China Daily (Hong Kong)

I, Mystic

Charismati­c Russian dance prodigy Sergei Polunin brings Rasputin to Singapore for its Asian premiere

- by CDLP

The old cliché “once in a lifetime” is often overused in the world of performanc­e. But in the case of Russian ballet superstar Sergei Polunin, it couldn’t be more apt. The 30-year-old aesthetic alchemisto of the stage takes on the role of the title mystic and villain in Rasputin, whose influence over the Russian royal family did so much to bring down the Romanov dynasty. Choreograp­hed by Yuka Oishi, the 95-minute performanc­e, at the luxurious Marina Bay Sands, Singapore from March 20-21, will be the ballet’s Asian premiere.

Polunin, whose performanc­es have been compared to those of Mikhail Baryshniko­v and Rudolf Nureyev at the height of their powers, is the controvers­ial bad boy and so-called “rock star” of the ballet firmament. He became the London Royal Ballet’s youngest-ever principal dancer (at age 19) in 2010. Two year later, he stunned the ballet world by leaving the company, blaming ballet punishing discipline and lacklustre financial returns. Since then, his reputation has steadily grown.

Now, Polunin takes on a career-defi role that explores the ambivalenc­e bet power and weakness, and between good and evil. The Russian royal fam believed that Rasputin, a self-procla holy man, could cure the hemophilia its young heir to the throne (Alexei, of Tsar Nicholas II); Rasputin appea to save Alexei from death in the face poisonous Prince Yusupov.

Unusually for a ballet dancer, Pol has made the rare crossover into the mainstream culture. In 2015, he star in a short dance video shot by Amer photograph­er and director David LaChapelle. The four-minute film, choreograp­hed by Jade Hale-Christo to the music of Hozier’s “Take Me to Church”, is almost like watching the h tattooed dancer making peace with prodigious talent, and has accumula nearly 28 million views on YouTube date. (Polunin and LaChapelle reuni for a Diesel campaign in 2017).

Since then, Polunin has re-emerged in Russia, dancing with the Stanislavs­ky Music Theatre, and has developed a parallel career as an actor, appearing in Kenneth Branagh’s Murder on the Orient

Express and French director Danielle

Arbid’s Passion Simple.

So far, Polunin has toured London, Italy and Russia with the show to huge acclaim, with many saying the dark, complex psychologi­cal role makes seamless symbiotic sense for Polunin. With a striking set modelled on a chessboard (designed by Otto Bubenicek), and costumes awash and animated with flushes of colour and chiaroscur­o, it’s stylish and stirring stuff at every level. If you only see one ballet all decade, make it Rasputin and the hyper-watt charisma of the Rasputin-esque Polunin as its lead.

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