Here’s my chance to wax more or less lyrical about two
quirky but undeniably loving homages to Tchaikovsky’s The Sleeping Beauty, which the more I hear it the more I’m
convinced is his meisterwerk. I had
to own up to the BBC Music Magazine that since I’d written the very long,
number-by-number notes for Neeme Järvi’s absolutely complete recording with the
superb Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, I couldn’t review it for the publication.
But I can attempt to do so here, having got that proviso out of the way. As for
Matthew Bourne’s New Adventures Sleeping Beauty, ‘A Gothic Romance’, I went to
the Sadler's Wells press night on Friday courtesy of my Arts Desk colleague Ismene Brown, who
writes brilliantly about it as ever and almost convinces me about points over
which we disagreed. The nub of which is that I warmed to it much more than she
did.
What I admire most is Bourne’s way of telling a story, and
in this case one that is very much his own spun from some of the elements of
Perrault’s tale. I’m not sure how much of the plot one should give away, since
I spent part of the first half wondering how the gardening boy/groundsman with
whom young Aurora
has such a sweet and sometimes funny first-love romance would survive one hundred
years. A bite on the neck from Christopher Marney's Count Lilac, aka fairy leader (pictured below with fellow winged things in the Prologue, first of Simon Annand's production images) gave a good hint. You can see how effective Bourne regular Lez Brotherston's designs are, though there aren't enough pics of them in the image gallery.
The biggest twists are unveiled in the second half, with
more than one awakening kiss failing to lead to the expected resolution. Shall
we say that the grand Caradoc ball – yes, he’s the tall and sexy son of
Carabosse, who expired some time after the Prologue – entails radical
re-jigging and major cutting of Tchaikovsky’s score. What Bourne does use of
it, and where he uses it, always has a strong musical/dramatic motivation.
First change is the royal March of the Prologue banished in favour of the Act
One garden hustle and bustle, which suits the 1890s bedchamber intimacy of this
narrative and involves a delightful puppet baby climbing the thick curtain
drapes. The musical number is reprised in its proper place when we meet the 20-year old Aurora in a Juliettish
playfulness with her nurse before her boy evades detection in her bedroom (charming Hannah Vassallo and cute Dominic North pictured below).
Re-ordering in the garden scene, mostly Edwardian whites, means
that Aurora’s
variation is played out with interloping Caradoc. Surely Bourne means parallels
here with the male Odile of his Swan
Lake - who can forget Adam Cooper there? - especially since
both numbers have eloquent violin solos (other witty references I thought I spotted are to Macmillan's Anastasia and, as I've already suggested, his Romeo and Juliet as well as other scenes in Bourne's own Swan Lake). He brings back another virtuoso sequence for violin, the Entr’acte of Act
Two which has surely never been danced in ANY previous choreography of Sleeping
Beauty, for a climactic Pas de Deux in the last act (obviously the
Aurora-Desiré adagio is saved up for when good has triumphed over evil). The
Rose Adagio is less successful. What Ismene writes about real dance never being
properly carried through applies here, as choreography gives way to precipitate mime and Aurora
falls swooning from a prick on the thorn of Caradoc’s black rose; that doesn’t
work for me. But the curtain certainly does.
Gone are the courtly dances of Act Two – Bourne has moved in the opposite direction from his Cinderella, which was the first to rehabilitate Prokofiev’s world-travel divertissement – but we get the vision imaginatively treated, and more of the Entr’acte Symphonique’s spellbinding sleep music than ever before (still not quite the crucial 100 bars I discovered it to be, but everything except a repeat; the charismatic Jurowski lookalike Ben Bunce pictured with Vassallo below).
Of course there are no fairy-tale animals at the ball, but the radical, near-atonal Puss in Boots number is brilliantly staged when our hero infiltrates the black and red Walpurgis Night and the brilliant 5/4 Sapphire Variation is a welcome survivor from the second fairy sequence. A shame the Bluebird enchantment wouldn’t fit into this context. But the real problem is that chunks of a divertissement can't really be pressed into service for the long-term dramatic narrative which Tchaikovsky has abandoned (in favour of something equally wonderful) at this point. Anyway although by and large the biggest orchestral climaxes aren't matched by the fitful classicism of the choreography, the corps numbers, the Polonaise and the Mazurka, get vintage Bourne creepy-mannerist treatment. And the fashionable Twilight/Buffy links are canny.
The Apotheosis brings a neat return to the best idea of the Prologue. How prescient was it to give a major role to a royal baby?
Forewarned was forearmed in the case of the pre-recorded
score. I’d hated the over-amplification of Prokofiev’s Cinderella music, and when
I met two of Bourne’s team with J at the Garrick on Monday, I asked if this
couldn’t be at a more natural level. Well, it was, and truthful enough to tell
that Brett Morris had mostly done a wonderful job, with especially good violin
solos from Gina McCormack. I loved the tempo for the Lilac Fairy music at the
end of the Prologue, and the ‘Sleep’ Entr’acte sounded as spellbinding as it can.
That bewitching sequence came as a bit of a shock on Järvi’s
recording: virtually double the tempo, with the Carabosse chords broken rather
than sustained. He also has a Panorama at a speed which the woodwind and horn
support can only just articulate, and a sprint at the end of the sublime
Bluebird Adagio. But, for all that they probably couldn’t be danced to, how
filled with energy are the faster passages. Järvi (pictured below by Till Veerhae) offers characteristic rubato that's often so subtle as to be barely perceptible
but gives so much life to the symphonic passages, and a spectacular recording
provides extended dynamic range which is especially impressive at the piccolo
end.
Was it necessary to bring in James Ehnes and Robert deMaine
respectively for the violin and cello solos? I wasn't sure at first, having heard Aurora’s
Variation in Act One more powerfully done. But Ehnes’s sophistication creates
wonders in the big Entr'acte Bourne found such a good use for, and the cello’s Andante
Cantabile offshoot in the vision has wonderful life and line. There are some
wackily extended harp cadenzas, and the woodwind in the animal portraits are a dream.
I did a Radio 3 Building a Library on the ballet score some years back, when Ermler’s Covent Garden performance came out on top; now I reckon it would be a very close-run thing between that, Lanchbery’s dansante Philharmonia recording, which took some time to appear on CD and now Järvi’s. His has the most demonstration-quality sound of them all. And I can say here, hoping to be believed, my devotion has nothing to do with the fact that I have a stake in its success…
I did a Radio 3 Building a Library on the ballet score some years back, when Ermler’s Covent Garden performance came out on top; now I reckon it would be a very close-run thing between that, Lanchbery’s dansante Philharmonia recording, which took some time to appear on CD and now Järvi’s. His has the most demonstration-quality sound of them all. And I can say here, hoping to be believed, my devotion has nothing to do with the fact that I have a stake in its success…