1973 – Premiere of Jack Carter’s Three Dances to Japanese Music by Scottish Theatre Ballet

Down Arrow

Three Dances to Japanese Music.

Three Dances to Japanese Music is a ballet originally choreographed by Jack Carter for Scottish Ballet after he had spent some time working in Japan. It consists of three thematically unconnected pieces linked by a score of authentic Japanese music arranged and recorded by Kisahisa Katada. The costumes, by Norman McDowell, are also in a Japanese style. The ballet does not attempt to imitate Japanese dancing so much as evoking a Japanese spirit as conceived by a Western choreographer.

In the first piece, a river God (originally Kit Lethby) abducts a mortal wife (Anna McCartney) from her husband and transforms her into a Kabuki water nymph. In the second piece two men compete for the attention of a woman (Marian St. Claire), while the third is a plotless ensemble.

The ballet was popular and widely toured, to Australia and Paris, among other places, and revived a number of times by Scottish Ballet. It was filmed and broadcast by the BBC in 1980, and also later entered the repertoire of London City Ballet.

You May Also Like...

Antoinette Sibley
Antoinette Sibley talks with Alastair Macaulay. Her wonderful mix of enthusiasm, appreciation and...
View
Patrick Harding-Irmer
Here is Patrick Harding-Irmer proving that it is never too late to start dancing! He says, in this...
View
John Tooley
If ever a job needed diplomacy it must be as General Director of the Royal Opera House, a post John...
View