In A Folk Tale (Et Folkesagn), choreographer August Bournonville swoops from domestic life to the temptations and dangers of the magical world. It’s a major theme for Bournonville, most famously in his 1836 ballet La Sylphide. This time, the boundaries between the two are blurred. A Folk Tale’s changeling plot means that human heroine Hilda has the sparkle of magic about her. Leading a bright revival from the Royal Danish Ballet, Astrid Elbo dances with a glow that shows both sides.
It’s a very Danish magic, with its troll mounds and elf-ballad storyline. The music, by Niels W Gade and JPE Hartmann, is sprightly and dramatic. This 1854 score has percussive hammering for the goldsmith trolls – predating Wagner’s much heavier Nibelungen – and a waltz that has become a traditional part of Danish weddings.
Though Bournonville himself saw A Folk Tale as his finest work, it’s rarely performed outside Denmark. The Royal Danish Ballet’s current production, created in 2011, is part of current director Nikolaj Hübbe’s move to refresh the Bournonville legacy. Created with Sorella Englund, Hübbe’s staging streamlines some of the traditional story, particularly downplaying its religious aspects.
Mia Stensgaard’s sets and costumes move away from cosy 19th-century naturalism to something much starker. Her frontcloth suggests both a moth and a Rorschach test. Her sets are dominated by huge but delicate paper cutouts, framing the action with tendrils and insect wings – a natural world ready to expand and take over. Domestic scenes nod to paintings by Vilhelm Hammershøi.
Inside the troll mound, the gathered supernatural creatures are more modern Halloween than Romantic folk tale, with a headless dinner-jacketed giant and prim children with back-to-front faces. It’s comic and high in energy, but lessens the sense of overlapping worlds.
Elbo’s Hilda brings them back into focus. Her phrasing is rich and musical, combining airiness with human warmth. In her first solo, she floats one leg up into a high extension, then firmly lowers the heel of her standing leg. It’s a step that pulls in two directions, and Elbo brings plush texture to the whole movement.