In London I pay twice for my tickets to see a Royal Ballet triple bill. Once for my top price ticket at £55.00 and secondly through my income tax a portion of which subsidies the company through our governments Arts Council grant to the Royal Opera House. This does mean, I have two reasons to complain when the Royal Ballet produces a triple bill of "Voluntaries", "The Lesson", and a new Wayne McGregor ballet “Infra”, that causes the public to
stay away in droves and prompts hasty telephone calls to members of the company, offering them complimentary tickets for a premiere. It still left very many seats empty. Someone should have advised the board that their marketing may try to make the Royal Ballet “sexy”, but if it doesn’t appeal, the answer is to give the regular audience what it wants ie Ashton, MacMillan and Cranko one act ballets many of which have been a long time out of the repertory. There is a received wisdom within the government that we must encourage young people to attend the ballet. That is laudable, but it has been my long experience attending the ballet and a sometime producer of events, that the young people who find their own way to the ballet, do not just go to first nights but see the same programme more than once. When you sex up a dance work to get media coverage, the vast majority of young people will attend once and once only because young people see ‘events’ as ephemeral and move onto the next 'sexed up’ event.
Two years ago a headline in the UK Guardian newspaper read “Experiment or face slow death: star warns of crisis in ballet “Acosta points to lack of young choreographers and new full-length works…..
I do not hold Carols Acosta responsible for what followed and follow it did, Wayne McGregor of Random Dance, was appointed Resident Choreographer to the Royal Ballet.
Mr McGregor’s first work for the company was, “Chroma” and his second performed last night confirmed for me personally that he does not work with an original voice that would separate him from others that make works for a theatre.
First things first, the company performed “Infra” very well and Eric Underwood stood out giving an exceptional performance and receiving the loudest cheers.
For me “Infra” is extremely old-fashioned in as much as I feel the dance vocabulary used and the choreographic style was already well established 25 years ago by the likes
of Merce Cunningham, Rudi van Dantzig, John Butler, Glen Tetley, Toer van Schayk etc in their various highly talented ways.
The programme gives the definition of ‘Infra’ to be,
“below,esp.when used in referring to part of a text
see below
Below; underneath; under; after
And further states
At any rate it is important to imagine a language in which our concept ‘knowledge’ does not exist.
Ludwig Wittgenstein: On Certainty
There is then quoted from T.S.Eliot’s ‘The Waste Land’
Unreal City,
Under the brown fog of a winter dawn.
A crowd flowed over London Bridge so many,
I had not thought death had undone so many.
It would appear that the Royal Opera House programme uses the above quotes perhaps chosen by Mr McGregor, as necessary supporting twaddle for a ballet whose authority they are not sure of , a David Gamez quote is also given which I cannot bring myself to post. If a ballet or stage work using movement cannot speak to an audience on its own terms it has failed -full stop-. It is a frequent error in so called modern dance that an explanation of where a work, "is coming from" is necessary when it should just stand on its own values. Nobody needs to be shown how a famous painting, famous piece of music or a famous ballet originated, Get real.
Infra follows the well worn formula of similar works with people walking, moving as if dancing singly, duets, quartets, in groups and he entire ensemble.music is by Max Richter known from his work as a distinguished musician member of “Piano Circus” and is a composer. There is also “Sound Design” by Chris Ekers who had obviously escaped for a short time from the movies. The music and sound I found absolutely acceptable for a stage work and supported without intruding or distracting one from the dancers. Throughout “Infra”, there is brilliant lit animated projection high up on a backdrop of human like figures walking across what may be a bridge so echoing T.S.Eliot’s deeply felt poem. I think not.
The designer for the costumes was Moritz Junge looking to me personally, very like cut down or cut up T shirts and shorts.
Infra for me exhibited marketing over content.
I am sure Mr. McGregor may one day produce something I find of suitable quality for the Royal Ballet and I am sure there is something better to come from someone who looks such a nice chap in the curtain calls that a wider Royal Opera House audience will enjoy and bottoms will be on seats that have been paid for.
The Lesson was given a very good performance with Johan Kobborg, Roberta Marquez and Laura Morera. It is a favourite work of mine since I first saw it on television in 1963 when it was thought a little shocking. Perhaps dance teachers should show it to irritating mothers who insist their daughter is the next Pavlova, to get rid of them and their child from their studio.
I first saw Voluntaries shortly after its premiere in Stuttgart and was moved by the intensity of the performance by its starry cast. It is a work that has been performed right around the world by good number of companies. Last night it was led by Marienella Nunez and Rupert Pennefather, Mara Galeazzi, Sergei Polunin and Thiago Soares. It may have been performed well, but it didn’t move me and in the end that is what counts.
PS Mr McGregor dedicated "Infra" to Dame Monica Mason’s celebration of 50 years with the Royal Ballet.
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