Skip to main content
Water ballet waves goodbye to magic on dry land

The Little Mermaid
The Grand, Leeds/Touring
NORTHERN Ballet can usually be relied on for exquisite sets and costumes and The Little Mermaid, one of three premieres from the company this year, is no exception.
Kimie Nakano’s concave, tarnished mirror panels create a watery environment, aided by the green and blue sea foam of the costumes made from frilled material.
It’s the perfect setting in which to bring alive Hans Christian Andersen’s beloved fairytale and, for the first act, it works well. David Nixon's sumptuous and evocative choreography has the dancers diving deep, with fluttering hand movements while slow head bobs mimic the lap of waves.
Beautiful fabric and light jellyfish float behind the dancers and the scene in which Abigail Prudames’s Marilla as the Little Mermaid manipulates her newly birthed legs, her face contorted into a silent scream, is painful to watch.
But, as the action moves onto land and the green hues of the sea are replaced by rich reds and browns, the production starts to lose focus. The choreography during a scene in which local people gather to celebrate the summer’s fishing catch is not dynamic enough to sustain its length and the closing scenes feel rushed and lack emotional impact.
There are glimpses of what the production could have been like with greater editorial control in repositioning of the story’s emphasis. The scene in which Marilla dances solo for Joseph Taylor’s Prince Adair, especially, succeeds in conveying poignancy as her initial lack of physical confidence gives way to slow and passionate movements.
The production took more than a year to create and the company would have been prudent to spend longer at the development stage to prevent its flashes of magic being watered down.
Tours until May 5, details: northernballet.com

 

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
snow
Theatre Review / 23 December 2024
23 December 2024
SUSAN DARLINGTON enjoys, with minor reservations, the Northern Ballet’s revival of its 1992 classic
bloody
Theatre review / 6 March 2024
6 March 2024
SUSAN DARLINGTON revels in an exhilarating adaptation of the gruesome fairytale that invokes the real-life horror of women lost to male violence
theatre review
Theatre Review / 23 May 2023
23 May 2023
SUSAN DARLINGTON is disappointed by a show that aims to highlight misogyny within the police but fails to arrest the audience's attention
review
Gig Review / 10 April 2023
10 April 2023
SUSAN DARLINGTON revels in a band that know their own continuing relevance
Similar stories
Jane Eyre
Ballet Review / 17 March 2025
17 March 2025
SUSAN DARLINGTON applauds the translation of Jane Eyre into a ballet that preserves the drama of her formative years
snow
Theatre Review / 23 December 2024
23 December 2024
SUSAN DARLINGTON enjoys, with minor reservations, the Northern Ballet’s revival of its 1992 classic
mermaid
Theatre Review / 12 December 2024
12 December 2024
SIMON PARSONS is swept away on the running tide of a dynamic new version of Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tale
BALLET
Theatre Review / 9 December 2024
9 December 2024
PETER MASON is moved by a striking production of Noel Streatfeild’s enduringly popular children’s book