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Callum Linnane (Don Jose) - Jill Ogai (Carmen) in Johan Inger's "Carmen" |
Choreographed by Johan Inger – Conducted by Jessica Gethin.
Décor designed by Curt Allen Wilmer and Leticia Ganan
Costume Design by David Delfin - Lighting Design by Tom
Visser
The Australian Ballet - Canberra Theatre Centre 20th – 25th
June, 2025
Opening night performance on 20th June 2025 reviewed
by Bill Stephens
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Jill Ogai (Carmen) Callum Linnane (Don Jose) in Johan Inger's "Carmen" |
After an absence of eight
years the Australian Ballet is back in town with a stunningly danced production
of the ballet Carmen.
The Australian Ballet was the very first company to perform
on the brand-new Canberra Theatre stage when on the 25th June 1965,
it presented a program consisting of Robert Helpman’s The Display, Rex
Reid’s Melbourne Cup and Act 11 of Peggy Van Praagh’s Swan Lake to open the theatre. All
these ballets were danced in pointe shoes.
Sixty years later, almost to the day, The Australian Ballet
has returned to the Canberra Theatre to celebrate this milestone with a
contemporary version of Carmen choreographed by Johan Inger, which could
hardly be more different to the one presented on this stage by the company in 1973
choreographed by Roland Petit and also danced in point shoes.
For his version Inger subverts the classical ballet technique
with movement that is gritty, aggressively modern, startingly erotic, and
danced in soft shoes. To focus on the psychological aspects of the relationship
between Carmen and Don Jose he employs a choreographic repertoire that is difficult to
describe being at times athletic, angular, buoyant, physically demanding, sometimes
beautiful, at others brutal, but always exhilarating and superbly danced by the
whole company with careful attention to phrasing and detail.
Inger has set his version to a captivating arrangement of the
music composed at various times for this ballet by Georges Bizet, Rodion Shchedrin
and Marc Alvarez and orchestrated by Alvaro Dominguez who incorporates unexpected
instrumentations and time signatures to support Inger’s dynamic choreography.
On opening night, it was thrillingly interpreted by the
Canberra Symphony Orchestra conducted by Jessica Gethin following an
introduction by the company’s Artistic Director, David Hallberg, making his
first visit to the National Capital.
But Inger’s choreography is not the only aspect of this
production which departs from the norm. For his costumes for the girls, David
Delfin eschews the swirling frilled skirts associated with Spanish
dance, in favour of short, cheeky ruffled skirts, some worn with the tops pulled
down around their waists. The girls were
dressed identically, but each in a different colour. Carmen’s dress is the only
red one, but otherwise similar to the others.
But apart from her dress, there is nothing else similar about Jill
Ogai’s Carmen. Defiant, wilful, overtly
sensual and completely in control, she commands the stage, taking her pick of
the men and taunting her lovers, playing them off against each other.
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Brett Chynoweth (Zuniga) - Jill Ogai (Carmen) in Johan Inger's "Carmen) |
Among them Brett Chynoweth’s Commanding Officer, Zuniga is a
sinister opportunist. Jake Mangakahia’s self-obsessed Torero flaunts his
rock-star glamour, but it is Callum Linnane’s insecure Don Jose who offers the
predatory Carmen the most challenge. She senses he is out of his depth, but
intrigued by her attraction to him, sets out to challenge him to his limit even
though she also senses that their relationship will end in tragedy.
All this is played out on a sparse setting consisting of a
series of huge triangular prisms. These prisms offer different surfaces; concrete,
textured and mirrored, and manipulated into different configurations by the dancers, to be converted into a variety of locales through the lighting wizardry of
Tom Visser, allowing Inger to demonstrate
his remarkable aptitude for creating mood, spectacle and emotionally powerful
visuals to enhance his choreography and storytelling.
The choice of Inger’s powerful thought-provoking ballet for
this occasion was a particularly apt choice, because not only is it a dazzling
showcase for the skill and artistry of the current dancers of The Australian
Ballet, it also demonstrates the Company’s ability to tackle, with confidence and panache, even the most
complex of concepts signalling future directions for the art of ballet.
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The moment Zuniga is shot by Don Jose. Zuniga (Brett Chynoweth) - Carmen (Jill Ogai) - Don Jose (Callum Linnane)
Images by Longley
This review also published in Australian Arts Review. www.artsreview.com.au |