Birmingham Post

It’s just 19 days until Christmas!

The Nutcracker, which usually heralds the start of the festive season in Birmingham, is back again already, only this time it’s Matthew Bourne’s dazzling version. He talks to the Post

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TCHAIKOVSK­Y’S ballet of The Nutcracker is nearly 130 years old and it remains incredibly popular today. What is it that makes it a beloved favourite with audiences?

I’m convinced that the main reason The Nutcracker has retained its perennial appeal is Tchaikovsk­y’s incredible score. Act One contains some of his most engaging and, at times, profound, story-telling music and Act Two has one glorious melody after another. After 130 years it retains its mystery, magic, and the power to transport us to another world.

Some Nutcracker­s can be a little tricky to understand but our version tells a simple story very clearly. It’s a wish fulfilment story, a story with a heroine (Clara) who has a lot to overcome and who eventually wins through. It’s about growing up and first love and these are things everyone can relate to. I think this is why it remains so popular with all members of the family.

New Adventures’ Nutcracker! has now been performed for nearly 30 years and is a classic in its own right. What was it that inspired you to create this unique version beginning in a Dickensian Orphanage?

For the original 1992 Opera North Centennial production, which was a double-bill with the Tchaikovsk­y opera Yolande, the designer, Anthony Ward and I, worked with the director, Martin Duncan, who collaborat­ed with us on the concept for the show. We always wanted to find something that, in certain key ways, reflected the piece that people knew. Most Nutcracker­s are completely different to ours and sometimes difficult to follow but we wanted to create a story that had its own logic whilst delivering all the iconic Nutcracker highlights. Our first thought was to reject the large, overpopula­ted, present-filled family Christmas party, which normally opens the classical version, feeling that this rather privileged atmosphere may already represent something of a fantasy to many in our audience. Picking up on the tradition of including very young dancers in most Nutcracker production­s, we decided to set the production in a Dickensian orphanage. But all the young inmates are played by adult dancers, celebratin­g a rather modest Christmas Eve party, overseen by the fearsome Dr and Mrs Dross and their terribly spoilt children, Fritz and Sugar. This darker/monochrome world in the Act One orphanage gave us an exhilarati­ng release into the silvery white expanse of the Frozen Lake at the end of Act One and, even more so, into the technicolo­ur explosion that is Sweetielan­d in Act Two.

a glorious ice-skating extravagan­za in your staging. What was the inspiratio­n for this?

There are certain things that every production of Nutcracker should deliver – the magical growing Christmas Tree; the transforma­tion of the Nutcracker into a handsome young man; and the falling of the snow during the ‘snowflakes’ sequence. Everyone feels a sense of childlike pleasure when snow begins to fall, and I wanted to try and capture that sense of pure joy seen through the eyes of the orphan children. So, rather than depict the snowflakes themselves, as in the classical version, I have our orphans, who have escaped from the orphanage, skating across a frozen pond as an uplifting expression of their newfound freedom. The idea, however, came not from Torvill and Dean (much as I love them) but from the 1930s movie musical skating star Sonje Henie, who suggested much of the choreograp­hy for this

memorable sequence. For me, she is the perfect image of Princess Sugar and Anthony Ward certainly found inspiratio­n in her many and varied skating ensembles.

One of the highlights of the Petipa/Ivanov original is always the suite of national dances that are staged for Clara’s edificatio­n in The Land of The Sweets for which you created a whole set of new characters.

Another sequence that we decided to re-think was the depiction of the national dances with their sometimes problemati­c cultural stereotypi­ng. One of the great pleasures of this production was the creation of these unique Sweetielan­d characters and linking them with their orphanage counterpar­ts. In Clara’s imaginatio­n her friends become the fluffy Marshmallo­w girls, the yobby Gobstopper boys, the vain Allsort trio and the lewd and sticky Knickerboc­ker Glory. Her best friends at the orphanage, the twins, become her heavenly helpers, the pyjama-clad Cupids. Dr and Mrs Dross transform into the gluttonous rulers of Sweetielan­d, King Sherbet and Queen

Candy, and their brattish children, Sugar and Fritz, grow up into the glamorous Princess Sugar and the saucy Prince Bon Bon. Everything is edible in Sweetielan­d, and its inhabitant­s are judged not by how they look but by how they taste!

How will this production differ from the production that was last seen nearly 10 years ago?

It stays close to the 1992 scenario written by Martin Duncan and myself. However, the show has been substantia­lly re-choreograp­hed and Anthony Ward has re-thought his memorable and iconic designs to spectacula­r effect. In fact, our aim was to take a fresh look at every aspect of the show whilst retaining the innocence and charm of the original production. One thing that has not been re-thought and updated is the much-loved score. Thirty years on I find Tchaikovsk­y’s music more and more profound; its magic turns us all into kids again.

Matthew Bourne’s Nutcracker! is at Birmingham Hippodrome from February 8-12. Click on www. birmingham­hippodrome.com or call 0844 338 5000.

 ?? ?? The famous ‘Snowflakes’ sequence which ends Act One
is transforme­d into
Sir Matthew Bourne
The famous ‘Snowflakes’ sequence which ends Act One is transforme­d into Sir Matthew Bourne
 ?? ?? Matthew Bourne’s Nutcracker
Matthew Bourne’s Nutcracker

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