THEATRE/ARTS & CULTURE
THE FAERIE QUEEN - B.C. Ballet | THE FAERIE QUEEN - B.C. Ballet |
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| Written by Tessa Perkins | |
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Title: The
Faerie Queen
Company:
Principal
Dancers: Simone Orlando, Donald Sales, Makaila Wallace, Jones Henry, Maggie
Forgeron, Léon Feizo-Gas, Shannon Smith, Marianne Bauer, Alexis Fletcher,
Racheal Prince, Melissa Morrissey, Shannon Ferguson, James Gnam, Peter Smida,
Brad Brannen, Connor Gnam
Choreographer:
John Alleyne
Composers:
Michael Bushnell,
Where:
Run:
Reviewed
by: Tessa Perkins (
This ballet
based on Shakespeare’s A Midsummer
Night’s Dream marks many firsts for
With such
an enchanting story filled with love, magic, and deception, the show is pure
joy from beginning to end. Puck (Orlando) is the character who holds all the
power throughout the ballet, and she is fittingly the first dancer on the
stage, and also the last. It is due to Puck’s meddling that the four lovers
become so confused, but in the end she sets things right and teaches a few
lessons in the process. The confusion begins when Hermia (Forgeron) and
Lysander (Feizo-Gas) run away together to escape Hermia’s ward, Egeus (Henry),
who is trying to make her marry Demetrius (Smith) to whom she is betrothed.
Demetrius is in love with Hermia and follows them into the forest. Meanwhile,
Helena (Bauer) is in love with Demetrius and also runs after them.
Once in the
fairy world, the lovers fall victim to Puck’s games with her special purple
flower, the love-blossom. When this flower is rubbed on the eyelids while a
person sleeps, they will fall in love with the first creature they see upon
waking. Oberon, King of the fairies (Sales), learns of this flower and decides
to teach his wife Titania, queen of the fairies (Wallace), a lesson on
selfishness. The results are very comical and keep the audience well
entertained as Puck cackles her wicked laugh.
The sets
props for the show are simple yet effective in creating the forest and fairy
world. Two drooping trees make up most of the background, while Puck plays with
her special flower and her flower trumpet. To represent the love between Hermia,
Lysander, Helena, and Demetrius, strings of flowers are used. In the prologue,
they dance with the strings entwined around each other creating a visual
connection. At the end, when all is well again, the strings of flowers hang
above the lovers as they dance blissfully. The costumes were also very simple;
unitards were used for the fairies, and the lovers wore simple white dresses,
shirts, and pants.
This show
is a farewell performance for Donald Sales who has been with the company since
2004. He gave a very strong performance along with all his fellow dancers. The
four lovers had great chemistry and effortlessly displayed their struggles to
gain love. The fairies were beautifully choreographed and always in time with
each other, wonderfully complimenting the other cast members.
As Puck
ends the show crouched under a shower of falling petals, love and hope is
restored to the kingdom, and the audience is returned to the real world.
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