John Neumeier’s 2005 ballet The Little Mermaid, receiving its DC première tonight courtesy of Hamburg Ballet, is an exquisitely layered story, told with profound psychological insight, and a burning intensity which does not allow us rest for a moment in fairytale cliche. In the beginning there was the poet, a black figure against a blue ribbon of light, and a string solo.
The constant authorial figure, Lloyd Riggins, shaped by his own personal tale of loss and in turn shaping his characters, meant that we were at once in the mode of Brechtian alienation. The conceit was an invitation to reflect on the nature of artistic genesis, on the intermingling of autobiographical and fictional narratives, and on the suffering empathy between the artist and his creation. And what a creation! His Little Mermaid, the mesmerizing Silvia Azzoni, performed her tragic role with extraordinary maturity, and an authenticity which was – at times – unbearably painful. How well she caught the sinuous energy of her life below seas – the whipped turn of her head, the swish of her hands, the dazzling graceful flow of her long blue ‘tail’ (how she managed to give this legless illusion with such speed and dexterity and not trip was mystifying). How alluring was her mischief, her awakening appetite for the handsome human stranger (a cad performed by Carsten Jung), her flirtation.
For all the marine frolicking against the undulating electric blue waves, neither her interpretation nor that wonderful score by Lera Auerbach let us forget the omnipresent sense of foreboding, made visible in the violent interjections of evil agency in the person of The Sea Witch (Karen Azatyan) and his henchmen. Azatyn brought an extraordinary preternatural energy to the stage, an astounding sense of rhythm, and in the scene of the Mermaid’s transformation (or deformation), one of the most brutal scenes of violation I have seen in the ballet. Her flowing blue fabrics were unbound from her body (fabric plays a huge role in this staging as metaphor for skin/identity) and, undone, she becomes a trembling figure in blue leotard, her feet hardly holding her, crucified by her naïve aspirations to love. And then further violation is to come as she is stripped again, to a skin-colored bodysuit. I couldn’t help thinking of Lear – and the “bare, forked animal” that we all are underneath. The irony of holding up on front of her flailing new body the staid grey gabardine dress that the human ‘competitor’ princess (Carolina Aguero) is aching indeed.