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A Darker Dream

A Midsummer Night’s Dream” is one of William Shakespeare’s best-known comedies. Filled with fairies, mischief, and moments of mistaken identity, it's a mischievous tale that delights with its chaos and humor. Yet despite the whimsical nature of the source material, in his new balletic adaptation for Staatsballett Berlin, Romanian choreographer Edward Clug somehow manages to imbue the story with darkness and foreboding.

Performance

Staatsballett Berlin: “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” by Edward Clug

Place

Deutsche Oper, Berlin, Germany, February 26, 2025

Words

Emily May

Kalle Wigle and Leroy Mokgatle in “A Midsummer Night's Dream” by Edward Club. Photograph by Yan Revazov

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To the ominous sounds of gongs, quivering strings, and ticking clocks composed by Milko Lazar, Act One of Clug’s “Dream” opens with a large cast of dancers in sand-toned costumes spread across the stage. As they rise from the floor, limbs jerk into bizarre, angular shapes, flat palms twitch back and forwards like horses’ ears, and feet step rhythmically around the space in snaking lines. These quirky, slightly neurotic motions build a palpable tension, signaling that something is coming. Eventually, we learn they are heralding the entrance of the soon-to-be-wed Duke of Athens and Queen of the Amazons (Cohen Aitchison-Dugas and Weronika Frodyma), who assume regal positions atop a jagged rock face. Meanwhile, the corps dancers keep their bodies flat and forward facing, evoking the 2D appearance of Egyptian hieroglyphs and establishing a quirky yet unsettling movement language that reappears throughout the ballet.

Large-scale, world-building scenes like this are where Clug’s “Dream” truly comes into its own, especially when paired with designer Leo Kulaš’s fantastical costuming. The standout moment of the ballet is when the Athenian forest, the main setting of Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” comes to life. A seemingly endless army of dancers dressed in vegetal green catsuits march in zig-zagging pathways across the stage, their faces covered with veined masks and hands replaced with leaf-like appendages that they use to gesture in unison, their motions reminiscent of semaphore or air traffic control. Later, they lay down in a large circle, lifting their red-stockinged legs into the air in perfect symmetry, together appearing like a tropical flower in bloom.

It’s like a scene from John Wyndham’s 1951 post-apocalyptic novel The Day of the Triffids. While only meant to herald the arrival of Titania, Queen of the Fairies (also Frodyma), its spectacle surpasses many of the plot points that follow. Solos, duets, and small group interactions by the main characters feel anticlimactic in comparison, more concerned with conveying the mechanics of Shakespeare’s narrative than capturing its otherworldly essence. 

Weronika Frodyma and Cohen Aitchison-Dugas in “A Midsummer Night's Dream” by Edward Club. Photograph by Yan Revazov

That said, some individual performances do stand out, namely Leroy Mokgatle’s Puck, who seamlessly fluctuates between subservience to Oberon (also Aitchison-Dugas) and masterful orchestration of chaos. Quite literally, they bend to their master’s will, contorting their body into impossible shapes on command and flinching at his poking fingers, before adopting a steely-faced aloofness to interfere with "the Mechanicals"—a band of amateur actors (danced by Ross Martinson, Erick Swolkin, Dominik White Slavkovský, Achille De Groeve, and Wolf Hoeyberghs) rehearsing for a play for the Duke of Athens’ wedding. This group’s bumbling antics make up some of the most comical scenes of the ballet, their slapstick humour and caricatured gestures offsetting the overall menacing tone of Clug’s adaptation.

It’s not a criticism that Clug’s ballet embraces a darker tone than expected; in fact, it’s a refreshing surprise that helps to highlight some of the more complex themes at play in one of the most beloved pieces of English literature. Just like Puck, who constantly shifts between being controller and controlled, all of the characters in Clug’s “Dream” have moments of agency, and moments when they’re at the mercy of forces that are invisible to them—whether they be fairies or the unpredictable whims of love. The fact that the scenes depicting powerful plant life are some of the most arresting feels like a timely (if unintended?) comment on human’s relationship with nature. While we may think we’ve been controlling and damaging the planet for years, the environment we inhabit still holds agency. Perhaps one day, like Clug’s militant marching leaves, Mother Nature will rise up to reclaim her power and restore the balance we’ve disrupted.

Emily May


Emily May is a British-born, Berlin-based arts writer and editor specializing in dance and performance. An alumna of Trinity Laban Conservatoire for Music and Dance and a member of the Dance Section of the UK Critics' Circle, she regularly contributes to publications across Europe and America including Dance Magazine, Art Review, Frieze, The Stage, Flash Art, The Brooklyn Rail, and Springback Magazine. She is currently an editor at COLORSxSTUDIOS, where she launched and continues to manage a new editorial platform.

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