Three of a Kind was a delightful surprise, showcasing the lighter sides of a ballet company without sacrificing technique or passion. Birmingham Royal Ballet traveled back in time and prepared an evening of three different works: Card Games by John Cranko, Slaughter on Tenth Avenue by George Balanchine and Elite Syncopation by Kenneth MacMillan. The Birmingham Hippodrome was full of people ready to enjoy an evening of dance by a leading ballet company in the West Midlands.
The evening opened with Cranko's Card Game, a "three deals" ballet that is only one act but nevertheless complete and incredibly funny in every way possible. The movement was linear, rhythmical, repetitive and broken by quirky, playful gestures and whimsical characters. Cranko really understands male bodies, choreography and crafting movement for men. The group pieces were inventive and maintained a great balance between strong, rigorous, sweet and gestural. The choreography had a significant comedic aspect that was fed by dancers climbing over and under one another's legs, and hand-clapping transitions. However, this comedy certainly did not overcloud the sheer strength and stamina required by the dancers; the unitards displayed their muscles and athletic bodies beautifully. A Cranko ballet always includes both theatre and dancing, and requires a harmony between the two. The Joker, played by Jamie Bond, found this balance. Overall, Card Game had a Pee-wee Herman quality with rare yet attractive moments. When does one get to see a ballerina wearing pointe shoes crouched on the ground in a somersault position? Hardly ever, except in a Cranko ballet.
Continuing with the theme of the evening – an atypical choice of works – Slaughter on Tenth Avenue fit the mold. Originally conceived as a finale for the Rodger's and Harts Broadway musical On your Toes (1936), the ballet became a stand alone piece when Balanchine chose to revive Slaughter on Tenth Avenue for Suzanne Farrell in the 1960's. The piece was a full length ballet within a full length musical; a story within a story that eventually became known as Balanchine's popular one-act ballet. The house lights dim and the stage reveals a scrim with what looks like the New York skyline, except that the sky-scrappers are the shape of legs. Then in walk gangsters dressed in 1930's Al Capone-esque zoot suits. We learn the plot – a Russian danseur who hires a gangster to kill his ex-lover – and proceed to watch how it unravels. Balanchine's movement is counter-intuitive of how ballet dancer is supposed to move. The Hoofer (Tyrone Singleton) wears tap shoes, he is bent over rather than erect, yet he still defies gravity with his jumps and leaps. The female role is also atypical. We see the Striptease girl (Céline Gittens) in a classy, black, tight fishnet unitard. The flexibility and ease of Gittens' leg extensions are mesmerizing; its as if her legs are longer than the Empire State building is tall. The Company dancers are flirty and engaging in a fun and playful manner. Their rhythmical body isolations and pendular hip movements, swaying to a jazzy score, encourage us to relish what was happening onstage.