This leaves no complaints in the entertainment department, as this three-hour extravaganza, choreographed by Christopher Wheeldon and staged by Jacquelin Barrett, goes full out in bringing Lewis Carroll's phantasmagorical world to life. Moving screens with video projections (designed by Jon Driscoll and Gemma Carrington) create the effects of the fall down the rabbit hole and the doors that grow enormous next to the shrinking Alice; ingenious set pieces (sets and costumes by Bob Crowley) provide others, like the room-shaped box Alice crawls into when she grows huge, accompanied by massive arms and legs that descend onto the stage; gigantic marionettes operated by black-clothed puppeteers form the floating and sometimes separating parts of the Cheshire Cat; there is even tap dance, in the choreography of the Mad Hatter (danced energetically by Robert Stephen). It is a multimedia production, in which ballet places a part.
Sarah Kaufman, At Kennedy Center, a jubilant ‘Alice’ that doesn’t worry about ravens or writing desks (Washington Post, January 21) |
This production continues through January 27, at the Kennedy Center Opera House.
Well, it certainly is popular--a nearly sold-out TWO week run (EVERY other visiting ballet has had only one week), the KC giftshop DVD of the ballet flying off the shelf, and the comments on the utube excerpt usually mention that the reason to see it is for the subject matter (aimed at young children PLUS the parent paying for the multiple tickets). Comic ballets are hard to pull off without being slapstick or farce--Fille Mal Gardee I could see over and over for its unexpected, touching humour, but this Alice, well, once is enough. But it will make money--not an unimportant consideration in our economic times. Wheeldon is such a gifted choreographer; I hope he is able to choose a meatier full-length BALLET next time.
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