Kevin McKenzie's remarkably prosaic production of Swan Lake made its annual appearance at American Ballet Theatre's spring season. Only a truly remarkable Odette/Odile can get me to sit through this production. Where do I start? The prologue elicits laughs when Rothbart captures Odette (in human form) and comes back onstage with a large stuffed swan. The role of Rothbart is split into two roles for two different dancers – a green swamp creature for the lakeside scenes and Purple Rothbart for the ballroom scene. Why? The final act is abbreviated to about ten minutes which destroys the ballet's structure of contrasting the lakeside scenes with Prince Siegfried's court life. And finally the thing is just so ugly; the "lake" curtain looks like strips of green slime.
But a remarkable enough dancer can get me to sit through this Swan Lake. Tonight Christine Shevchenko made this production almost bearable. Shevchenko had a great success as Odette/Odile. She is working with several inborn advantages; she has long arms, a pliant back, hyperextended legs with extremely arched insteps. In other words, you look at her, and think Swan Lake.
Shevchenko combines those physical attributes with total technical security. This was more impressive when she was Odile where her long-held balances, showy flexibility and confidence in her body language made one understand why Siegfried would be attracted to this new shiny thing. In the coda, she alternated single fouettés with doubles with fouettés a la seconde. Shevchenko's naturally cool demeanor was also a bonus – she didn't resort to over the top vamping. This was a woman who knew she was desirable.
Her Odette was beautifully danced. She has long, rippling "swan" arms, and she obviously paid attention to little details in the choreography. One is at the end of the White Swan Adagio, where ballerinas are supposed to beat their foot against their calves. When done right it looks like the flutter of a heart. I've seen many ballerinas erase that detail. Shevchenko articulated each frappé. The only thing missing with Shevchenko's Odette right now is that she is not much of a dance actress. Her face tends to be an expressionless mask. Her Odette didn't make the arc from fear to love and trust in the lakeside scene, but it was still a very impressive performance.