We had never seen a 'proper' ballet before, so we picked Giselle. Previously we'd seen a ballet/dance version of Dracula at the West Yorkshire Playhouse that didn't blow me away, and a modern dance interpretation of The Picture of Dorian Gray in Edinburgh, which was intriguing and hot. Giselle conforms more to what I think a ballet is. The closest I've come to such previously would be watching the excellent Black Swan, and the musical Billy Elliott.
Coming off a week of a head cold and sat in an over-warm theatre (the ice cream seller told me that the heat's turned up for the benefit of the dancers) meant that I found my lids drooping on occasion during the first act and so I may not have been in the best condition for judging what I saw. However, I have determined that I don't think ballet is for me. It feels like ballet is a world that you really have to know, that isn't accessible to people like me who dip in with no background knowledge. If I hadn't read the act synopses in the programme beforehand I would not have been able to follow all that was going on, particularly in the second act.
I think I need my drama and plot articulating, either through lines of dialogue or song lyrics, as I find it hard to interpret the mime of ballet. Oh it all looked very pretty and the dancing appeared excellent (though I have no frame of reference to say otherwise) but it all felt a bit like showing off. I thought well fair enough you can dance beautifully, but so what, what does that do to further to story? My emotions weren't stirred as I was either trying to figure out who was who and what they were doing or I was ignorant of what I was supposed to be feeling. The live music, for which the Grand takes out the first 3 rows of stalls and employs a much larger orchestra than normal, was brilliant, and I enjoyed the second act's dancing if not the story. The tale of Giselle - she falls for a nobleman dressed as a peasant (why he's dressed like this is unknown) who is betrothed to another, when she finds out she dies of a broken heart, and then rises from the grave to dance with him, for some reason - is tragic when written down but becomes fairly inconsequential when spun out into over-long dances. I will stick to the drama of Black Swan in future I think.
Labels
3D
(6)
action
(41)
animation
(26)
Australia
(8)
ballet
(4)
Belgium
(3)
Bond
(16)
books
(108)
Bulgaria
(1)
Canada
(1)
Classic Adventures
(5)
comedy
(226)
creative writing
(6)
Denmark
(3)
Disney
(15)
Doctor Who
(8)
documentary
(24)
drama
(193)
Eurovision
(2)
fantasy
(3)
fiction
(93)
Finland
(1)
France
(14)
gay
(20)
Germany
(4)
Glee
(2)
graphic novel
(2)
Greece
(1)
horror
(9)
Hot
(4)
Iceland
(4)
Ireland
(3)
Israel
(1)
Italy
(3)
Japan
(5)
Kazakhstan
(2)
Liberia
(1)
live music
(17)
Luxembourg
(1)
Madonna
(6)
Marvel
(4)
Melanie C
(3)
Mexico
(1)
movies
(222)
Muppets
(4)
music
(9)
musical
(39)
New Zealand
(1)
non-fiction
(22)
Norway
(1)
reality show
(10)
Romania
(2)
sci-fi
(29)
South Africa
(1)
Spain
(1)
Studio Ghibli
(2)
Sweden
(10)
Theatre
(60)
thriller
(21)
TV
(179)
UK
(171)
US
(168)
war
(2)
western
(1)
X-Files
(2)
No comments:
Post a Comment