No ballet embodies the wonder of Christmas quite like Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker. From the Overture’s spiralling musical scales to Drosselmeyer’s final magic trick, the audience is swept away to a magical snowscape of childhood wonder and sugar confectionery. Saturday night’s Scottish Ballet production at the Edinburgh Festival Theatre is a festive delight that can be easily enjoyed by children and adults alike.
The stage is an elegant Victorian parlour, with a giant glittering Christmas tree and inviting tables brimming with indulgent treats. The party excitement onstage is enchanting, with gorgeous period costumes and stately ballroom dancing from the adult members of the ensemble. Drosselmeyer’s parlour tricks amuse, and his assistants’ dances are fantastic, particularly Christopher Harrison as the male entertainer with his spectacular fouetté turns that glide seamlessly into retiré passé pirouettes.
This is Scottish Ballet founder Peter Darrell’s production of The Nutcracker, where children are cast in all the children's roles. Eight members of the Scottish Ballet Associates, the company’s training programme for children aged ten to sixteen play the younger party guests and, later, a troop of anthropomorphic mice in party attire. It's by no means an easy feat to include children in a stage production, but here they are a welcome addition to the cast. As party guests their joyful enthusiasm brings even more excitement to the holiday celebrations and their rabble of hungry mice is far too adorable to deserve being shot by the toy soldiers.
Twelve-year-old Lily Wearmouth makes a very sweet Clara. She is utterly endearing in eager amazement at everything around her, whether that be mundane Christmas celebrations or her fantasy journey through an icy winter to the Land of Sweets.
The magnificent white sparkling tree and the stunning snowflake archway that borders the stage are the perfect backdrop for the Snow Queen’s realm. Constance Deverney, as the Snow Queen, dances with effortless elegance, and her elevation in the batterie and amazing flexibility are a pleasure to watch. The accompanying flurry of snowflakes dances in perfect unison, yet each dancer faces a slightly different direction creating the beautiful impression that, although a unified group, each individual snowflake is unique. They hold varying positions at once, making a fantastic crystalline structure. When the choir of wordless voices is heard in the music, everything in the scene comes together to create a wonderful wintry atmosphere.