Les Patineurs/Tales of Beatrix Potter, Royal Opera House, London

Zoë Anderson
Monday 21 December 2009 20:00 EST
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Frederick Ashton's gorgeous ballet Les Patineurs turns dancers into skaters. They slip-slide across the stage, spinning and gliding and sometimes falling over. Each soloist is vividly characterised: every step shows the different personalities, from the wobbly beginners to the soaring show-offs.

This Royal Ballet revival is irresistible. Ashton makes virtuosity funny; here, the virtuoso performances were the strongest. Steven McRae is spectacular as the skater in blue. His first solo whips through intricate jumps and spins, literally shrugging off his latest dazzling feat. McRae is casually brilliant, wittily musical. When he dances off, shoulders swinging in Ashton's "skating" run, he looks both demure and pleased with himself.

He's matched by Laura Morera and Yuhui Choe as the girls in blue. Picking their way on pointe, with a little bounce to each step, they suggest skates chipping into the ice. Both women have musical phrasing and a delicate sense of style. Morera whirls, snatches a held pose out of the air, changes it and whirls on. Choe's flurry of fouetté turns is stunning: she throws in double spins, apparently from sheer glee.

If the blue girls are champions, the red pair are beginners. Cindy Jourdain and Laura McCulloch wobble onto the stage. The step combinations bump them up and down, suggesting their unsteadiness on the ice. Sarah Lamb and Rupert Pennefather are softly romantic in a pas de deux, though her leg positions are extreme for this sweet Victorian couple.

William Chappell's designs frame the stage with trees, formal arches and coloured lanterns. When snow falls on the skaters, they interrupt their dance to marvel, then plunge on. They separate as night falls, leaving the blue boy still spinning as the curtain falls. McRae's last burst is marvellous: he turns with exuberant momentum, unstoppable and happy.

The Royal Ballet's Tales of Beatrix Potter, meanwhile, is too long and far too twee, blurring Potter's storytelling and her precise sense of animal behaviour. The production does have nice touches: the sparkling splash as Jeremy Fisher dives into the water, the squirrels punting across a lake. Ashton sneaks in dance jokes. Pig-wig's entrance echoes the Sugar Plum Fairy's, while Jemima Puddle-Duck's exit is pure Dying Swan.

To 13 January (020 7304 4000)

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