There is a general sentiment that ballet technique has improved over the years. Then a ballet company does The Sleeping Beauty and we realize that ballet technique may have changed, but it isn’t necessarily better. This 1890 masterpiece challenges every single dancer in a company. The short, charming fairy variations are pitfalls for dancers. They expose clumsy épaulement, poor posture, weak backs, sloppy feet. How well a company dances The Sleeping Beauty is really a test of the company’s classical mettle.
New York City Ballet kicked off a two-week run of Peter Martins’ adaptation of the ballet. It is one of his most inoffensive adaptations. The scenery by David Mitchell and costumes by Patricia Zipprodt are sumptuous, traditional and pleasing to the eye. Martins does abridge some of the score (the knitting scene is gone, as is the dance for the Prince’s hunting party), but he respects Petipa’s structure. Most of the choreography is the standard “after Petipa” text. It also has George Balanchine’s wondrous choreography for the Garland Dance and Martins includes all of the music for the jewels in the last act. It is interesting to compare this to Alexei Ratmansky’s historically-informed reconstruction for ABT.
The cast I saw mostly confirmed that NYCB remains a strong classical company, not just a neo-classical company. There are a few noticeable differences in this revival. The first is the tempi. In the past, variations were often played at a breakneck tempo. Last night, conductor Andrew Litton took a luxurious approach to many of the dance highlights. Maybe too luxurious. A few of the fairies seemed to have difficulty dancing their variations so slowly. But overall, the slower, more expansive tempi allowed the choreography to breathe in a way that was not always so in the past. The Puss-in-Boots duet’s slapping has been toned down as well.
Tiler Peck as Aurora was technically hard to criticize. Her musicality and attack are always impressive. She clearly listens to the music carefully, as she times her movements with stunning accuracy. An example is the chaînés turns during Aurora’s entrance. Peck times each chaîné turn to a note in the music. She’s also an incredibly strong dancer. She bounds onstage in the Rose Adagio and you immediately know that the role holds no terrors for her, not even the famous balances with arms au courant.
Her characterization, however, was a tad generic. Tiler Peck has always been better at nailing technical challenges rather than channeling a character. She didn’t differentiate between Aurora’s three big scenes. The bubbly girl who bounced onstage in the Rose Adagio was the same as the girl in the Wedding pas de deux. Bright smile, very winning, but there was no evolution of character.