Review of The Lady of the Camellias | Romance at its best

The Grands Ballets Canadiens offer a very beautiful reading of The Lady of the Camelliasall elegance and finesse.


The novel by Alexandre Dumas fils tells the tragic love story between the courtesan Marguerite Gauthier and the young bourgeois Armand Duval. Canadian choreographer Peter Quanz chose to illustrate the major stages of this passion with three excellent performers for the role of Marguerite. Rachele Buriassi is brilliant in a first scene, while Marguerite and Armand feel sincere love for each other and take refuge away from society.

In a second scene, Anya Nesvitaylo’s performance is marked by subtlety and distress as Marguerite agrees to leave Armand, at the request of the latter’s father, to put an end to the scandal of such an affair. Finally, Maude Sabourin is particularly moving when Marguerite sees herself isolated, abandoned, while tuberculosis condemns her.

Peter Quanz offers them a classic, romantic choreography, but he opens the door to a more contemporary dance in the transitions, while a narrator (spectacularly interpreted by the dancer Célestin Boutin) takes up the words of Alexandre Dumas fils to express Armand’s moods.

There are still some moments of joy, and even humor, in the choreography to lighten the subject.

The choreographer was generous towards the dancers, whether soloists or members of the dance corps, by giving them the opportunity to showcase their talent. However, this occasionally leads to some delays.

The music, mainly pieces by composers like Lili Boulanger, Louise Farrenc, Fanny Mendelssohn and Clara Schumann, fits the story perfectly. The choreographer made a particularly enlightened choice by placing the piano on the stage, near the dancers. Pianist Rosalie Asselin thus finds herself playing a direct role in the production.


PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Two of the dancers during rehearsals

Anne Armit’s costumes add to the romanticism of the whole. The dancers’ outfits are obviously very beautiful, whether ethereal or ornate, depending on the context. But it is especially the gentlemen’s clothes that enchant with their elegance. Jackets, frock coats, top hats, the dancers look great.

A final, more dreamlike painting closes the production. The three Marguerites find themselves on the threshold of death, in a particularly touching choreography. Each one literally disappears before our eyes, in a clever process.

The story of The Lady of the Camellias has been repeated many times in cinema and on stage. Several great choreographers have offered their reading of the novel by Alexandre Dumas fils. The choreography of Peter Quanz and the performance of the dancers of the Grands Ballets can proudly take their place alongside these productions.

The Lady of the Camellias

The Lady of the Camellias

Les Grands Ballets Canadiens

At the Wilfrid-Pelletier room at Place des ArtsOctober 19 to 28

8/10


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