Swan Lake is a tragic, fantastical love story about a prince who falls in love with a princess under a spell that has her morph into a swan with sunrise. It sounds silly today, and it was no less absurd in 1877 to its première audience in Moscow and the critics who panned it. Still, the ballet was kept in regular production for over a decade until, in 1895, choreographers Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov revived it in their opulent style for the St Petersburg's Imperial Russian Ballet, today's Mariinsky Ballet Theatre. Their production struck a winning combination in choreography, music, drama and staging that has made it a classic. Continued nostalgia for the ballet has kept it on rotation to this day in companies around the world.
So convenient this nostalgia and Swan Lake's iconic status that allusions to it already draw the audiences' favour. This convenience, though, risks caricature, a pitfall of many dance companies who, in staging this ballet, have reproduced the likeness of the Petipa-Ivanov piece without fulfilling the nuances in drama and staging that completed the original production. Partly, this could be due to the demands (on dancers) of ever more diverse repertoires in companies tackling classical, neoclassical, and various contemporary works. Further dilution comes inescapably through time, but also as a result of the modern environment, in culture and architecture, that bring artists and audiences further from the time and place that inspired the original production. These factors summon greater effort of the imagination to relate with 19th century Imperial Europe.
Pacific Northwest Ballet's production of Kent Stowell's Swan Lake (after Petipa-Ivanov) showed the common successes and failures of staging this old classic in modern times. Its successes demonstrate that with proper attention, PNB's team of talents can bring imagination to life.
If the company's attention had been divided, its priorities were clear. Rightfully, the production shone with a stunning Odette / Odile danced by principal dancer Laura Tisserand. Her triumph of the physical feats in this role never eclipsed her commitment to character. She even retains Odile's seductive charm in her 32 fouettés, which she executed cleanly (but averted from looking like a blender's blade). Tisserand's depth of characterisation carried the narrative in many crucial scenes even when her counterparts did not reciprocate. One such mismatch was Prince Siegfried, played by Batkhurel Bold. Dutiful as he was, he never found depth beyond his stock character. Technical prowess saved him though, his commendable jumps and precision settled him easily into his courtly role.