Cinderella
Dance

Description
Description
Revival of Cinderella for the contemporary stage
The story of Cinderella has a place in the collective human psyche. A downtrodden maiden, helped by her fairy godmother, strives to find love and fulfil her dream while sending her oppressors to a bitter end. The story, filled with symbolisms, has been retold countless times on stage including numerous ballet productions. A fresh perspective is always going to be a challenge for any contemporary choreographer trying to revive this old tale. Thierry Malandain has managed to do so by developing a very personal approach, and yet remained faithful to the dramaturgy of the beloved Cinderella.
In Malandain’s vision, he explores themes that he holds dear. Cinderella is the path of a star, a dancing star. Modern in form but classical at heart, his Cinderella delights the audience with a minimalist set, inventive stagecraft and exquisite taste.
The story behind Malandain’s version
A masterful work is often the child of a long gestation. Malandain had many hesitations before taking on Cinderella. He felt the 1985 Maguy Marin production, which set the ballet in a dollhouse, was almost perfection. And then there is his relationship with Prokofiev’s music. Malandain wrote, “[Prokofiev] composed a music sounding sincere, but sometimes contorted, ironic and harsh. I often kept his music at bay because it reflected in me like a faithful mirror and because I preferred to paint a less gloomy picture of my soul.”
Malandain did later choreograph for Profokiev’s last opus “La Fleur de Pierre” to great success. But something else was needed to prompt him to take on Cinderella. It finally came when he was offered the opportunity to stage it in the Royal Opera of Versailles, as well as the impetus providedby a Nietzsche quote – One must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star.
In Greek mythology, chaos gave birth to the earth, the starry sky, and love. In the tale, Cinderella, considered by her cruel stepmother as a good-for-nothing, was made to clean the hearth and live among the ashes. But she became an accomplished young woman, a dancing star, thanks to love. This coming true of a dream symbolises self-fulfilment.
Every person can relate to Cinderella. Her doubt, denial, pain, hopes and cry for light. It is a cry for the serene brightness of stars to counterbalance an inner chaos. Malandain created his Cinderella to escape from the dark realities and from bleeding humanity, ignorance and human stupidity, and in a nutshell, to transcend the ordinary.
A stylish and clever production
It is said that this ballet was created on a shoestring, but budget cannot diminish artistic brilliance when the stars align. There is no change of scene, and the entire piece is performed on a stage whose only decorations are black stilettos hanging on three sides of the stage. It is stripped of pretence, but instead radiates real pleasure derived from humanity, the magic of the tale and the magnificence of its music. Malandain tells the story of Cinderella as we know it, but without the darker undertones that other productions often have. Humour is cleverly interwoven within the story, with the laughter of burlesque scenes counterbalancing dreamlike or unhappy episodes.
Danced on soft shoes, Malandain’s choreography allows the dancers’ technical brilliance to shine. Prokofiev’s music envisages Cinderella as a classical ballet with variations, adagios and pas de deux, requiring a corps de ballet of around 30 dancers. To get around this with a smaller company, Malandain uses a trick to double his number of dancers to arrange the climax: the ball at the court. His other inventive ideas include turning the pumpkin carriage into a simple wheel, and the glass slipper, a black stiletto. The overall grey tone and use of geometry lend the ballet a surprisingly modern and fashionable outlook but the mythical elements of Cinderella are kept in tact.
Choreographer:Thierry Malandain
Production Manager:Jean-Claude Asquié
Lighting Design:Jean-Claude Asquié
Set and Costume Design :Jorge Gallardo
Costume Production:Véronique Murat
Set and Prop Production:Chloé Bréneur; Alain Cazaux; Annie Onchalo
Wig Production:Franois Dussourd; Georges Dejardin
Note:This event record is compiled from "Hong Kong Theatre Yearbook 2016 – Dance, Drama and Xiqu" published by International Association of Theatre Critics (Hong Kong).
Info
$120
$480
Indoor
Non-local