
Circa/LPO/Gardner review – Exhilarating, exquisite and extraordinary as Ravel melds with acrobatics
Rather than use the music as accompaniment to display, Lifschitz worked with the score rather than against it, though he dispensed with Daphnis et Chloé's narrative, replacing it with a sequence of contrasting abstract tableaux, now exhilarating,now erotic, always rooted in the pulse and throb of the music, played with exquisite finesse and detail by the LPO and Gardner throughout. Circa's acrobats, five women, five men, look like classical statues slowly coming to life in the Introduction, as their lifts and dives become ever more vertiginous. The Danse Guerrière became a spectacular contest of prowess between two men on a climbing frame, and in Chloé's Danse Suppliante, a woman hovered and swung with supreme grace in bolts of cloth high above the orchestra. The interlocking bodies of Lever du Jour, suggestive of ancient Greek friezes, were particularly beautiful, though the final Bacchanale, where the music turns orgiastic, eventually coalesces into an aggressive, unresolved standoff between two men.
The sudden ambivalence, in fact, marked the transition to La Valse with its underlying sense of society careering towards its own destruction. The atmosphere was markedly different. Tracksuits and skirts replaced the clingy lacy outfits worn in Daphnis, and where the latter was danced in pools of light, all pastel shades and purple, the platform now glowed red.
The choreography was again spectacular, if more closely woven: we're now aware of tautness and tension throughout. Routines began and ended in the formality of ballroom hold, which felt increasingly like a constraint, and Gardner ratcheted up the pressure as the waltz itself moved almost imperceptibly from suave elegance to something infinitely more troubling. Lifschitz's ending, meanwhile, with the 10 acrobats simultaneously performing a different spotlit dance was astonishing, but we were also suddenly and shockingly aware how isolated each had become. Powerful, beautiful stuff, and a most extraordinary evening.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
9 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Strictly star says he faked scenes on dance show in shock admission
Incoming pro dancer was involved in a fakery row and says he will stand up to producers if ever asked to do it again Strictly Come Dancing's new professional dancer Julian Caillon has admitted he once faked a row on TV in a bid to create more drama. The Australian-born star, who joins the BBC series this autumn, told how he acted up for the cameras to please producers who wanted the fake friction to boost ratings. Caillon was appearing on the Aussie version of the ballroom show, Dancing With The Stars, when he was paired with a female celebrity with a hectic work schedule, which sometimes made her late for rehearsals. The 29-year-old dancer and choreographer claims producers cooked up a plan for him to pretend he was angry with her for not being on time - and he went along with it. 'Reality TV is not necessarily what you think,' he explained afterwards. 'A massive aspect of reality TV is not really real. I remember in one episode of Dancing With The Stars, one of my celebrities was late to rehearsals and the producers were asking me to go around and pretend that I was frustrated. 'But she had something pop up and stuff happens sometimes and life gets in the way and we get a little bit late. It's not the biggest deal in the world. We just stay back a bit later. But they made this whole kind of thing out of it.' But Julian says while he agreed to act annoyed at the time, he would refuse to go through with it if asked now. 'I think during my earlier experiences, whatever I was asked to say or do, I just thought, 'It's a privilege for me to be here. I need them to like me. So I'll just say and do whatever needs to be done'," he explained. Speaking on the podcast Try with Alex, hosted by Australian Survivor contestant Alex Coe, he added: 'In a way, it teaches you to know what your values are and what you're willing to do and not do. It made me be confident in my own choices. 'Now, I have clear boundaries and lines where I know, 'This is what I'm willing to do. If they ask me to say this, I'm just gonna say no'." Julian, who is also a former athlete and personal trainer, joined Dancing with the Stars Down Under in 2020 and stayed for three seasons, with his partners including Gogglebox Australia star Angie Kent and model Erin McNaught. For all three appearances, he and his partner were the second couple to be eliminated. The dancer is one of two new pros lining up alongside the Strictly regulars, who include Johannes Radebe, Katya Jones and Nikita Kuzmin. The other one is American-born Alexis Warr - a former winner of US series So You Think You Can Dance. She has told how she has a backstage ritual before every routine as she thinks it will bring her good luck. 'I wipe the bottom of my shoe before I go on and then rub my hands,' she said. 'I don't know why. I just feel more grounded that way. And I always say a prayer before I go on. And if I am with my partner we will always take deep breaths together.' This year's Strictly is expected to launch on September 20.


Scotsman
9 hours ago
- Scotsman
Edinburgh Fringe comedy reviews: Elouise Eftos: Australia's First Attractive Comedian + more
Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... COMEDY Elouise Eftos: Australia's First Attractive Comedian Pleasance Courtyard (Venue 33) until 24 August ★★★★☆ Let's be honest, self-deprecation, openly appealing for audiences to like you and never running down your peers are such established features of contemporary stand up that they're essentially invisible. So when an act seems to flagrantly and fragrantly subvert them, it's bound to cause a bit of a stir. With her retro pin-up artwork and a little red dress, Elouise Eftos is un apologetically sexy and super-confident, flirting with the audience as a performer while never letting the imagine for a second that she might deign to be with them in real life. That the upfront Greek-Australian has the physical and comedic goods to back up her poise and assurance is confirmed right from the get-go. And she benefited on the night I caught her from her typical audience of 'girls and gays' being supplemented by a front row of heterosexual lads, scarcely knowing what had hit them – even as they slavered like wolves in a Tex Avery cartoon, Eftos's mastery of the classic animation's sound effects being just one of her more hidden talents. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Elouise Eftos: Australia's First Attractive Comedian | Contributed Although her throwback posing has upset some of her female comedy icons, with irony the first casualty in the battle of the sexes, Eftos is also embracing the dubious future of dating in the AI age. Set up like a computer game, she challenges her marks to seduce her against the clock as she inhabits various fantasy archetypes, the beach babe, the bartender, the bookworm etc. Plenty of knockabout fun, if perhaps excruciating for those brought to the stage, and it allows her to comment on contemporary sexuality, manipulation of the spectator's gaze and the requesting and receiving of consent. Eft os leaves some things to the imagination, but not too much, in her eye-catching finale. Yet she doesn't indulge easy answers about how free female comics are to be themselves in this bravura performance. JAY RICHARDSON COMEDY SMUT with Entendre Entendre Zoo Playground (Venue 186) until 24 August ★★★★☆ The word brave is too often used in a patronising way. That is not how I use it here. This extraordinary show is very brave. To play with character comedy, add in quite the dollop of semi-graphic sexual content, then pull it back to beautiful and poignant storytelling while increasingly scantily clad is impressive. There is no section in the Fringe brochure for a show like this. Bryn Woznicki (and her alter ego Entendre Entendre) manages to be funny, very rude, genuinely moving and memorably powerful all at once. Her timing is breathtakingly good and her stage presence like a very beautifully coiffed and maquillaged tractor beam by which we are all held fast for her hour. And we love it. Smut is the title of Entendre Entendre's memoir and we are treated to sex-saturated (hence her HPV2 and immunity to Penicillin) excerpts therefrom, with tales of post-coital chopped cheese in New York and titles like 'Garlic Pussy'. The Lie of the Big Cock takes a pasting (and in song!) and we do generally get the idea that she has – as the tells us at the start – 'f***ed a lot'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad We get haikus about drummers making the best lovers and play 'Never Have I Ever'. Then, towards the end of the show, things take a poignant, serious turn. Entendre Entendre plays with comedy's most dangerous weapons – sadness and silence – and it is breathtaking. From a saucy seductress who so recently has had her room rocking with laughter at some sexy role-play with a random – but enthusiastic - audience, she becomes vulnerable, regretful and sad. It is extraordinarily moving. And then, in an instant, we are laughing again. As a script and as a show concept, this is good. As a performer, she is great. KATE COPSTICK COMEDY Marjolein Robertson: Lein Pleasance Dome (Venue 23) until 24 August ★★★☆☆ Marjolein Robertson has made a trilogy of shows with titles based around her name. So there was Marj, then O and now finally Lein. She came of age in comedy at a time when mining personal trauma was the fashion, and Marjolein (you pronounce it 'Marie-O-Laine') made her shows personal, honest and based on the deepest darkest parts of her experience. Marjolein Robertson | Contributed But she went too far, which is partly what this show is about. In the final part of her trilogy Marjolein, (her name is Dutch), gives us her comedy origin story – how a disastrous episode in Amsterdam led her to take a course in stand up. The comic, who grew up in Shetland, incorporates traditional folk tales into her shows. Marjolein weaves in her dislike of jazz, her failure as a mime and her distrust of the French. Her story features nuns, angels and magic cheese. She has a charm and an eccentricity which is hugely appealing and properly funny. There are lots of brilliant elements, which she doesn't quite draw into a satisfying whole. But I'm still keen to see what she does next. In the words of Quentin Crisp: 'Age is kind to the non-conformist.' CLAIRE SMITH Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Make sure you keep up to date with Arts and Culture news from across Scotland by signing up to our free newsletter here. COMEDY Hannah Campbell – Me! Gilded Balloon Patter House (Venue 24) until 25 August ★★★☆☆ Hannah Campbell's not got many grand aspirations for her hour, with a straightforwardly solipsistic admission that she will be its primary focus, there will be nothing 'too deep' and the promise of three 'risque' jokes. The disclaimer betrays her lack of confidence in the latter, because there's nothing in the Edinburgh resident's set that could truly shock or offend, with even a closing abortion gag operating within reasonably safe and contained parameters. Her simmering resentment at boorish misogyny she's encountered affords her some appealing spikiness. Yet her pique with millennials and their so-called problems at the grand old age of 32, feels premature, scolding and excessively affected. Prone to hoary stand-up cliches, like Glaswegians being unfamiliar with fruit and punchlines about being fingered in an unappealing location, her cynicism also feels rather too default and protective a mechanism. Tales of the nine years she spent in New Zealand are amusing enough in their culture clash, even if she can't fully deliver on her salacious pledge about going on Kiwi television that she sells it with. Still, she ekes the story out capably and ultimately keeps the crowd invested in her grouchy self-analysis. JAY RICHARDSON COMEDY Killian Sundermann: This Boy is Cracking Up Underbelly, Bristo Square (Venue 302) until 21 August ★★★☆☆ Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Killian Sundermann eventually found himself online, creating funny viral videos about his Irish-German heritage. Yet the waggish 30-something shows that he can more than cut it live in his debut Fringe hour. Having recalibrated his rockstar dreams of following in Phil Lynott's tight trousers, after realising that his privileged upbringing afforded him considerably less grit and gypsy soul to work with than the Thin Lizzy frontman, he's nevertheless been a drifter and retained his guitar. Born in England, growing up in one of the posher parts of south Dublin, and with family who arrived in South America via 1940s Germany if you catch his drift, he's learned to dial up and down aspects of his identity depending on the circumstances. That's a luxury which can't be afforded to his explicitly Celtic mother and Teutonic father though, with the latter's quest for inclusion in his adopted home the show's strongest throughline. With chortling good humour, dishing out to all-comers but invariably making himself the principal butt of the joke, Sundermann recounts his ill-advised time spent living in a van with his girlfriend, with their fellow Europeans slow to indulge them as they strained their relationship and his spine. The songs are only gentle accompaniment to Sundermann's amiable anecdotes, leaving Lynott to continue resting easy for now.


Scottish Sun
11 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Watch as sacked Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou ‘lives his best life' getting hand-fed steak Salt Bae-style
He dined at one of Greece's most exclusive themed dining experiences viral post Watch as sacked Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou 'lives his best life' getting hand-fed steak Salt Bae-style ANGE POSTECOGLOU is enjoying life away from football, with video emerging of him enjoying steak fed to him in the style of viral chef Salt Bae. Postecoglou was sacked by Spurs in early June following a topsy-turvy season for the north London side. 6 Ange Postecoglou was sacked from his role as manager of Tottenham Hotspur in June Credit: Getty 6 But the manager is now appearing to love his time away from the game, living it up on holiday in Greece Credit: Instagram @stefanos_saratsis Play Dream Team now! Play The Sun Dream Team ahead of the 2025/26 season Free to play Over £100,000 in total prize money Play in Mini Leagues against your mates Submit a team for Gameweek 1 to enter £5,000 prize draw Play via Dream Team's app or website today! The Australian led the team to a 17th-place finish last season, their lowest ever in the Premier League era. However, Postecoglou also brought Spurs their first significant silverware since their 2007/08 League Cup victory, in the form of a Europa League trophy. That accolade could not save him from the sack in the end, but it seems like he has taken his sudden abundance of free time in stride. A video has emerged of Postecoglou dining at Sta Kala Kathoumena on the Greek isle of Paros. 6 Stefanos Saratsis theatrically sliced Postecoglou's steak in front of him Credit: TikTok @ 6 The football manager could only watch on awkwardly as he waited for his food Credit: TikTok @ In the video, uploaded to TikTok by celebrity chef Stefanos Saratsis, the football manager can be seen sat down for a meal with a huge steak laid on the table before him. Saratsis dramatically slices the steak into ribbons before spearing a section onto his knife and seasoning it. Postecoglou watches on with an awkward smile as the chef turns towards him with the steak in tow. The 59-year-old is fed the steak off of the knife's tip, and gestures his approval to the chef before the video's end. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS 6 Finally the Aussie was fed his slice of steak by hand Credit: TikTok @ 6 He gestured his approval, though he seems a bigger fan of the steak than the theatre Credit: TikTok @ The theatrical dining experience is a staple of Saratsis' restaurant chain, which also has locations in Athens and Thessaloniki. The themed style of dining was popularised by internet personality Salt Bae, who has since opened his own successful chain of restaurants.