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The Sleeping Beauty

Scottish Ballet

The Sleeping Beauty by Scottish BalletThe Sleeping Beauty presents a challenge to Scottish Ballet. Ashley Page has spent five years repositioning the company away from tutus and turn-out to something more experimental and unique.

The Christmas production, however, is a tradition that is determined by the season and the expectations of young balletomanes. Page has talked about his desire to connect this box-office success to the company's more distinctive programmes: his Sleeping Beauty is a singular spectacle that merges a playful post-modernism and rigorous ballet technique.

"Merges a playful post-modernism and rigorous ballet technique ...a sumptuous visual treat"
Despite hints in the programme that this Beauty has a dark past ' earlier versions of the story involve adultery and murders ' Tchaikovsky's lavish score prevents any excessive brutality. The influence of Wagner that Page detects in the orchestration has inspired him to tidy up the storytelling, but it is not powerful enough to create a Screaming Beauty.

Lorena Fernandez Saez as Pina, Limor Ziv as Carabosse and Amy Hadley as Lucinda in Page's The Sleeping Beauty, sponsored by Bank of Scotland. Photograph by Andrew Ross.Instead, there are light touches of kitsch humour and camp ' Beauty's sleep is induced by a large, phallic cactus rather than a needle, Carabosse's daughters are bald-headed aliens and the courtly first act is delivered with a wry smile. The choreography is modern, but not jarring, and the principals revel in the chance to exhibit their technique. Soon Ja Lee's graceful strength is clear in her lyrical solos, Jarkko Lehmus brings a stolid machismo to the King, and if the corps de ballet are slightly loose in places, the male dancers are, as always, precise and fluid.

Claire Robertson, as Princess Aurora, is serious rather than sensual: like last year's Cinderella, the heroine comes across as humble until Act Three, when the solos allow her to reveal her finesse. She seems rather immature during her dance with the suitors ' appropriately so, and making her final awakening all the more passionate.

The Sleeping Beauty doesn't really unite Page's contemporary preoccupations with the Christmas spectacular: at best, he injects an ironic distance and a sense of fun. It does point to the other work, however, in the quality of movement and witty self-awareness: it also stands on its own terms as a sumptuous visual treat, a musical extravaganza and a charming introduction to a company on the rise.

Reviewed at Theatre Royal, Glasgow in December 2007.

From December 6 2008 to December 27 2008 at Theatre Royal, Glasgow. Tel: 08700 606647. www.theambassadors.com/theatreroyalglasgow/

From January 7 2009 to January 10 2009 at Festival Theatre, Edinburgh. Tel: 0131 529 6000. www.eft.co.uk/festival_theatre/

From January 14 2009 to January 17 2009 at Eden Court Theatre, Inverness. Tel: 01463 234234. www.eden-court.co.uk

From January 28 2009 to January 31 2009 at His Majesty's Theatre, Aberdeen. Tel: 08452 708200. www.hmtaberdeen.com

www.scottishballet.org.uk/

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What the papers said:
The Herald:
***** "There's no room to detail all that happens in this fabulous reinterpretation ...You simply have to experience it for yourselves and take pride in the fact that this is our national company."
Scotland on Sunday:
**** "Another surefire hit in the company's repertoire ... The final act is so stylishly realised that the Regency fashion of earlier acts pales in comparison."
Sunday Herald:
"This Beauty fizzes with energy, pops with colour and revels in layers of meaning and references to all from Doctor Who to drug-addled celebs"

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