Kumakawa’s paradoxical unity of discord thus bridges the extremes of comedy and romance in this most enchanting of our happily-ever-after ballets. Surreal touches of incongruence continue throughout the staging—stag-headed footman, a giant orange, acrobatic antics from the Tall Knight and Short Knight—as the storytelling effortlessly swerves from exaggerated buffoonery to dreamlike romance. Some of the humor lands more successfully than others, but the tension is maintained throughout.
The Prince (Masaya Yamamoto) doesn’t have much to do in this version except dance beautifully and look princely. Like several modern versions, the Prince’s foreign travels in his search for Cinderella in Act 3 is omitted from Prokofiev’s score. Kumakawa instead adds further mischief from the Stepmother to deepen the emotional impact of the slipper scene.
Yamamoto does both beauty and princely-ness with grace and presence, and even manages to characterize the Prince as a misfit himself, in parallel to Cinderella, with only one short sequence. At the ball, Yamamoto briefly partners a revolving parde of twirling, identical beauties, perfectly revealing through dance the Prince’s ennui and disdain for his palace prison, a perfect set-up for his meet with destiny.
Moving out of the shadows after the frenzied ball preparations in Act 1 (an early comic highlight), Iwai reenacts the scene in her own imagination. This solo, with her whimsical pantomimes of the ball prep and graceful, dreamy extensions to a now empty stage, transforms the earlier campy choreography to a study in classical refinement. Iwai’s delicate, quick footwork mesmerizes, especially when she reconfigures the Ballet Master’s steps with precise elegance. We can rewrite our stories, most importantly in our imaginations, Iwai seems to say with this solo.
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