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The ‘Dumpy’ costume.

Carol-Anne Millar as DumpyIan on Facebook asked us about the ‘Dumpy’ costume, and what stopped us making the character even fatter.

He wondered if there were issues of manoeuverability for the dancer playing the part, which is indeed one contributing factor, as was a desire to move away from the pantomimic tone of previous productions of the story. The characters deserved to be laughed at, but they had to retain a realism in order for the threat that they posed to the heroine to be believable.

David himself explained another factor however. ‘There wasn’t a way of making their hands or the heads any fatter, so if we’d made the bodies bigger and bigger and bigger, eventually the character would have looked ridiculously out of proportion. We can pad every other part of the suit, but not the hands and especially not the head.

Here’s another chance to see one of David’s earliest video diaries, recorded nearly a year ago, in which he discusses the roles of the sisters.

Cinderella on DVD!

The recording that was broadcast on the BBC over Christmas 2010 has been released on a DVD, and we received our first copies in the office a few weeks ago.

If you’d like to buy the DVD, you can do so (region 1) either through the Company shop by clicking here, or via Amazon by clicking here.

You can also buy Cinderella on Blu-ray through the Company shop by clicking here.

The invitation to the Prince’s ball

With the Cinderella tour now over, the sets, props and costumes have been put into storage. This gave us a chance to grab you a close-up of a prop that will until now only have been seen from afar: the letter that Cinderella’s stepmother and stepsisters receive inviting them to the Prince’s ball!

The original design for the invitation was composed and hand-painted by John Macfarlane, and from this master copy duplicates were made for the various performances throughout the tour.

Prokofiev’s score

During the summer of 2010 – while much of the choreography for Cinderella was yet to be completed – David Bintley discussed Prokofiev’s score for the ballet.

‘I did a radio show a few years ago,’ he noted, ‘for which my seat and microphone were positioned within the orchestra. It was a concert of music for dance, and one of the things that the musicians played during was a suite from Cinderella. Even if I hadn’t been such a fan of the music – which of course I was – the impact of such a performance would have converted me instantly. It was a thrilling occasion.’

‘It’s a remarkable score,’ he explained, ‘because while it’s built around the framework of the 19th-century ballets, with the requisite waltzes and variations, there’s an additional complexity to even the simplest looking solos.’

‘In addition, it’s a score of huge extremes. While most of the Tchaikovsky scores encompass a single idea – Grandeur for Sleeping Beauty, doom and foreboding for Swan LakeCinderella has this extraordinary range of emotion. It has everything from heart-stopping pathos to really quite crude, almost Soviet humour. And at the root of everything there’s always a little kick that knocks it off-kilter; nothing’s ever four square like a Tchaikovsky variation. And I find that fascinating. As a choreographer, and as a performer, you’ve got to be alert all the time.’

Interactive timeline

You can now get an idea of the length of time that Cinderella took to put together with our interactive timeline!

Click on the image below to open up the timeline, which is divided into seasons, each showing our Birmingham headquarters at a different time of year. It works using the Google Maps interface, so you’ll be able to zoom in and out and scroll left and right as you would do with an online map.

Select each of the red teardrop markers to open balloons containing images, videos and diary entries showing what was happening in the building during each of the seasons leading up to the premiere. We’ve also included Spring 2011, so we can post updates relating to this year’s final touring performances of Cinderella at the London Coliseum, 29 March-2 April (NEXT WEEK!)

Click on the image below to get started:

Cinderella designs on display in Cardiff

Some of John Macfarlane’s designs for Birmingham Royal Ballet’s production of Cinderella have been included in a major new exhibition by The Society of British Theatre Designers at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama, Cardiff!

Entitled Transformation and Revelation, the exhibition aims to provide an insight into how an idea becomes a design, and how it then reaches the stage in a realistic form. Around 200 exhibitors are contributing work.

John Macfarlane’s materials – selected by the designer himself – include the original modelbox for Cinderella, and drawings of many of the characters.

Transformation and Revelation is open weekdays from 9.30am to 8pm and weekends between 10am and 5pm between March 18 and April 16 2011. Entrance to this exhibition is free to the general public.

Backstage with John Macfarlane

When Cinderella was broadcast on the BBC, the intervals featured exclusive backstage footage, along with interviews with many of the creative team. Here you can see a short excerpt in which John Macfarlane discusses his designs, and oversees the dancers trying on the full frog and lizard costumes!

With thanks to Glass Slipper Productions.

New poster artwork


With the show having opened at Birmingham Hippodrome we’ve now got a wealth of production images, as you’ve already seen. This of course means that we’ve been able to produce a new poster design for the remaining Cinderella performances in London at the end of March/start of April.

Here you can see the newly designed poster, featuring the heroine in her carriage and the Fairy Godmother waving her off to the Prince’s palace. We’ve included a few more images along the bottom showing other scenes too.

We’ve also been able to add a few more stars to the sky above her head – specifically in the top left of the poster(!)

Cinderella technical preparations

The video diaries that David recorded in the weeks leading up to the premiere of Cinderella often featured portions of time-lapse footage showing the technical teams from Birmingham Royal Ballet and Birmingham Hippodrome in stage preparations. With the production starting it’s UK tour in Salford tonight, we’re happy to present a longer edit, showing more of the techical work that took place!

How Cinderella challenges the dancers

In mid-2009, David Bintley discussed his dual responsibilities as both a Choreographer and Director of Birmingham Royal Ballet. ‘I use my pieces to bring people along’, he said, ‘to support the dancers’ development.’

With Cinderella going on tour this month to Salford and Plymouth, we asked how he hopes his latest work has stimulated the Company.

‘It’s a ballet with a lot of roles for women, rather than the men,’ David says, ‘Cinderella herself is a nice role for the girls because it’s quite varied – not only technically, because they’re working barefoot and en pointe, and with big set pieces in the second act – but also because of the long passages where they’re just alone by themselves. They have to create and maintain a character that really endears itself to the audience, who have got to empathise with Cinderella, otherwise the show doesn’t work. It’s really carried on her shoulders.

‘Then there are a lot of subsidiary characters like the sisters, which are comedy roles, and there aren’t a lot of those for women in ballet. I feel that these characters work: there’s a freedom in them that allows the dancers to add their own personality, but there’s a good solid framework and the audience gets the jokes.

‘Then there are the Seasons, which are challenging solos full of difficult steps. They’re deliberately difficult, I didn’t want to make them easy. And I’ve tried to get a number of the girls into those roles from Principals to Artists. We’ve already had Nao [Sakuma] as Autumn, and Natasha [Oughtred] as Spring, and Elisha [Willis] as Winter. All three of these are also dancing Cinderella in other shows. But I’ve also cast Artists like Yvette [Knight] and Kristen [McGarrity] and Delia [Mathews], all of whom I wanted to challenge. And they’ve responded brilliantly.’

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