MATTHEW BOURNE’S SWAN LAKE – Revisited – Bristol Hippodrome

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8 March 2025

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5*****

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The genius of Matthew Bourne is encapsulated in his desire to offer opportunities to up and coming dancers and then being able to capture their loyalty via his New Adventures company. With ‘Swan Lake’ on tour, he has two more shows waiting to be launched to theatres across the UK and Worldwide.
I have reviewed the current production before, at Plymouth, when it started its present tour, and the opportunity to return and see how this young cast have developed was not worth missing. It is difficult to believe that this revolutionary show was first performed 30 years ago and caused people to walk out at the affrontery of the choreographer. Times have changed!

Bourne keeps his ‘Swan Lake’ fresh with tweaks, small adjustments and new dancers, often graduating through his ‘Swan School’. Along with the genius of set and costume designer Lez Brotherston and lighting designer Paule Constable, the visual presentation throughout is arresting and classy. These elements to provide a framework on which to hang the powerful story of the young Prince, rejected by his Mother, haunted by his dreams and struggling with his sexuality.

The faultless performances of the big company illustrates that this is a show which is of no specific genre; ballet, jazz, contemporary, ballroom… all meld together to create a feast. Precision is a key element of Bourne’s work and you won’t see a better example. As an accompaniment to Tchaikovsky’s sublime score, you can’t do better.

As the Swan and Stranger, Jackson Fisch (who we saw as he made his debut in the role) has become wonderfully at ease; exuding charm, swagger, menace and sexuality in the most spine-tingling  manner. James Lovell first played the Prince in 2018 (still a teenager) just prior to graduating from Elmhurst Ballet School; he returns to the role as a hugely accomplished dancer and gives an absolutely outstanding performance. He dances with an ease and grace and his acting is out of the top drawer – if you want to know what is going on in the story, just watch Lovell’s face, vulnerability, ecstasy, confusion, despair and anger – he expresses them all.  As a duo, there is a magnetism, a desire and a love. Simply as good as it gets.

Carla Contini is statuesquely elegant as the cold-hearted Queen who rejects her son; her brazen flirting with all and sundry adding to his loneliness. Benjamin Barlow Bazeley is wonderfully pompous and precise as the Private Secretary and what a joy Bryony Wood is as the Girlfriend – out of her depth and making every social gaffe going – joyous and hilarious. Look out for other treasures along the way – the podium dancer, the threesome on the balcony and the automaton nurses with Queen-like masks – there is wit and danger around every corner.

The swans are astonishing, you hear their breathing, you see the sweat pouring off them, you marvel at the athleticism and you sit back in horror at what they do, but you admire every single one of them. As you do with the whole Company.

This ‘Swan Lake’ is sublime; once seen, never forgotten and feels as fresh as it did when I first saw it. In another 30 years it still will. A mighty show borne of brilliance.

 

 

Cast

The Swan/Stranger – Jackson Fisch

The Prince – James Lovell

The Queen – Carla Contini

The Girlfriend – Bryony Wood

The Private Secretary – Benjamin Barlow Bazeley

The Swans –Alistair Beattie, Ben Brown, Jamie Duncan-Campbell, Perreira de Jesus Franque, Cameron Flynn, Louis Fukuhara, Aristide Lyons, Callum Mann, Leonardo McCorkindale, Jarrod McWilliams, Mukeni Nel, George-Murray Nightingale, Harry Ondrak-Wright, Tom Barnes Standing

French Princess – Molly Shaw-Downie

Spanish Princess – Savannah Ffrench

Romanian Princess – Eve Ngbokota

Italian Princess – Anna-Maria de Freitas

Hungarian Princess – Eleanor McGrath

German Princess – Jade Copas

Monaco Princess – Maisie Mwebe

 

Creatives

Director & Choreographer – Matthew Bourne

Composer – Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Set and Costume Design – Lez Brotherston

Lighting Design – Paule Constable

Sound Design – Ken Hampton

Video Projection Design – Duncan McLean

Associate Artistic Director – Etta Murfitt

Photo Credit – Johan Persson