The Royal Danish Ballet is in town at the Joyce Theater, with an all-Bournonville program that highlights the eternal charm of the Danish style of classical ballet. The Danes don't visit very often, but when they do balletomanes turn out in droves.
It was doing so under conditions that were less than ideal. The Joyce stage is simply too small for the flying, free, Danish style, especially those famous grand jetés that travel in an arc. This was especially evident in the first half, a compressed version of the second act of La Sylphide. Because the stage was too small for scenery or the corps de ballet, the whole thing ended up being an odd mishmash. Instead of a forest we got an aqua backdrop. The sublime dance of the sylphs was gone. The main Sylph (Ida Praetorius) was accompanied by three other sylphs and that was it. Much of the drama was incomprehensible if you didn't already know La Sylphide; for instance, the wedding music for James' abandoned fiancée, Effie, and her new husband, Gurn, plays, but there is no wedding party, no Effie, no Gurn. It's just James (Ulrik Birkkjaer) reacting to the music.
With that being said, Ida Praetorius and Ulrik Birkkjaer were an excellent Sylph and James. Birkkjaer (now a principal at San Francisco Ballet) is a sunnier than usual James. Praetorius and Birkkjaer had the requisite light jumps, soft landings and playful chemistry. But the performance of the evening was Sorella Englund as Madge. Englund played Madge not for camp, but as a woman with a deep witch's brew of feeling for James. Was it love? Obsession? Jealousy? Her expressive mime seemed to indicate: all of the above?
After an intermission, things lightened up with a hodgepodge of Bournonville's greatest hits. It was one of the conceits of the second half that dancers stayed onstage after their pas de deux was over, and watched the new dancers come on for their number, so everyone was on stage at the end to dance Bournonville's “Biggest Hit of All”, the Napoli pas de six and Tarantella.
Before the Napoli finale there was the pas de trois from The Kings Volunteers on Amager, From Siberia to Moscow's Jockey Dance, The Streetsinger Mime from Napoli, and the pas de deux from Kermesse in Bruges. The Jockey Dance trades in Bournonville's trademark wholesome style for slapstick comedy. Two jockeys mimic the motions of racehorses; they do frog leaps, gallops, shuffles, all the while "whipping" their horses. Marcin Kupiñski and Alexander Bozinoff were fantastic as the duo with huge jumps and great comic timing.