Opinion: What ballet school is for

WHAT BALLET SCHOOL IS FOR: There are fewer than 300 ballet jobs in UK companies - is this why British dancers find themselves outnumbered?

There are fewer than 300 ballet jobs in UK companies - is this why British dancers find themselves outnumbered?

How many classical ballet dancing jobs, full-time, are there in Great Britain? I make it just 289. That's the Royal Ballet 94, English National Ballet 67, Birmingham Royal Ballet 57, Scottish Ballet 36, Northern Ballet 35. Rambert does sometimes take classically trained dancers: another 23. So, at a stretch, 312 full-time jobs for Britain's classical ballet graduates to be searching for a vacancy in. Moreover, a profession in which most are tenacious of their jobs, staying perhaps 10-plus years.

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (2012), Royal Ballet

ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND: The Royal Ballet's glossy production has everything - except a plot

Even the best butter would not help this plot-less evening

"I told you butter wouldn’t suit the works," accuses the Mad Hatter. "It was the best butter," replies the March Hare apologetically, in Lewis Carroll’s original tale. Butter might or might not suit the works onstage in the Royal Ballet’s everything-including-the-kitchen-sink version of Alice in Wonderland. We’ll never know, since Christopher Wheeldon has not used any butter at all, allowing his audience the merest scrape of choreographic margarine.

Men in Motion II, Sadler's Wells Theatre

Ivan Putrov and Sergei Polunin's second outing is eclipsed by a heavy, middle-aged genius of a woman

This show was intended to be all about the men (see title). But it was the woman in motion who stormed off with the honours in this second edition of what has become tagged as the Sergei Polunin show. And a heavy, maternally hipped, middle-aged woman at that - step forward, the sensational Dana Fouras, a dancer of genius who blew every other performer off the stage in Russell Maliphant’s Two (including the hapless gentleman trying to duplicate her movements on the other side of the stage).

The Royal Ballet, 2012-13 Season

THE ROYAL BALLET 2012-13 SEASON: Cuts be damned - it's all go for the new under new director Kevin O'Hare

Cuts be damned - it's all go for the new under new director Kevin O'Hare. Full listings of his first season

World premieres, new faces, lower ticket prices (and the first recycled opera production). The Royal Opera House announced a bullish attitude today as it enters the austerity post-Olympics period for next season with six ballet  premieres and six new opera productions. Ballet headlines are that the leading Russian choreographer of the era, Alexei Ratmansky, will create a work for the Royal Ballet - as will Christopher Wheeldon. Radical abstractionist Wayne McGregor will create his first narrative ballet, and the rising young Liam Scarlett will create his first full-length ballet.

Boy George and rapper Wale to sing live in Royal Ballet's upcoming premiere

Alison Mosshart, Jonny Pierce, Hero Fisher, Andrew Wyatt, Wale and Black Cobain in Wayne McGregor's creation

Boy George will be in a live line-up of singer-performers for the latest Royal Ballet premiere by Wayne McGregor. Mark Ronson's cycle of nine love songs, orchestrated by Rufus Wainwright, will be performed by the former Culture Club New-Romantic (he's now 50), alongside Alison Mosshart of The Kills, Jonny Pierce of The Drums, Hero Fisher, Andrew Wyatt of Miike Snow, and rappers Wale and his protégé Black Cobain during the six-performance run next month.

Romeo and Juliet, Royal Ballet

ROMEO AND JULIET: Melissa Hamilton makes a dramatic debut in the most coveted of ballerina roles

Melissa Hamilton's debut in the most coveted of ballerina roles starts subdued but bursts into touching dramatic personality

Better late than never. It took till Act 3 for a new Juliet to fledge her wings and shed the nervous caution, but Melissa Hamilton, debuting yesterday afternoon in probably the Royal Ballet’s most coveted ballerina role, suddenly did what we all knew she could, and after a subdued first act seized the drama and the story. And, in Romeo’s phrase, light broke - the sun in the east. A fair new Juliet.

Russian Ballet Icons Gala: Celebrating Anna Pavlova, London Coliseum

Tip-top stars put on their best to impress the ghost of Ivy House in Golders Green

Fokine, the founding choreographer of the Ballets Russes, wrote on Anna Pavlova’s death, “Pavlova will be the dream of many generations, a dream of beauty, of the gladness of movement.” The superb array of international stars of ballet last night showing up at the Coliseum to honour Pavlova a century later had to set you thinking, all over again, about why this particular ballerina remains worldwide the epitome of what people imagine about the ballet.

The Dream/ Song of the Earth, Royal Ballet

THE DREAM/SONG OF THE EARTH: Alina Cojocaru and Tamara Rojo dazzle in two British masterpieces

Alina Cojocaru and Tamara Rojo dazzle in two British masterpieces

Oberon in Frederick Ashton’s The Dream was the hurdle at which the ferociously promising young Sergei Polunin refused when he quit the Royal Ballet last week, and whether it was the deceptive complexity and difficulty of it that caused his sudden exit, last night’s opening gave his replacement, the brilliant Steven McRae, such a run for his money that it wouldn’t be surprising if the role had indeed left Polunin in a blue funk.

Men in Motion, Sadler's Wells Theatre

MEN IN MOTION: Royal Ballet star escapee Sergei Polunin takes his first steps off the leash

Men in emotion a more apt title as Royal Ballet star escapee takes his first steps off the leash

Sergei Polunin’s flight this week from the Royal Ballet just as he rises to the pinnacle made last night's Sadler's Wells show a very hot ticket for those who wanted to catch his guest appearance in it. But the evening was also a proclamation that this isn’t the first time that company has mislaid one of its finer talents.