Ballet Repertory’s ‘Nutcracker’ is a treasure
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Tom Titus
The sheer logistics would make most theater folk shudder, but the
Ballet Repertory Company of Huntington Beach has been making it work for
a quarter of a century.
This Christmas season, some 250 dancers are populating the Mainstage
Theater at Golden West College for a splashy, colorful and wondrously
magical production of “The Nutcracker,” the traditional holiday ballet
set to the classical music of Tchaikovsky.
And, as it has for all these 25 years, “The Nutcracker” has been
lovingly crafted by Ballet Repertory Theater’s choreographer Anthony
Sellars and his wife and ballet mistress, Terri Sellars. For those
uninitiated in this celebratory art, it’s a real eye-opener.
The company is so huge -- and “The Nutcracker” so popular -- that most
of the principal roles are double, triple and even quadruple cast. For
instance, the central role of Clara, the little girl who receives the
Nutcracker as a Christmas gift, may be danced by Brittany Barney,
Alexandra Hall, Megan Loo or Stephanie Stellrecht, and her young
tormenter by Gawain Anderson, Kevin Baumann or James Neil.
But there’s only one Sugar Plum Fairy, and only one Cavalier. These
roles -- beautifully interpreted by Megan Elliot and Michael Houston --
late in the second act are the highlight of the show, and even listed in
the program in bold-face type lest you overlook them.
Equally deserving of featured billing are the Arabian dancers, who may
be Lindsay Blackett and Ian McCall, Randi Galbraith and McCall, Stacey
Hill and Sate Falley or Crystal Matsuyama and Chris Sellars. Their
whirling dervish of a number stands out for its poetic athleticism.
The latter Sellars, the teenage son of the show’s creators, returns to
highlight the Russian dance with Kameron Ghassemieh and McCall, and also
shares cavalier duty with Falley and Ian McCall in the “Waltz of the
Flowers,” where either Lindsay Blackett, Randi Galbraith, Ashley Jones,
Tamra Lockhart or Rachel Rylander dances the Dewdrop Fairy.
If you’ve watched hordes of clowns emerging from a tiny circus car,
you can relate to the “Mother Ginger” number where the lead dancer (Carol
Bills) lifts her hoop skirt and what seems like dozens of tiny dancers
emerge. One in particular (alas, uncredited) displays exceptional
athleticism in a series of gymnastic moves.
Dancers may start performing in “The Nutcracker” at the age of 4, and
several of these youngsters are adorably on view as baby mice in the
opening act. Altogether, there are 41 baby mice, grouped into four
mini-companies, and their appearance is calculated to draw audible “oohs”
and “aahs” from the audience.
Choreographer Sellars employs a good deal of theatrical elements to
ensure audience entertainment, in a bit of a departure from the
traditional balletic form. And entertain “The Nutcracker” does, enriching
its viewers with the Christmas spirit.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent. F.Y.I.
WHAT: “The Nutcracker”
WHO: Ballet Repertory Theater of Huntington Beach
WHERE: Golden West College Mainstage Theater
WHEN: Closing performances Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 7 p.m.,
matinees Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. and a special Christmas Eve
performance Monday at 1 p.m.
COST: $10.50 & $12.50
PHONE: (714) 895-9150
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