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No talking teacups in Ballet Victoria's Beauty and the Beast

While Disney鈥檚 current movie version of Beauty and the Beast has rekindled interest in the classic fairy tale, Ballet Victoria鈥檚 take is a different beast altogether, the company鈥檚 artistic director says.
BV Beauty Beast 1_2.jpg
Dancers in Balley Victoria's Beauty and the Beast: from left, Yui Watanabe, Julia Jones-Whitehead, Andrea Bayne and Ruaidhri Maguire.

While Disney鈥檚 current movie version of Beauty and the Beast has rekindled interest in the classic fairy tale, Ballet Victoria鈥檚 take is a different beast altogether, the company鈥檚 artistic director says.

鈥淭here is no Gaston, because he is not a character who exists in the original, and there are no talking teapots or cups,鈥 says Paul Destrooper, whose choreography will emphasize magic and emotion.

Destrooper, whose unique dance adaptation hews closely to Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve鈥檚 18th-century fairy tale, says audiences shouldn鈥檛 expect familiar Disney tunes, either.

Inspired by Jean Cocteau鈥檚 1946 film, Destrooper aimed to convey the morality of the fairy tale, 鈥渨here true beauty is found within the heart,鈥 casting Belle as an adventurous and empowered young woman.

Among the deviations from the Broadway musical and current movie version are additional characters, including Belle鈥檚 two materialistic sisters.

As well, 鈥渢he magic of the rose is slightly different,鈥 says Destrooper, who, musically, has opted for a more classical approach to enhance his ballet treatment.

The story鈥檚 action will be dramatized by ballet dancers, including Andrea Bayne as Beauty and Luke Thomson as the prince, set to music by Tchaikovsky, Delibes, Dvorak and Gounod.

In the Ballet Victoria version, the rose 鈥 depicted by company dancer Risa Kobayashi 鈥 will take on noticeable significance, Destrooper adds.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a magical thing 鈥 the rose as allegory, represented by a ballerina in a tutu,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he鈥檚 almost like a fairy. It鈥檚 a magical performance.鈥

In this adaptation, Belle鈥檚 imprisoned father tells Beast that the reason he stole his beautiful rose is because a rose 鈥渋s the only thing Belle has asked for, and none are growing in the garden,鈥 said Destrooper.

鈥淲hen he explains he just picked the rose for his daughter Belle, Beast realizes that she might come and be able to break the spell, so her father gets to go back home,鈥 he said.

In the original story, Belle is enchanted by the rose and brings it back, he said.

In this case, Beast tells her that if the rose dies, he, too, will die, because of the spell cast on him.

鈥淎 rose is beautiful, but also, you have to be careful. There are sometimes consequences to decisions you make,鈥 said Destrooper, referring to what happens when Belle鈥檚 sisters abuse the rose鈥檚 powers.

While the Ballet Victoria production is a period piece, Destrooper is accenting the fairy tale鈥檚 timelessness, incorporating contemporary anecdotes and references to universal experiences about sending messages.

In a production that emphasizes simplicity, beautiful costumes and graceful movement rather than Broadway pizzazz, Destrooper says there鈥檚 something for all ages.

鈥淐hildren will love the familiar characters and story and adults will appreciate the thorns that accompany the rose in the centre of the story.鈥

And, no, he adds, you don鈥檛 have to be a hardcore dance aficionado to appreciate this Beauty and the Beast.

鈥淚f you know nothing about dance, you will enjoy it, and if you know a lot about dance, you will, too, because you will recognize the vignettes that pay homage [to traditional ballets],鈥 he said.

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What: Beauty and the Beast

Where: Royal Theatre

When: May 19 (7:30 p.m.), May 20 (2 p.m.)

Tickets: 250-386-6121

Info: balletvictoria.ca