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Depressingly corny: Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, reviewed

Depressingly corny: Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, reviewed

Spectator18 hours ago
It's all very well for people like me to sneer at dance makers for drawing on classic rock as a quick way of pulling in the punters, but the trick clearly does the business. Sadler's Wells was pretty well full on the night I saw Pete Townshend's Quadrophenia, a concept album that has endured several iterations and rewrites since the recording was first released on vinyl by the Who in 1973. An audience of all shapes and ages seemed to be having a good time, but although there's nothing disgraceful about the show that director Rob Ashford has overseen, it seemed to me depressingly corny and laboured – a bumpy ride hitched to a creaky old bandwagon.
You may recall the premise: searching for a focus to his banal adolescent existence, Jimmy is a disaffected, angsty mod of the early 1960s with something by Camus in his coat pocket. Tormented by his four conflicted inner selves, he rejects the values of his suburban parents and gets caught up in the seaside war with the rockers. Love and friendship let him down; the drugs don't work. He ends up isolated in disillusion and misery as the waves break thunderously on Brighton beach.
The score has been 'symphonically' orchestrated by Townshend's wife Rachel Fuller: excised of his lyrics, it loses whatever acerbic critical edge it originally had and becomes a relentless noise, monotonously pitched, painfully over-amplified and devoid of light and shade. But the staging is super-slick. Both Christopher Oram's sets (leaning heavily on projections and video) and Paul Smith's costumes efficiently evoke the era, while the cast presents a well-drilled, multitasking ensemble, making the most of the mechanically athletic choreography by Paul Roberts. The doe-eyed Paris Fitzpatrick is engagingly vulnerable as the protagonist and Dan Baines is a malign presence as the leader of the mod pack. God knows what satisfaction the Royal Ballet's Matthew Ball extracted from his pointless cameo as a preening pop idol. The women appear as nothing more than silly dolly birds.
The master of this genre of narrative ballet is Matthew Bourne: but what he has – and what Quadrophenia fatally lacks – is a light touch that avoids futile gesturing at large philosophical themes. It's this quality that irradiates Bourne's The Midnight Bell, currently revived for the first time since its première in 2021. It's one of Bourne's strongest and most distinctive shows, playing to all his strengths and rooted in his enduring fascination with the seedier aspects of mid-20th century London.
Loosely drawing on the novels of Patrick Hamilton (with nods towards Rodney Ackland's play Absolute Hell), it focuses on a dismal Soho pub in the 1930s that serves as a magnet for spivs, cads, tarts and queers, all of them either lonely or desperate. Ten such wounded characters drink their sorrows and dreams away over one sorry night. Although there's not much in the form of plot beyond a series of unsuccessful seductions and emotional disappointments, Bourne manages to create vivid personalities, ingeniously weaving the slim narrative threads and using his (somewhat limited) choreographic language to establish credible psychological detail. It's also sharply funny.
Terry Davies provides a period-appropriate score, and at intervals popular songs of an Al Bowlly nature are wittily mimed. Lez Brotherston has designed a richly atmospheric set, beautifully lit by Paule Constable: you can almost taste the gin and smell the woodbine.
Running at 90-odd minutes it risks seeming a bit thin and protracted, but a uniformly excellent cast ensures that it holds fast and charms. A national tour continues until October.
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Depressingly corny: Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, reviewed
Depressingly corny: Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, reviewed

Spectator

time18 hours ago

  • Spectator

Depressingly corny: Quadrophenia, a Mod Ballet, reviewed

It's all very well for people like me to sneer at dance makers for drawing on classic rock as a quick way of pulling in the punters, but the trick clearly does the business. Sadler's Wells was pretty well full on the night I saw Pete Townshend's Quadrophenia, a concept album that has endured several iterations and rewrites since the recording was first released on vinyl by the Who in 1973. An audience of all shapes and ages seemed to be having a good time, but although there's nothing disgraceful about the show that director Rob Ashford has overseen, it seemed to me depressingly corny and laboured – a bumpy ride hitched to a creaky old bandwagon. You may recall the premise: searching for a focus to his banal adolescent existence, Jimmy is a disaffected, angsty mod of the early 1960s with something by Camus in his coat pocket. Tormented by his four conflicted inner selves, he rejects the values of his suburban parents and gets caught up in the seaside war with the rockers. Love and friendship let him down; the drugs don't work. He ends up isolated in disillusion and misery as the waves break thunderously on Brighton beach. The score has been 'symphonically' orchestrated by Townshend's wife Rachel Fuller: excised of his lyrics, it loses whatever acerbic critical edge it originally had and becomes a relentless noise, monotonously pitched, painfully over-amplified and devoid of light and shade. But the staging is super-slick. Both Christopher Oram's sets (leaning heavily on projections and video) and Paul Smith's costumes efficiently evoke the era, while the cast presents a well-drilled, multitasking ensemble, making the most of the mechanically athletic choreography by Paul Roberts. The doe-eyed Paris Fitzpatrick is engagingly vulnerable as the protagonist and Dan Baines is a malign presence as the leader of the mod pack. God knows what satisfaction the Royal Ballet's Matthew Ball extracted from his pointless cameo as a preening pop idol. The women appear as nothing more than silly dolly birds. The master of this genre of narrative ballet is Matthew Bourne: but what he has – and what Quadrophenia fatally lacks – is a light touch that avoids futile gesturing at large philosophical themes. It's this quality that irradiates Bourne's The Midnight Bell, currently revived for the first time since its première in 2021. It's one of Bourne's strongest and most distinctive shows, playing to all his strengths and rooted in his enduring fascination with the seedier aspects of mid-20th century London. Loosely drawing on the novels of Patrick Hamilton (with nods towards Rodney Ackland's play Absolute Hell), it focuses on a dismal Soho pub in the 1930s that serves as a magnet for spivs, cads, tarts and queers, all of them either lonely or desperate. Ten such wounded characters drink their sorrows and dreams away over one sorry night. Although there's not much in the form of plot beyond a series of unsuccessful seductions and emotional disappointments, Bourne manages to create vivid personalities, ingeniously weaving the slim narrative threads and using his (somewhat limited) choreographic language to establish credible psychological detail. It's also sharply funny. Terry Davies provides a period-appropriate score, and at intervals popular songs of an Al Bowlly nature are wittily mimed. Lez Brotherston has designed a richly atmospheric set, beautifully lit by Paule Constable: you can almost taste the gin and smell the woodbine. Running at 90-odd minutes it risks seeming a bit thin and protracted, but a uniformly excellent cast ensures that it holds fast and charms. A national tour continues until October.

Olivier-winning The Red Shoes coming to King's Theatre
Olivier-winning The Red Shoes coming to King's Theatre

Glasgow Times

timea day ago

  • Glasgow Times

Olivier-winning The Red Shoes coming to King's Theatre

The 2025/26 tour of Matthew Bourne's The Red Shoes will be the first run of the show since the 2020 tour was cut short due to Covid-19. The show will be performed at the King's Theatre from January 27 to 31, 2026. This new tour will be in celebration of the double Olivier award-winning show's 10th anniversary. Read more: Update provided on plans for closed A-listed building Ashley Shaw, Cordelia Braithwaite, Hannah Kremer, and Holly Saw will all take on the role of Victoria Page, while Andy Monaghan and Reece Causton will play Boris Lermontov. Dominic North and Leonardo McCorkindale will portray Julian Kraster, with Michela Meazza, Cordelia Braithwaite, and Katrina Lyndon as Irina Boronskaya. They are joined by Liam Mower, Will Bozier, and Jackson Fisch as Ivan Boleslawsky, and Glenn Graham, Liam Mower, and Reece Causton as Grischa Ljubov. Mr Bourne said: "I'm thrilled to announce today that 11 of the original cast of The Red Shoes, which premiered in 2016, are returning for this 10th Anniversary production, performing the roles they created, possibly, for the last time. "The Red Shoes was the culmination of a twenty-year ambition to bring Powell and Pressburger's seminal 1948 film to the stage. "It was also, in many ways, a personal love letter to a life in theatre and dance." Joining the lead roles are Mark Austin, Isabella Chandler, Adam Davies, Cameron Flynn, Anna-Maria de Freitas, Christina Gibbs, Thomas Ireson, Rosanna Lindsey, Callum Mann, Daisy May Kemp, Jarrod McWilliams, Matthew Potulski, Molly Shaw-Downie, Kingston Taylor, Shakiera Ward, and Daisy West. After a successful residency at Sadler's Wells for New Adventures' 23rd consecutive Christmas season, the Glasgow performances will mark the start of The Red Shoes' UK tour. Mr Bourne's production of The Red Shoes is an adaptation of Powell and Pressburger's 1948 film, which is an Academy Award-winning movie. The Red Shoes tells the story of a girl's dream to be the greatest dancer in the world, and her struggle between the two men who inspire her passion. The production is set to a score orchestrated by Terry Davies, featuring music by Bernard Herrmann, with designs by Lez Brotherston, Paule Constable, and Paul Groothuis. The show was an instant hit when it premiered in 2016, with the world premiere season selling out before it even opened. It then went on to win Best Entertainment at the 2017 Olivier Awards, with Mr Bourne being awarded Best Theatre Choreographer. Mr Bourne said: "I'm so happy to see it return this year, especially as our last tour in 2020 was sadly cut short by the pandemic and left many of our loyal audiences throughout the UK disappointed. "So, welcome back to the Ballet Lermontov and to paraphrase the great impresario himself… 'It's time to put on the red shoes, Vicky, and dance for us again....'"

Quadrophenia the ballet is a storm of movement
Quadrophenia the ballet is a storm of movement

New Statesman​

timea day ago

  • New Statesman​

Quadrophenia the ballet is a storm of movement

Photo by Johan Persson The Who's rock opera Quadrophenia has had many lives since it was released in 1973: a film (1979, directed by Franc Roddam); a stage musical adaptation; a 2015 orchestral album, Classic Quadrophenia, featuring the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and tenor Alfie Boe. Now, this Sixties subculture tale has been revived in a rather unlikely medium: ballet. Quadrophenia: A Mod Ballet follows the story of a young mod, Jimmy (Paris Fitzpatrick), who rejects his parents' way of life, struggles with unrequited love, and is caught in a rivalry between the mods and the leather-jacket-wearing rockers. The score is the arrangement created by the Who guitarist Pete Townshend's partner, Rachel Fuller, for the 2015 album – minus the vocals. In homage to the film, the performance exudes a cinematic quality through its use of multimedia. Naturalistic backdrops are projected into the black‑box theatre – sometimes on to a mesh screen in front of the dancers. Additional layers are added by Fabiana Piccioli's lighting design: the cool blue wash of the sky, the warm golden glow of streetlamps, and the neon flash of a dive‑bar scene, where dancers gather in Twiggy‑style dresses and sharp suits by the costume designer Hannah Teare. Here, 'ballet' is a loose term: pointe shoes and split-sole slippers are swapped out for LaDuca brogues. Paul Roberts's choreography eschews the highly formalised steps of the genre, favouring flexed feet over the point, and parallels to turn-outs. There are echoes of classical style, as in the Godfather's (Matthew Ball) fouettés in his solo, but even here the smooth line is broken by a flexed foot. Roberts's attention to force and flow creates a dynamic performance, with stunning holds and lifts. But while the choreography is visually pleasing, and the themes of identity and masculinity are as relevant today as 50 years ago, Jimmy's story gets lost in the storm of movement. If narrative is what you're after, the film might be a better choice. Quadrophenia: A Mod Ballet Sadler's Wells, London EC1 [See also: 4.48 Psychosis is a disturbing dissection of the mind] Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe Related

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