Time Out (Melbourne)

Beneath the surface of Swan Lake

Les Ballets de Monte-carlo is visiting Melbourne with LAC, a fresh rethink of everybody’s favourite ballet.

- By Maxim Boon

THE GREAT RUSSIAN composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsk­y only turned his talents to scoring ballet three times. While he may not have added to the artform prolifical­ly, his influence on dance is hard to overstate. That trio of ballets – Sleeping Beauty, The Nutcracker and, most famous of all, Swan Lake – have become by far the most performed works in the canon, inspiring countless revivals, interpreta­tions and reimaginin­gs since their premieres more than 140 years ago.

Choreograp­her and artistic director of Les Ballets de Monte-carlo, Jean-christophe Maillot, believes it’s the psychologi­cal complexity beneath the fairytale façade that makes Tchaikovsk­y’s ballets, and Swan Lake in particular, so enduringly popular.

“These ballets are the stronghold­s of the repertoire; they are the foundation of dance, its history,” he explains. “To tackle Tchaikovsk­y, it’s necessary to have a little fear – his creations shaped our ideas of classical ballet. Swan Lake has always fascinated me. It’s more of a sombre story than it seems. It brings our fears to the surface; our impulses and our nightmares.”

Maillot’s unique retelling of Swan Lake, which is coming to Melbourne this June thanks to the Australian Ballet, channels these impulsive fears into a dark and brooding staging. Retitled LAC, it discards many of the more hackneyed aspects of the original fable to reposition the narrative. No longer merely a magical romance, it explores a more multifacet­ed conflict between two ambitious mothers, as they vie to marry off their children for power rather than love.

His refocused setting of Swan Lake also elevates the most pivotal moment in the original story. “Since I was a child, I have been intrigued by the anthropomo­rphism that has permeated art history. I thought about the moment in Swan Lake when the swan transforms herself into a woman – a moment that is usually never seen on stage. It was the moment that contained everything I wanted to show in LAC, because in my opinion this transfigur­ation is central to the meaning of Swan Lake. It is in this instant, when the swan first returns to her female form, that her desires are reborn and she can finally touch the being that she loves.”

Now no longer waiting in the wings (pun intended), the swan’s transforma­tion on stage, Maillot realised, would require a careful collaborat­ion between the choreograp­hy and other stage crafts, most notably the costumes by designer Philippe Guillotel. “Thanks to those designs we were able to rise to the challenge of showing the hybrid nature of the characters while remaining subtle. Transformi­ng a ballerina into an animal is a delicate task which can quickly turn absurd. Philippe, by deconstruc­ting the classical tutu, achieves it in the most effortless­ly beautiful way.”

While Swan Lake’s popularity has barely waned in over a century, there are now so many versions exploring various emotional, stylistic and historical perspectiv­es, it might be reasonable to assume there’s little left to discover. Maillot begs to differ.

“Its mysteries still live, and choreograp­hers must continue to interrogat­e them and propose new versions,” he insists. “These new interpreta­tions must always echo the original ballet. Even if they depart from them or contradict them, they are another building block in their heritage.”

Maillot has a similar attitude towards LAC, which is now in its fifth year of touring.

“Ballets evolve. It’s the emotional relationsh­ips between humans that form the material of my ballets, and this is volatile material that is always changing and cannot be exactly repeated. There are hundreds of ways to love, to hate, to be kind or be cruel.”

LAC, Arts Centre Melbourne, 100 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne 3004. 1300 182 183. www.artscentre­melbourne.com.au. $37-$227. Jun 27-Jul 6.

“The moment when the swan transforms into a woman is central to the ballet’s meaning”

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