Ballet industry demands end to "too-thin" dancers

Ballerina Tamara Rojo heads speakers at launch of new NHS initiative

Ballerina Tamara Rojo, director-designate of English National Ballet, is making waves even before she takes up her position in September. Next Monday she is a keynote speaker at a day of events at the Royal Society of Medicine launching the first-ever NHS treatment centre for injured dancers and rejecting the pressure for extreme thinness in performers.

Daphnis & Chloë/ The Two Pigeons, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Birmingham Hippodrome

DAPHNIS & CHLOE/ TWO PIGEONS: An evening of genius Ashton ballet where a masterpiece meets a romance with live birds

Everybody wins in an evening of genius Ashton ballet where a masterpiece meets a romance with live pigeons

There must be a protest movement going on in Birmingham’s ballet against London’s - if down south they insist on Kenneth MacMillan’s box-office blasters, so in the Midlands it’s Frederick Ashton’s more fragile work that reigns. BRB director David Bintley’s northern chip on the shoulder has its uses, and especially this spring. After his hugely entertaining Hobson’s Choice last week, here is a double bill of Antiques Roadshow Ashton that it's unlikely today's Royal Ballet (trying so consciously to be hip) would think of rediscovering.

Hobson's Choice, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Birmingham Hippodrome

HOBSON'S CHOICE: Delightful, lovable comedy that's Birmingham Royal Ballet's finest hour

Delightful, lovable comedy that's David Bintley's finest and most entertaining work

It's a rare ballet where the culmination you hope for is that the young guy gets to take over the business (an idea for a Murdoch ballet there, one day?). David Bintley's Hobson's Choice is surely his very best work, unmitigated pleasure for the spectator - an innocent, beautifully executed period comedy full of atmosphere, good characters, a perfect emotional arc and a perfectly brilliant musical score. None of this is simple to carry off.

Birmingham Royal Ballet, 2012-13 Season

BIRMINGHAM ROYAL BALLET 2012-13 SEASON: Celebrating the art of storytelling in a family-focused repertoire

Storytelling for families is the emphasis as grant cuts reduce choice

Birmingham Royal Ballet has outlined its 2012-13 season for its home base in Birmingham, indicating a shrunken repertoire due to subsidy cuts, but with a new full-length family ballet by David Bintley, Aladdin.

The season will celebrate the art of storytelling, says the company, and some performances will have early starts to pitch at families. Only one mixed bill is announced, attesting to the damage done to the broader performance repertoire by the swingeing cuts in grant.

Touring dates and venues will be added.

 

Autumn-Winter 2012

 

2011: Ballerinas, Cuts and the Higgs Boson Theory

ISMENE BROWN'S 2011: Jolts and closures that questioned how people want their dance and what we should fight to keep

Jolts and closures in a year that questioned how people want their dance and what we should fight to keep

The year’s best arts story was not the cuts (which isn’t art, it’s politics), but the appearance in Edinburgh of a mysterious series of 10 magical little paper sculptures, smuggled into the city’s libraries by a booklover. No name, no Simon Cowell contract - it proved the innocent gloriousness of the human impulse to make art, a joy that has no expectation of reward but without which no existence is possible.

The Nutcracker, Birmingham Royal Ballet, O2 Arena

NUTCRACKER AT O2: The perfect production is left high and dry, with Joe McElderry a baffling warm-up

The perfect production is left high and dry with X-Factor pixie Joe McElderry as baffling warm-up

It would always be a risk putting such a gossamer Christmas charmer as The Nutcracker into a gargantuan Mammonite cavern like the O2 Arena, where magic only counts if it rings loudly in the coffers - car park £25! programmes £10! As with the Royal Ballet’s Romeo and Juliet last June, Birmingham Royal Ballet have put up a cinema screen to enable thousands of viewers far away to catch what looks dolls-house-sized in real view.

La Fille Mal Gardée, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Sadler's Wells

LA FILLE MAL GARDÉE: The world's sunniest ballet warms the cold autumn days

The world's sunniest ballet warms the cold autumn days

It may be that there is no sunnier place than Ashton’s La fille mal gardée. Certainly there is no sunnier ballet. It speaks not of great drama, nor ecstasy, but instead of gentle happiness, of quiet content and loving kindness. Not, one might think, the stuff of great art. But one would be – one is – wrong, and Ashton is happy to set us straight.