The Prince of the Pagodas (TV Movie 1990) Poster

(1990 TV Movie)

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8/10
Princess Rose's love changes the Salamander into a Prince...
jshuffield11 May 2005
English composer Benjamin Britten wrote only one full-length ballet, and this is it. It is also arguably one of the very last full-length ballets written by any composer (3 acts, 2+ hours), but unlike his operas, which entered the repertoire quickly, The Prince of the Pagodas has had a patchy performance history until relatively recently, apparently because the original choreography by John Cranko was less than compelling. This version is a revival by choreographer Kenneth Macmillan and the Royal Ballet (who better to revive this thoroughly English ballet?); Macmillan scraps Cranko's choreography and original scenario for a more Freudian and sexual take on the story.

The story concerns an aging King and his two daughters, Princess Belle Epine and Princess Belle Rose. When the king divides his land unequally, giving the larger share to the younger and nicer Rose, Epine curses the court, turning the king's courtiers into monkeys, and Rose's suitor into a Salamander. This much of the story is the set-up for the remainder of the ballet, in which Rose, rejecting four wealthy suitors from the North, South, East, and West, is led by the Fool to Pagoda Land on a search for her salamander Prince.

Britten's musical depiction of Pagoda Land is the most celebrated and controversial aspect of his score. Britten, fresh from a trip to Bali, uncannily recreated the sound of the Balinese gamelan (percussion orchestra) using mostly a combination of Western orchestral percussion instruments. He uses actual Balinese gamelan tunes, and the sound is thoroughly un-Western and exotic. Britten's harsher critics have argued that this is Western musical imperialism, but even they would concede the technical achievement of this portion of the score.

Once Rose gets to Pagoda Land, she (of course) finds the Salamander and reluctantly gives him the kiss that changes him back into a Prince--but, before she arrives, she must pass through each of the 4 elements (earth, air, water, fire)--and this is where Macmillan scraps Cranko's decorative scenario, with its focus on big corps dance numbers, in favor of a more intimate approach that focuses on Rose's internal fears (which, at least in this new re-imagining, seem to be primarily rape and adultery, although depicted in highly symbolic fashion, rather than flagrantly--the kiddies won't know what's going on, but adults will).

I would love to see a production that combines great choreography with the original fairy-tale scenario, but Macmillan has single-handedly and convincingly resurrected a languishing masterpiece with this production, and shown that the music is rich enough to support a variety of interpretations. It now seems inevitable that the Prince of the Pagodas will join the repertoire with Prokofiev's now-beloved ballets. This production is superb, but if you don't care for it, rest assured that because it exists there will be more in the future.
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9/10
Really interesting and beautiful to watch
TheLittleSongbird20 August 2013
The Prince of the Pagodas was a completely new experience and a delightful one, coming from someone that knows Britten best for his operas and questioned initially whether his style was quite right for ballet. The Prince of the Pagodas is a very interesting ballet, time will tell if it ever becomes a personal favourite. The story is charming and always has a sense of fun. Britten's music has been criticised for being unmemorable, too glum, un-danceable, too heavy and having musical ideas that don't turn the corner enough. Understandable, but not an opinion this viewer shares. It was sensual, enchanting and very cleverly crafted, with Britten's typically wonderfully varied orchestral colours and sounds as well as some nice touches of exotic Gamelan-like style music. Different in style to what is usually heard in ballet, but in some way in a refreshing way. As for the un-danceable statement, it is definitely tricky but then again Prokoviev's Romeo and Juliet was considered un-danceable too.

This performance is beautiful to watch and is a treasure. The sets- though with a few sparsely lit ones- and especially the costumes are spectacularly sumptuous. The orchestra don't seem too taxed by the demands of Britten's score, they perform it with a great sense of style as well as beauty of tone, paying also close attention to the clever orchestral writing. The conducting does what any conductor ought to, keeps things moving swiftly and clearly while leaving room to breathe. Kenneth MacMillan does wonders choreographing. His ideas are tasteful, sensitive to Britten's music and make sense within the story. The prologue is appropriately eerie, the four Prince variations are varied and characterful and the Water, Air and Cloud dances are both beautiful and thrilling. The dancing is exemplary, making the difficult choreography seem easy. Darcey Bussell captivates in the principal role, with clean and gracious technique and a charming and expressive stage presence while made to act prim. Fiona Chadwick also dances with great elegance, while Jonathan Cope shows power and great involvement in the music, story and what he's dancing. Anthony Dowell makes a doddering role powerful and moving in equal measure. In fact, all the dancers are great, but it's Bussell's show and she doesn't disappoint.

As for the technical values for the DVD- picture, sound and video directing- they're right on the money. Clear and sharp for the picture and sound and with the video directing it's unobtrusive and while not quite cinematic is still broad enough to capture everything and do it tastefully(thankfully for example there are no cut-offs of people's feet). All in all, a very interesting ballet, beautiful to watch and a splendid production overall. 9/10 Bethany Cox
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