GEOFF BOTTOMS relishes a profoundly human portrait of a family as it evolves across 55 years in Sheffield
CREATED to mark the bicentenary of Queen Victoria’s birth, this new production from Northern Ballet is very much an exercise in historiography.
It’s told through the eyes of her youngest daughter Beatrice, who in the first act examines how she was cast in the role of companion and literary executioner to her mother. In the second act, she reads pages of the queen’s diaries and in a sequences of flashbacks discovers the circumstances that moulded Victoria’s character.
Ever present, Pippa Moore’s Beatrice both observes and rewrites history through the pages she peruses and excises and, in some of the most powerful scenes, she gains self-awareness by observing her younger version, played by Miki Akuta.
KEN COCKBURN relishes the memoir of a translator, but wonders whether the autobiography underlying the impulse would make a better book
MATTHEW HAWKINS recommends three memorable performances from Scottish dance artists Barrowland Ballet, In the Fields Project, and Wendy Houston
PETER MASON is wowed (and a little baffled) by the undeniably ballet-like grace of flamenco



