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Jack of Hearts

As the audience come to their feet at the end of this ballet there is a noted difference to be seen on stage. Three women stand with joined hands, taking their call as the romantic leads of a loud and proud lesbian ballet. “Gentleman Jack,” choreographed by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa, tracks the life of Anne Lister, a woman considered to be the “first modern lesbian.” Lister embraced androgyny as much as she did women, writing in her diaries in a secret code all about her affairs and methods of seduction. In 1834 she and her partner Ann Walker held a symbolic, albeit illegal, marriage, largely recognised as the first lesbian marriage in England. As a Yorkshirewoman, it only makes sense that Northern Ballet, known for their facility in narrative works, would be the company to tell her story.

Performance

Northern Ballet: “Gentleman Jack” by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa

Place

Sadler's Wells, London, UK, May 19, 2026

Words

Eoin Fenton

Gemma Coutts and Saeka Shirai in “Gentleman Jack.” Photograph by Emily Nuttall

In suitable coincidence, the role of Lister is danced by a young Turk, Nida Aydınoğlu. Having only joined Northern Ballet two years ago, this is her first principal role. She is highly physical, assured in her movement, and remarkably flexible. She is a convincing Lister, a woman known for her boorishness as well as her passion, and oozes spades of charisma and cockiness. In her acts of seduction she towers above her partners with a firmness, in her vulnerable moments she is pliable and open. The versatility of Aydınoğlu as a mover as well as an actor serves her well. She is most certainly a dancer to be watched. 

Lopez Ochoa gives “Gentleman Jack” a distinctive feel with her movement. Exchanges both flirtatious and business-oriented tick like a mechanical puzzle, as if powered by winches and pistons, sometimes Lister is the master of operations but often systems and customs greater than her are at play. Each character possesses a signature, like a catchphrase they dance when declaring who they are. What perhaps generated the most curiosity before the ballet’s premiere was how one might set about the task of creating pas de deux for two women; Lopez Ochoa pulls it off with steamy results. There are no acrobatic pressages but rather pulls and pushes, women cradling and leaning onto one another. It’s a more human and egalitarian approach that still adds the desired fleshiness to the womanising Lister’s trysts. 

Northern Ballet in “Gentleman Jack” by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa. Photograph by Colleen Mair

Northern Ballet in “Gentleman Jack” by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa. Photograph by Colleen Mair

There is much innovation in the ensemble work too, where men and women are dressed equally and are often dancing the same choreography—no sheepish alterations between the sexes here. Lopez Ochoa’s chorus of words from Lister’s diary swoop about like dark, fragile birds in the moody northern skies. They lift Lister and hold her dearly as no one else in the ballet does. The miners are a little less convincing, though references to traditional long sword dances provide a Tyke-ish charm. Repetition of movement does also weaken some of the kinetic impact, particularly cabrioles off the side of set pieces. What really impresses however is just how much Lopez Ochoa is able to pull out all the passion, tension, and humour from Lister’s life and keep it snappy. No scene is overwrought and long, even those concerning land disputes which could prove snore-inducing in less capable hands. Peter Salem’s excellent score underlies the action suitably.

While “Gentleman Jack” is a strong addition to the modern canon of story ballets, what makes it a real triumph is its impact as an all-too-rare Queer story. Lopez Ochoa does not shy away from the harsh realities of the period for Queer people but equally doesn’t wade in the sorrow. The moments of passionate flight are luxurious—especially when Lister heads to permissive Paris to sample the local fare—and Lister’s tenacity and audacity act as unwavering anchors to the storyline. In an audience noticeably filled with lesbian couples, butches, and trans folk, we see in action how ballet is still entirely capable of reaching audiences far and wide. With Lopez Ochoa at the helm, the possibilities of what can or cannot become ballet seem endless.

Eoin Fenton


Eoin (they/he) is a dance maker and writer based in Cork (Rep. of Ireland), and London (UK). They have danced across Ireland and London in venues including The Place, Project Arts Centre Dublin and Galway Cathedral. Eoin graduated with a BA in Choreography from Middlesex University in 2024 and began writing as part of the Resolution Reviews programme. They are a regular contributor to A Young(ish) Perspective. 

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