Coup Versus Calamity
Of the many stylish touches in Scottish Ballet’s “Mary, Queen of Scots,” the titular Tudor’s black pointe shoes are my favourite.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
Of the many stylish touches in Scottish Ballet’s “Mary, Queen of Scots,” the titular Tudor’s black pointe shoes are my favourite. Sleek and surprisingly sexy, they sum up the theatrical esprit of this production co-created by Sophie Laplane and James Bonas, here receiving its London premiere after debuting at Edinburgh International Festival last autumn. Their vision is expansive but tidily marshalled, bringing order and spark to a convoluted patch of history. Applying an imaginative glaze that blurs certain details and infills others, they create a zipping account of Mary Stuart’s ill-fated royal tenure in sixteenth-century Britain. There are some uneven shifts in tone and a slightly crowded cast of characters, but the funhouse lens has the effect of magnifying the humanity across this eventful chronicle, creating a bold, lively reframing.
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Of the many stylish touches in Scottish Ballet’s “Mary, Queen of Scots,” the titular Tudor’s black pointe shoes are my favourite.
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