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Beyond the Beyond

Is it as traditional as there being “The Nutcracker” or the British pantomime on at Christmas time, for there to be an alternative offering? In 2022, Lost Dog collaborated with the Royal Ballet to create “Ruination.” It’s a ‘retelling’ of the Greek myth of Medea—but don’t sigh just yet if you’re done with literary retellings. You are in safe hands with director Ben Duke in this second outing at the Royal Opera House’s Linbury Theatre.

Performance

Lost Dog / Royal Ballet: “Ruination” by Ben Duke

Place

Linburg Theatre, Royal Opera House, London, UK. December 16, 2024

Words

Róisín O'Brien

Hannah Shepherd-Hulford in “Ruination” by Ben Duke. Photograph by Camilla Greenwell

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Formed by Duke and Raquel Meseguer Zafe in 2004 and based in rural East Sussex in England, Lost Dog runs towards the literary and creates well-written, often humorous dance theatre productions of classic tales. Current productions in rotation include: the solo “Paradise Lost (lies unopened beside me),” “Juliet & Romeo” and “A Tale of Two Cities.” The company has gained many awards; most recently, “Ruination” itself won the award for Best Modern Choreography at the 2023 UK National Dance Awards. Alongside Duke, Meseguer Zafe is involved as dramaturg and Yshani Perinpanayagam as the musical director.

Sure, Greek tragedies pack a punch; but there’s something particularly uncomfortable about Medea, a scorned women who kills her own children to punish her wayward husband Jason (of Argonauts fame). “Ruination” doesn’t shy away from the darkness, but the central horror of filicide is wrapped up in a narrative conceit that is weirdly mundane and funny, and which is much more interested in love than in anger. 

“Ruination” is set in Hades’ underworld, a bureaucratic, plastic-y processing facility. Hades is played by the effervescent circus artist, Jean Daniel Broussé, who acts as a compère for the evening. Hades has seen it all; he knows what questions the newly dead will ask him and will tire of having to repeat to them the same instructions of filling out the form and deciding whether to drink from the water fountain of forgetfulness, before exiting through the orange door to discover your final fate. He is joined by Persephone, played with regal aplomb by Anna-Kay Gayle, who both wear corporate suits—in bright pink. 

Liam Francis, Jean Daniel Broussé, and Anna-Kay Gayle in“Ruination” by Ben Duke. Photograph by Camilla Greenwell

It is Jason, performed by Liam Francis, who is wheeled in first (inert under a sheet of plastic, atop a creaky cadaver trolley) and who demands to have custody of his murdered children in the afterlife. Francis is a lithe mover, awakening from his dead slumber in confused, jerky stumbles, that see him fold and fall across the floor in elastic contortions. When Medea, played by Hannah Shepherd-Hulford arrives, she counters that she did not in fact kill her children —this was the work of an angry mob, goaded on and sent by Jason. And so, a trial is announced to attribute blame and determine guilt. 

The trial thus forms a loose narrative structure that marches towards an inevitable judgement. But the script routinely and beautifully meanders away from the trial, to either perform backstories, to dig into moments of emotional intensity, or enjoy the medium of theatre itself. Throughout, there’s an easy balance of Greek mythic extremities with the humdrum of everyday life. A married Jason and Medea must find work; he tries to be an actor, Medea teaches Pilates.

All the while, “Cinderella” is playing upstairs in the main theatre (quite literally). Four television screens stacked to the side of the stage show clips from past ballet performances, interspersed with spooky backstage shots of stairs or glitching visual static. Hades often not only asks the other characters if they’ve seen “Cinderella” but goes to on idly (mis)interpret what’s happening; “here, Cinderella arrives at the sex party . . .” and so on. Where many dance theatre productions either fail at this self-aware, fourth-wall breaking manner, or come off across as cynical, here the quality of the comic timing and delivery, and the specificity of the language, allow these to be genuine moments of humour rather than self-congratulatory laughs. 

Hannah Shepherd-Hulford and Liam Francis in “Ruination” by Ben Duke. Photograph by Camilla Greenwell

The cast are stupidly multi-talented. If it is sometimes the case in these blended productions that you can separate the main characters into dancers and actors, singers and clowns, here the cast move between vocal projection and physical manipulation—as well as portraying multiple characters—without friction. While the musicians stay at a distance from the main cast, acting like a Greek chorus, they too are integrated into Hades’ underworld as the newly dead, dropping in at their appointed time. I particularly liked catching one singer diligently filling out her form in the background while waiting for her musical number. 

Duke’s movement language is crafted for each performer, and determined by what each scene needs, though there are some commonalities. Passionate duets, as well as protective group sequences, all feature strong physical connections between the dancers in their taut and pulled linked arms that re-find and guide each other. There is an enjoyable retelling of Jason’s trials in which the dancers move through a cacophony of Greek friezes. Music and sound don’t worry about being anachronistic or in different languages. Directorial decisions like these are visually and sonically distinct enough to communicate to the audience a new emotion or setting and trust their intelligence.

As a retelling of a classic myth, it is not that well trodden path of the female character explaining her actions from her perspective. Rather, “Ruination” shows us Medea asking Jason to tell the truth—to acknowledge shared blame in her crimes, and shared acknowledgement in his victories. It is also a tale of love and passion, where the characters, the storytelling and the dancing all get caught up in a lovers’ embrace, and choose to linger there awhile. A final reckoning, and the wintry outdoors, can wait a little longer. 

Róisín O'Brien


Róisín is a dance artist and writer based in Edinburgh, Scotland. She regularly writes for Springback Magazine, The Skinny and Seeing Dance, and has contributed to The Guardian and Film Stories. She loves being in the studio working on a new choreography with a group of dancers, or talking to brilliant people in the dance world about their projects and opinions. She tries not to spend too much time obsessing over Crystal Pite.

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