The Royal Ballet's 2011 reimagining of Lewis Carroll's beloved Alice stories was a glorious triumph, as proved by its immediate, slightly reworked revival for the 2012 season. Choreographer Christopher Wheeldon and composer Joby Talbot combine contemporary freshness with affectionate nods to the traditions of their respective crafts and together with playwright Nicholas Wright and the Royal Opera House's production team, they have created a gorgeously lush Alice, whose shimmering music, set wizardry and sheer exuberance will no doubt delight audiences for many seasons to come.
Wheeldon is clear that he wanted to keep Wonderland magical rather than psychoanalytic and so the focus is firmly on the joys of storytelling, with many of Carroll's weirdest and most wonderful characters gleefully realised on stage (making the Mad Hatter a frenetic tap dancer, played by Steven McRae, was a stroke of genius). Nevertheless the ballet does take Alice's growing up as its narrative arc, and her increasing confidence and maturity is beautifully conveyed by Lauren Cuthbertson in the title role. I would have liked to see perhaps a touch more edginess in her psychological journey, as she challenged the class and sexual restraints of her Victorian childhood, but having her wake up from her dream in contemporary Oxford, minus the repressive family and with her handsome Jack, was a nice way of figuring the emotional truth of her mental experience. Wheeldon chose well to make Cuthbertson his Alice, whose gorgeously fluent dancing keeps her Alice youthful and innocent, but never gauche. Cuthbertson's interactions with Ed Watson as the White Rabbit and Federico Bonelli as Jack/the Knave of Hearts give the episodic narrative coherence, and all three dancers maintain an unforced lightness, which is capable of becoming moving intensity when required. The villains are as evil as they need to be – the Cook with her cleaver and her kitchen full of pig meat is deliciously disturbing, while Laura Morera's Queen of Hearts is mesmerisingly mad, all staring eyes, rictus grin and dangerous caprice.
Designer Bob Crowley's sets and costumes eschew the spikiness of Tenniel's well-known illustrations, choosing instead a modernised brand of Victoriana, with bright clear colours and clean lines. The effect is stunning: my only (slight) reservation is that the characters' essential grotesqueness is sometimes undermined by the elegance of their surroundings. The courtroom of cards is a case in a point; the Duchess's gruesome kitchen an honourable exception. Film and light projections are used sparingly but effectively to convey Alice's disconcerting fall down the rabbit hole, her changes of size and the pool of tears, but the mechanical effects are the real triumph. The Cheshire cat's giant floating head and tail and the roses which magically switched from red to white caused particular glee in the audience, although all three acts elicited near-constant exclamations of delight as sets and set-pieces changed rapidly and ingeniously.