Frankenstein at The Royal Ballet

It Dances! It Dances!

The world premiere of a new full-length ballet, inspired by Mary Shelley’s Gothic masterpiece.

frankenstein_royal_balletNot since the hilarious “Puttin’ On The Ritz” scene from Mel Brooks’ “Young Frankenstein” has the creature of Mary Shelley’s imagination been so light on his toes. For the month of May 2016, London’s Royal Ballet will be putting the story of the mistreated and misunderstood monster and his science “father” creator from the classic “Frankenstein: or the New Prometheus” on the stage, from choreographer Liam Scarlett.

According to Scarlett, it was a chance to put his own interpretation and the story that has long been the stuff of imagination and discussion, enthralling and sometimes baffle its readers and audiences. In Scarlett’s version which, he thought would get to more of the heart of the story, “It’s not about the horror of creating life from dead matter. It’s about is love, yearning, and abandonment.”

The main characters in the ballet are Victor Frankenstein, the scientist who creates the monster, his fiancée Elizabeth, and the creature who seeks vengeance when he is mistreated and cast aside, like an unwanted child, as well as the family members surrounding them affected when Frankenstein’s creation turns against them. He wanted to get to the emotion of the story which is more a tragedy of unrequited love than of science gone awry.

The creature and his creator are no strangers to theater. The first adaptation Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein for the stage was as early as five years story after the first publishing of the work. The most famous movie version with Boris Karloff was adapted from a stage version by Peggy Webling and John L. Balderson,  and the Gothic Romantic story has made recent appearances on the stage in London, like Danny Boyle’s version at the National Theater with Benedict Cumberbatch which was filmed shown in National Theater broadcasts as cinema theaters and schools. A balletic interpretation seems timely in advance of the 200 anniversaries approaching.

The composer of the ballet is Lowell Liebermann who had worked previously with Liam Mr. Scarlett as a choreographer on two piano concertos and his other piano work “Gargoyles.”

The Frankenstein at the Royal Ballet Premiers at the London Royal Opera House Main Stage from May 4 to May 27, 2016.

FRANKENSTEIN IS ALIVE AT GREAT FULFORD

frankenstein_fulfordFrankenstein will make a dramatic theatrical appearance at one of Devon’s most famous great stately homes, the Fulford Estate. Mary Shelley’s gothic masterpiece will appear in a stage incarnation with a focus on prosthetic make-up to go with the dramatic sturm and drang of the monster created from the dead. The Great Fulford estate, a Tudor manor near Dunsford in the Teign Valley of Devon, has risen itself to television fame in recent years as the setting for the antics of the The F***ing Fulfords aristocratic family on Britain’s Channel 4, and in the BBC3’s Life Is Toff series. This theatrical version hopes to take advantage of the locale’s “spooky appeal” for the appropriate atmosphere, having hosted more than its share of ghost hunters.

Conceived and produced by the Four of Swords theater company, which specializes in inventing immersive adaptations of classic stories in unusual locations, this production intends to push into new territory with ways to make the audience experience unique and unforgettable. Cast members will lead the audience through the rooms of the Great Fulford mansion as the tale progresses, standing in for the Frankenstein manse of Geneva from the novel, surrounding  with live music and multi-media elements, involving them so close to the action that they can experience every close-up emotion of the actors’ performances and more than a few scares before the night is through.

The Four of Swords Company was founded by Sarah White and Philip Kingslan John, educators in their non-theatrical incarnations and will be complimenting their version of the Frankenstein classic production with workshops at schools, libraries and museums.

The Four of Swords’ production of Frankenstein will be at The Great Fulford estate from February 16 to 27. Tickets, priced £13, are available from Four-of-Swords.com