Mayerling: The Royal Ballet’s revival of MacMillan’s ‘revolutionary’ piece

Magnificently danced revival of the 1978 show is utterly ‘engrossing’

Mayerling at the Royal Opera House
Hirano and Osipova excel in a magnificently danced revival
(Image credit: © Helen Maybanks)

When Kenneth MacMillan’s Mayerling premiered in 1978 it was “revolutionary”, said Sarah Crompton in The Observer – taking ballet into hitherto unexplored realms of “psychosis and misery”. It is based on real-life events, and although our protagonist is a prince, he is no “dreamboat”. Crown Prince Rudolf, heir to the Austro-Hungarian empire, is riddled with syphilis, addicted to morphine, plotting against his father – and soon to die in a suicide pact with his teenage lover. More than 40 years on, the piece still feels “radical”, and the Royal Ballet’s magnificently danced revival is utterly “engrossing”. With a score of Liszt excerpts, and set design by Nicholas Georgiadis in “glowing autumnal colours, its imaginative, inventive confidence is truly astonishing”.

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