Kontakthof, Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch review - struggling to make contact
Emotional connection is not guaranteed in this latest revival from the Pina back catalogue
Twelve years may have passed since her earthly demise, but you still hear people say they saw Pina Bausch the other night. Bausch remains synonymous with the company she founded, Tanztheater Wuppertal, and with a style of dance theatre that launched an entire new category.
Raymonda, English National Ballet, Coliseum review - a creaky old standard, lavishly restored to health
Tamara Rojo gives an ailing veteran a shot in the arm
Neglected classics, whether books, plays or ballets, are usually neglected for a reason, and so it is with the three-act ballet Raymonda. A hit in 1898 for the Imperial ballet in St Petersburg but unperformed in this country since the 1960s, its ineffectual heroine, fuzzy sense of geography and offensively silly plot have made it impossible to stage in full – at least in Britain.
Best of 2021: Dance
There was gold among the rubble in this wreck of a year for dance
It was never going to be a bumper year, just a bumpy one. With theatres dark until May or later, the usual 11 or 12 months of potential live-dance going was reduced to four or five. There was one bright shaft of optimism in late spring, and another in the autumn, when the gloom-clouds parted to allow a few weeks of almost-normality. But now we seem to have come full circle. In the past 10 days three out of London’s four Nutcrackers have either closed or been drastically postponed – one of them to this time next year. The show must go on, it will go on. Just not yet.
Matthew Bourne's Nutcracker!, Sadler's Wells Theatre review - new candy, but the nuts are off
This is designer Anthony Ward’s Nutcracker! with multiple exclamation marks
The legendary quip of a sophisticated ballet critic that we are all one Nutcracker nearer death never rang so true as now. One goes to the theatre with one’s heart in one’s mouth, behind the partypooping mask.
Starstruck, Scottish Ballet review - smart, sassy and cinematic
A ballet by Gene Kelly from 1960 gets new wings
How do you picture Gene Kelly? Most likely in his effervescent screen persona, either as the burly ex-GI of An American in Paris, or as the hoofer without a raincoat in Singin’ in the Rain.
Past Present, Linbury Theatre review - historic, but very much alive
Yorke Dance Project premieres the final work of Robert Cohan
Not so long ago, a few decades at most, anyone with a passing interest in dance knew what “modern” looked like. It was earthbound, usually barefoot, and it focussed on mundane movements such as walking or lying down as often as it looked like dance. It sometimes even turned up its nose at being seen in a theatre.
Ballet Black, Linbury Theatre review - an essential part of the landscape
Twenty years on, the pity is that it's still necessary for this excellent company to exist
The colour of a shoe might seem a trivial thing. But when in 2018 the dancewear manufacturer Freed launched the UK’s first range of pointe shoes to match darker skin tones, true equal opportunity in British ballet came a big step closer.
Curated by Carlos, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Sadler's Wells review - a star turn
Carlos Acosta and Alessandra Ferri show the young things how it's done
When a great performer takes on the running of a ballet company, the effect on its dancers can be transformative. It happened when Mikhail Baryshnikov took on American Ballet Theatre in the 1980s. It’s been happening at English National Ballet since 2012 under Tamara Rojo.
Royal Opera House lullabies for Little Amal
Near the end of her long journey, our refugee gets a welcome her real-life kin are denied
“I want to tell her that people will be good,” Tewodros Aregawe of Phosphoros Theatre confided to us as Little Amal closed her eyes on the giant bed made up for her in the Paul Hamlyn Hall, “that all the people with kind eyes who have walked alongside her and listened to her story will be louder than those who wish she wasn’t there”.