In a collaboration between Manchester’s Factory International and the Royal Ballet, Watkins makes a welcome return to Covent Garden, this time with an adaptation of Christopher Isherwood’s A Single Man. Isherwood’s loosely autobiographical novel focuses on a day in the life of George, a university lecturer grieving the death of his partner Jim, while he navigates existence as a closeted gay man in 1960s America. This production notably has two Georges, one representing his thoughts and the other his actions, performed by singer and songwriter John Grant and former principal dancer of the Royal Ballet Edward Watson respectively.
Watson’s depiction of George is world-weary but never thorny. His insecurity trembles through his curving arms, embracing a lover that is no longer there. Grant, who wrote songs to go alongside Jasmin Kent Rodgman’s score, unleashes George’s unfiltered thoughts: sceptical, lonesome, and often wry—“the present is a monumental drag.” The tonal connection between Kent Rodgman’s atmospheric score and Grant’s confessional ballads is occasionally tenuous but always sounds on point in the capable hands of the offstage Manchester Collective. Jonathan Goddard cuts a tragic figure as the ghostly Jim, while Royal Ballet first soloist James Hay dances the role of Kenny, a charming student who catches George’s eye.
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