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.
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