This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Put on your red shoes, and dance the blues

Nobody, but nobody, fuses together pop culture references, storytelling and populist dance quite like the fabulous Matthew Bourne. There is a reason people flock in droves to see his work, including those who are immune to dance's charms—he is simply a master craftsman. He is Britain's best-loved choreographer. This double Olivier Award-winning production is simply superb, and his company New Adventures are at the top of their game. “The Red Shoes” is arguably the most fully-formed production of his career to date.

Performance

Matthew Bourne's New Adventures: “The Red Shoes”

Place

King's Theatre, Glasgow, Scotland, June 6, 2017

Words

Lorna Irvine

Ashley Shaw and Sam Archer in Matthew Bourne's “The Red Shoes.” Photograph by Johan Persson

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

  • Weekly articles from the world of dance
  • Wide diversity of reviews, interviews, articles & more
  • Support for quality art journalism

Already a paid subscriber? Login

As the beautiful and talented, but ultimately doomed Victoria Page, Ashley Shaw, Bourne's muse, is an inspired choice for the role made famous by Moira Shearer on the silver screen—a combination of innocence and smarts. She's nobody's shallow little princess, and every bit as wilful as she is gifted, with a fine foil in the gorgeous, tender Dominic North as her lover, struggling composer Julian Craster, who gets a beautiful piece of his own choreography examining his epiphany in the creative process.

When the shadowy marionette child figure at the outset emerges from sepia-dipped curtains (which turn throughout, representing the tonal shifts) it is as a foreshadowing of evil portents, sealing Page's fate. She retains her dignity, always en pointe and on point, even when the cursed shoes keep her dancing to the brink of collapse, or when she is flung around by a wonderfully deviant Sam Archer as the demented Machiavellian impresario Boris Lermontov.

It's the campy wit and Gothic interludes that Bourne juxtaposes effortlessly, from the stiff ennui of the ballroom with its conspicuous consumption and endless Rococo prancing among the upper classes, to the jazzy street scenes which feel brooding, and darkly sexual, with legs popping out at angles, a signifier of Page's burgeoning womanhood and the increasing sense of voyeurism. It seems that someone is always watching at shadowy corners, always judging. One lovely scene, an unlikely pas de deux between Page and a Priest, seems to imply that she is beyond redemption, that in signing her life away to dance is something akin to a Faustian pact in her own blood. In Bourne's hands, red ballet shoes are both a poisonous fairytale apple (and this is still very much a fairytale, albeit a somewhat adult one) and disapproving religious symbol of 'the fallen woman' alike.

Indeed, “The Red Shoes” is steeped in the traditions of MGM, as opposed to the restraint of the 1948 Powell and Pressburger film, augmented by the swooning icy soundtrack selections by Bernard Herrmann and Duncan McLean's gorgeously inspired, ethereal multimedia. There is no Hollywood cliché left unskewered, from the beach beauties, who are part Charles Atlas, part Pierre et Gilles in a rippling conga line of health and efficiency; to the choreographic divas, male and female, with their Norma Desmond eye rolls and wrist flicks, to rakish "wrong 'uns" with sadistic tendencies and tempting eyes, not unlike a reprise of Bourne's own sexy Knickerbocker Glory from “Nutcracker”!

For all of Bourne's swooning tropes of melodrama, though, which swing metronomically between wry parody and loving homage, there is a wider truth here—that of the dance hierarchy, played out in the many pithy rehearsal scenes. The showgirl 'hoofers' shaking their shapely butts in cheap routines look down at the classically trained dancers; the classically trained look down at these money-maker shakers. Meanwhile, simply everyone looks down at the pitiful vaudeville sand dancers, with their cheesily cringeworthy routine. It could be typically mischievous Bourne, or it may in fact represent a wider critique of those at the absolute bottom of the pile, scrabbling piecemeal to survive in a tough industry. Inspired, inspiring, pretty devastating.

Lorna Irvine


Based in Glasgow, Lorna was delightfully corrupted by the work of Michael Clark in her early teens, and has never looked back. Passionate about dance, music, and theatre she writes regularly for the List, Across the Arts and Exeunt. She also wrote on dance, drama and whatever particular obsession she had that week for the Shimmy, the Skinny and TLG and has contributed to Mslexia, TYCI and the Vile Blog.

comments

Featured

Vibrant and Versatile
REVIEWS | Cecilia Whalen

Vibrant and Versatile

There are few dance companies as versatile as Ballet Hispánico. The company, which is the largest Latine/x/Hispanic cultural organization in the United States, prides itself on its far-reaching celebration of the Latinx diaspora with a school that offers training in flamenco, salsa, and Afro-Caribbean, in addition to ballet, jazz, and more.

FREE ARTICLE
A Grand Evening
REVIEWS | Josephine Minhinnett

A Grand Evening

It was a lovefest at the David H. Koch Theater last Thursday for the Youth America Grand Prix's 25th Anniversary Gala performance. As galas go, the night was awash in pageantry. 

Continue Reading
Sweet Fields
REVIEWS | Rachel Howard

Sweet Fields

According to artistic director Peter Boal’s welcome letter for Pacific Northwest Ballet’s fifth season program, the most popular mixed rep slates at PNB feature works by Crystal Pite or Twyla Tharp. 

Continue Reading
Good Subscription Agency