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What's On > Birmingham Royal Ballet - Cyrano

Wed 30 Sep - Sat 3 Oct 2009 (ARCHIVED LISTING)

The beautiful Lady Roxane is in love with the dashing cadet Christian de Neuvillette, and so enlists her cousin, the poet and soldier Cyrano de Bergerac to deliver her intended a love letter. Cyrano's an extraordinary man, blessed with a big heart, a big mind... but an even bigger nose.

This hilarious and heartbreaking story of one man's truly self-sacrificing devotion, set in 17th-century France, has been made famous to modern audiences through stage and film interpretations. This production, choreographed by David Bintley for Birmingham Royal Ballet, has a specially commissioned score by Carl Davis.

CLICK HERE to read about the characters

CLICK HERE to read an interview with the composer Carl Davis

'Cyrano is a winner'
THE TIMES

'Strongly recommended'
MAIL ON SUNDAY


Find out more about all of the ballets in Birmingham Royal Ballet’s 2009-10 season at Birmingham Hippodrome - including details of subscription packages offering substantial discounts - by visiting www.brb.org.uk/2009-10

Running Time - 2 hours and 50 mins.

Wed 30 Sept 7.30pm, Thu 1 Oct 2pm & 7.30pm

£15.00£16.50£19.50£23.50£26.50£30.00

Fri 2 Oct 7.30pm, Sat 3 Oct 2.30pm & 7.30pm

£16.00£19.00£25.50£33.00£38.00£45.00

Circle Restaurant
Birmingham Hippodrome’s popular restaurant, situated on Middle Circle level of the theatre foyer, is the perfect venue for a matinee lunch or an evening dinner. Come a little earlier, meet up with friends and relax over good food and a chance to browse through the programme, just a short walk from your seats in the auditorium. Click below for more details, sample menus and online reservations.
 

 

 
StageSide Bar & Restaurant
Just over the road from our stage door on Thorp Street, StageSide is our casual, brasserie style experience with a lively bar and quick service.  Ideal as a place to meet friends before or after your Hippodrome visit, you might even bump into cast members and musicians as it’s a popular post-show haunt.  Pop in for a coffee or a drink, or a tasty dish or two from our simple modern British menu, all at attractive prices.  You can also book Upstairs at StageSide for a private reception for up to 60 guests.
Click below for more details and sample menus.

 

Deli Bar
If you are short on time and looking for a quick and tasty bite to eat before the show, our newly opened Deli Bar offers the perfect solution. Situated on Front Circle Foyer, in front of our main entrance, the Deli Bar offers a selection of hot or cold dishes as well as a variety of delicious sandwiches, desserts, cakes and hot and cold drinks.

 

Theatre Packages

Whether it’s VIP treatment, Romance or a ‘Night Out with the Girls ‘, we’ve just the package for you. Treat your family, friends or loved ones to something special, our 3 packages are designed to make your visit to the Hippodrome extra special and are ideal to celebrate special occasions.
Click below for more details and contact details.

 
Bars
Our bars, conveniently positioned on each main foyer level serve a great range of wines, spirits, beers and soft drinks, Champagne by the bottle or glass and fresh 'bean to cup' coffee.
Wed 30 Sep - Sat 3 Oct 2009 (ARCHIVED LISTING)

Reviews

I saw Cyrano on Wed matinee 30 Sept. It was absolutely brilliant and the music was beautiful. BRAVO to the BRB and the Orchestra!! I would really like to see it yet again if possible.
Carol Wall \\ 02/10/2009

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Director David Bintley talks through the action in Cyrano Act I, with model box set designs by Hayden Griffin.

 

Act One, Scene One

Act 1 Scene 1

We're starting it quite unusually, in that when the audiences comes in, they'll see the curtain up on an ambiently lit set, albeit with more people on stage than are shown above. Scene one depicts an outdoor theatre production in a town square, and the idea is that as the audience for the ballet arrives, so too the audience for the performance within the performance arrives.

So everybody arrives, these [seating] boxes will fill up, and the performance starts. An actor called Montfleury takes to the stage, dressed as the Sun King. He's a pompous actor, and not a very good one at that, so in protest Cyrano appears and interrupts the performance, driving him from the stage.

The crowd is furious because they came to watch a show. The Viscomte de Valvert challenges Cyrano to a duel, and he disdains, but then Valvert makes a quip about his nose, so Cyrano draws his sword and the two men duel. Cyrano, being a solider and a stunning swordsman, completely takes this man apart, ridicules him, disarms him every time, and just generally plays with him, until at the very end he cuts the tip of Valvert's nose off. The the audience is delighted because this fight's been better than the show, so they all go away happy.

Roxane - a young girl and also the ward of Valvert's employer the Compte de Guiche - has been in the audience. She comes forward to Cyrano and gives him a rose, then she and everybody else departs, leaving Cyrano alone with the rose. He then expresses his love to the flower, an act which is witnessed by his friend Le Bret who arrives at that moment. Le Bret asks 'are you in love with her?' and upon confirming the answer is yes, demands 'why don't you tell her?'

Then Roxane's duenna - her nursemaid, or chaperone - enters at that point to ask Cyrano if he will meet with Roxane. He naturally agrees and they arrange for a meeting the next morning at the bakery owned by Cyrano's close friend Rageneau.

At that moment the baker himself comes running in to warn Cyrano that De Guiche has sent 100 assassins to kill Cyrano because of what he's done to Valvert. For matters of practicality, the 100 assassins don't all come onto the stage! But there is a fight where he ends up standing on the stage fighting increasing numbers of swordsmen and then the front cloth comes in. Cyrano, with the assistance of his friends Le Bret and Reganeau, sees them all off and the scene ends with the three of them chasing the final few assassins across the edge of the stage in front of the cloth.


Act One, Scene 2

Act 1 Scene 2

A bell strikes four: it's four o'clock the next morning, and the curtain rises on the bakery, with Cyrano's friends Ragueneau and all of the chefs arriving. There are tables and chairs, and all the shelves will be filled with croissants and pastries and tarts and things that you can't see here. We have what we call ‘the meat chandelier', with sausage and meat hanging from the ceiling in an echo of the previous scene's chandeliers.

Cyrano is there to meet Roxane. He's filled with hope that she has some kind of feelings for him so he enters extremely nervously and extremely early. He sits to write what he calls ‘a love letter written in his heart a thousand times'.

Roxane arrives, and Cyrano ushers everybody else out of the place. The two of them dance a pas de deux, during which she tells him that she's in love with a man in his regiment and that he's intelligent and he's brave. Everything is leading Cyrano to the expectation that she's going to tell him that she loves him, so the pas de deux gets more and more ecstatic. Finally, however, she reveals that the target of her desires is another young man called Christian. She hands Cyrano a letter and asks him to give it to Christian for her.

As Roxane leaves, Christian follows her out before Cyrano can give him the letter, and he's is left alone in the shop realising that his hopes are dashed.

The cadets from Cyrano's regiment arrive, because they've heard of the duel from the night before, so they all come falling in, wanting to celebrate this great victory. De Guiche also arrives, sarcastically applauding him. Everybody knows that De Guiche sent the men, but nobody mentions it. De Guiche asks who the cadets are, and they have this big group number, at the end of which they throw all the hats from the dispatched assassins all over De Guiche and chase him from the baker's shop.

Christian then returns, this time in the uniform of the cadets, revealing himself to be a new recruit. He reports to Le Bret who is the captain of the cadets, and there's a bit of banter with the other soldiers and they and warn Christian not to say anything about Cyrano's nose. Cyrano is then persuaded to recount the story of the fight with the assassins, but Christian, showing off in front of his new peers, keeps doing nose gags. Cyrano is ready to tear Christian apart, but then he recognises that the young cadet before him is the man that Roxane is in love with, and so he can't.

Shortly after Cyrano gives Christian the letter from Roxane, at which point we find out that Christian can't read or write. Cyrano reads the letter to him. Roxane has written that she loves Christian, she adores him, and that he must write her a reply. Christian persuades Cyrano then to help him write the reply, but being inarticulate, Christian can't even find the words for what he wants to say. Cyrano retrieves from his pocket the letter to Roxane that he wrote right at the beginning of this act, and with heavy heart gives it to Christian as the first of a whole series of letters between the young couple.

DAVID BINTLEY 

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