The Independent

STEPS AND MISSTEPS

This new programme marking the centenary of the First World War fails to do the subject justice, says Zoë Anderson

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The Royal Ballet, Royal Opera House, London

The Unknown Soldier, Alastair Marriott’s new ballet marking the First World War centenary, is timid, wellmeanin­g and dull. The production team, including designer Es Devlin, surround it with all the bells and whistles of modern stagecraft, but the ballet itself is weak.

Marriott uses a real-life couple, Ted Feltham and Florence Billington, who fell in love as teenagers before he was killed in the war. Devlin’s set is a striking frame of sliding panels, supporting Luke Halls’ film

projection­s – though I wonder how clearly the scenery reads from the upper levels of the theatre. On screen, archive footage and more recent interviews dissolve into the colours of the spectrum, beautifull­y lit by Bruno Poet. Dario Marianelli’s cinematic new score blends in interviews, with snatches of social dance for the couple’s early meeting.

On screen, the elderly Billington remembers her younger self: how handsome the soldiers were, the smitten crush she had on Ted. She’s aware of both the intensity and the naivety of those feelings, but Marriott stages it all as ballet cliche: demure girl meets dashing boy. Even the marvellous Yasmine Naghdi and Matthew Ball can’t make this personal. The battlefiel­d scenes are ploddingly literal, and there’s an illjudged glimpse of the afterlife, an accidental­ly homoerotic scene with soldiers performing academic steps in their underwear.

It raises questions about Royal Ballet commission­ing, with resources lavished on an underdevel­oped idea

In the past four years, the centenary has prompted some outstandin­g works, fresh perspectiv­es on the war and how we remember it. After Akram Khan’s mesmerisin­g Dust, the horror and anger of William Kentridge’s The Head and the Load or the lucid humanity of Shobana Jeyasingh’s Contagion, Marriott’s ballet is limited and sentimenta­l.

It also raises questions about Royal Ballet commission­ing, with resources lavished on an underdevel­oped idea. Marriott, a dancer with the company, has made six main-stage works, with mixed success: his best was the elegant Sensorium, created in 2009. In that time, the company has commission­ed only two women, Twyla Tharp and Crystal Pite, both brought in from outside. Who gets the chances at the Royal Ballet?

The Unknown Soldier is part of a very mixed programme. Wayne McGregor’s Infra was polished but emotionall­y underpower­ed, with Akane Takada lacking weight as the woman reaching for connection in a city crowd. George Balanchine’s sparkling Symphony in C closed the evening, with sharp rhythm from Lauren Cuthbertso­n in the first movement and Marianela Nuñez grand and dreamy in the second.

Until 29 November. Box office 020 7304 4000

 ??  ?? Akane Takada and Tristan Dyer in Wayne McGregor’s polished but emotionall­y underpower­ed ‘Infra’ (Helen Maybanks)
Akane Takada and Tristan Dyer in Wayne McGregor’s polished but emotionall­y underpower­ed ‘Infra’ (Helen Maybanks)

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