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Sweet Peas

Joffrey Ballet’s latest mixed bill programme, “Golden Hour,” unfurled into the still dark and snowy evening streets of Chicago in mid-February (‘Danger Ice Falling’ signs littering the pavements). This diverse mix of works contained two world premieres, including a co-production with Oregon Ballet Theatre titled “Princess and the Pea.”

Performance

Joffrey Ballet: “Under the Trees’ Voices” by Nicholas Blanc / “Heimat” by Cathy Marsten /  “Andante” by Yuri Possokhov / “Princess and the Pea” by Dani Rowe

Place

Lyric Opera House, Chicago, Illinois, February 20, 2025

Words

Róisín O'Brien

The Joffrey Ballet in “Princess and the Pea” by Dani Rowe. Photograph by Cheryl Mann

 

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It was a small pleasure for this writer, having recently moved to the States from Scotland, to see the name Nicolas Blanc as choreographer for the first piece, “Under the Trees’ Voices.” Blanc is currently rehearsal director and coach with the company, and was previously Ballet Master with Scottish Ballet. “Under the Trees’ Voices” is a beautiful and complex work which sketches out different interpersonal relationships between its dancers within a dreamlike environment. 

The curtains rise to reveal large spectral leaves floating in the air. The dancers —and there are many of them—stand largely still, bar a few individuals who ripple like a gentle breeze as they split away from and then rejoin the group. Blanc’s choreographic language is filled with intricacies—curves of the wrists, articulations through the knees. There are some wonderful, innovative jumps and partner sequences, that see the dancers suddenly spin or drop out of the air in expected angles. In particular, Dylan Gutierrez and Jeraldine Mendoza are a dynamic duo; his tall presence and her lithe athleticism both seem an excess of positives rather than a delicate complement. The Joffrey dancers, almost fawn-like in how they herd together in this enchanted forest, ably traverse the entire stage, never mistaking detail for meanness. The first section ends with a grand unison of the whole group, Blanc embracing the magic of a large group of bodies moving as one.

As the piece progresses, the backdrop changes colours from dark blue, rich pink and dusky yellow, under Scenic and Lighting Designer Jack Mehler’s careful eye. The fine costumes (conceived by Blanc) made of sheer fabrics with black petals add to the sophistication of the work, while Ezio Bosso’s music is pleasingly bare, sometimes featuring only one lone stringed instrument. It’s a shame that sometimes the volume of the instruments doesn’t fully overwhelm the auditorium. Otherwise, it’s a strong, compelling work to begin the evening.  

Olivia Duryea in  Under the Trees Voices' by Nicholas Blanc. Photograph by Cheryl Mann

The second work, “Heimat,” comes from Cathy Marston, choreographed to Richard Wagner’s symphonic poem Siegfried Idyll. Wagner composed the work after the birth of his son, and Marston repaints a picture of familial comforts. Set against a minimalist pale blue backdrop, with the five dancers dressed in conservatively draped dresses for the women and plain shirts and trousers for the men, it’s a sentimental work. In clear cut shapes, Gutierrez as the leading man of the family negotiates with his children who push their boundaries, while the mother, danced by Olivia Duryea, indulges the children’s playing as they vie for her affections. Based on Marston’s previous revisits of countryside idylls (such as in her latest work with the Joffrey, “Atonement”), I was cynically waiting for something to go wrong, or for something dark to emerge from behind the facade. But “Heimat” remains a quiet, sweet work. 

“Heimat” is followed by the slightly off-kilter, but technically virtuosic, premiere of “Andante” by Yuri Possokhov. Possokhov created this pas de trois for Joffrey Artist Victoria Jaiani to celebrate her twentieth season, under the recognisable chords of Dmitri Shostakovich. Xavier Núñez is dressed in a loose linen shirt, while Jaiani and Alberto Velazquez are dressed in almost vintage beach wear. Jaiani and Velazquez mostly dance separate from Núñez, though Jaiani is sometimes thrown between or forms an impressively limber connection across the two men. There are plenty of long arms, striking angles and gracefully contorted shapes. The piece ends almost as soon as it’s begun, crisp and beguiling. 

The Joffrey Ballet in “Heimat” by Cathy Marsten. Photograph by Cheryl Mann

In the final performance of the night, it’s the premiere of “Princess and the Pea,” with choreography from Dani Rowe, a libretto by Rowe and Garen Scribner and music by James Stephenson. In this retelling of Hans Christian Andersen’s short story, we are introduced to a peaceful land that used to be one of variety and diversity, before (the self-titled) Princess invaded and demanded that everyone eat peas, and only peas. Anyone who disagrees is ‘canned’ (literally); everything we see in the world is violently green, including some fun gaudy plaid trousers and curtains.  

And so follows the well-trodden journey of our young character, Penelopea—who sees her parents canned after they introduce her to a carrot—who must go on a quest through the drudgery of the pea farms and eventually compete against Princess in the (rigged) mattress competition to try and regain control of the land. It’s a familiar tale of innocence and hope triumphing over the evil dictator, because the world is better when we can all be ourselves etc. You could see this as speaking to our current, turbulent times—or you could stay in this fictional world where it’s easy to agree that we all like different vegetables.

Aesthetically, “Princess and the Pea” happily embraces kitsch. The story uses a framing device in the form of Gutierrez portraying a grey suited and bespectacled commentator, who appears with a clicker and projector at various points throughout the ballet. Basia Rhoden as the evil Princess peacocks around the stage with her reliably ingratiating stooges, danced by Fernando Duarte and Reed Henry, who often lift her up on their shoulders in an awkward, butt-wiggling manner. The central triad of Anabelle de la Nuez as the young hero, and her two dads, Valentino Moneglia Zamora and Evan Boersma, forms the most emotionally full aspect of the piece, especially when they are reunited at the end. There is an enjoyable level of whimsy and surrealism in the dancing carrot played by Jonathan Dole, who leaps across the stage with vim. The set design from Emma Kingsbury is extremely well done, clearly setting up the different environs, including high up in the clouds, while Rae’s direction gives us time to observe and understand these changes of scene. 

As you may imagine, the story ends happily. The reunited family look out through their window to see a wealth of different vegetables swaying in a gentle revelry.  Here in a wintry America, we await the return of the sun, too.

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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