW ADVENTURES, SADLER'S WELLS A hearty dose of cheer, with just a little weirdness, from master storyteller Matthew Bourne

A hearty dose of cheer, with just a little weirdness, from master storyteller Matthew Bourne

For those who’ve seen one too many Nutcrackers, nothing says Christmas better than a Matthew Bourne production at Sadler’s Wells. A man whose mantelpiece is overflowing with Tony and Olivier awards is a safe bet for entertainrment – even when the production in question looks at first glance unlikely: Bourne’s 2005 danced version of Edward Scissorhands, the 1990 Tim Burton movie which is part Gothic fairy tale, part moral fable, part 1950s soap opera.

Triptych, Rambert, Sadler's Wells

TRIPTYCH, RAMBERT, SADLER's WELLS Great dancers in long programme of new work by Baldwin, Jeyasingh and Page

Great dancers in long programme of new work by Baldwin, Jeyasingh and Page

How long should a dance programme be? Opera and theatre habitués can be surprised by outings to contemporary dance, where the pieces might be shorter than the intervals, and a 7:30 start could see you comfortably on the 9:15 train home. But the early train is in no danger from Rambert’s new programme, their annual showcase of contemporary creations at Sadler’s Wells, which features one world première, one London première, and one revival from this time last year, and last night came in at a handsome two and a half hours.

TOROBAKA, Israel Galván & Akram Khan, Sadler's Wells

TOROBAKA, ISRAEL GALVAN & AKRAM KHAN, SADLER'S WELLS Two great dancers show that Kathak and flamenco can work together

Two great dancers show that Kathak and flamenco can work together

When you're talking about dancers, the old adage about genius being 99% perspiration has a point. You have to work damned hard just to be average in professional dance; to be good, like Akram Khan and Israel Galván are good, takes sweat (and tears and blood, like as not). Still, all the perspiration in the world won't avail if you don't have that 1% of inspiration, a little blue flame of a pilot light in your soul, ready to spark the gas jets of hard work into fiery life, rather than just a lot of hot air.

Thomas Adès, See the Music, Hear the Dance, Sadler's Wells

THOMAS ADÈS, SEE THE MUSIC, HEAR THE DANCE, SADLER'S WELLS Composer's works matched with contemporary choreography by McGregor, Armitage, Whitley and Pite

Composer's works matched with contemporary choreography by McGregor, Armitage, Whitley and Pite

The challenge was already in the title for me: as both a dance critic and a strongly visual person, in the normal order of things I see the dance first and hear the music second.

theartsdesk Q&A: Choreographer Wayne McGregor

British dance-maker shares his views on creative practice, cognitive neuroscience, and critics

How do you know Wayne McGregor? Dance-goers with long memories might remember Wayne McGregor as the wunderkind who founded his own company and became resident choreographer at The Place aged just 22. Lovers of contemporary dance will be familiar with his company Random Dance, which boasts some of the best dancers in the business and periodically brings sophisticated, hi-tech pieces to Sadler’s Wells.

Shadows of War, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Sadler's Wells

SHADOWS OF WAR, BIRMINGHAM ROYAL BALLET, SADLER'S WELLS Atmospheric revival of 1944 Miracle in the Gorbals, the centrepiece of an unusual triple bill

Atmospheric revival of 1944 Miracle in the Gorbals, the centrepiece of an unusual triple bill

Another week, another war commemorative; it’s the story of all the arts in 2014. But – because you can always rely on David Bintley and Birmingham Royal Ballet to be different – last night’s programme at Sadler’s was overshadowed by the Second World War, not the First. Nor were there any soldiers or war widows to be seen: instead this remarkable mixed programme danced from the doomed brightness of the inter-war generation, to religious experience in war-torn Clydeside, to a kilt-girt, abstract, bittersweet lament.

Lord of the Flies, Matthew Bourne's New Adventures, Sadler's Wells

LORD OF THE FLIES, MATTHEW BOURNE'S NEW ADVENTURES, SADLER'S WELLS Golding's tale of schoolboy savagery becomes superb dance theatre, with real schoolboys

Golding's tale of schoolboy savagery becomes superb dance theatre, with real schoolboys

New Adventures, the name of Matthew Bourne's company, has a ruddy-cheeked, Boys’ Own ring to it that has – until now – been rather belied by his oeuvre, which includes a dance version of Edward Scissorhands, as well as dark retellings of all the traditional story ballets. But the New Adventure which rolled into Sadler’s Wells last night really is an adventure – an adaptation of William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, the desert island schoolboy story heavy with allegory about the propensity of human beings to descend into barbarism.