A new spin on a classic


“It’s about respecting tradition, but also taking a fresh new look at it,” Watkin explains. “Our returning audiences will still enjoy it, but 60 per cent of our audience for The Nutcracker are coming to the ballet for the first time, so it’s about how we attract them.”

This version took a year and a half to bring to life, with over 100 dancers and musicians and more than 150 workshops and artisans all over the UK creating costumes and sets. The story begins on Christmas Eve in Edwardian London and is told through the eyes of Clara, a young girl, as she comes across a special nutcracker in Drosselmeyer’s Sweets and Delights Emporium.

“I tried to delete any version of The Nutcracker I knew and imagined Tchaikovsky’s music had been composed for this production,” says Smith. “We’ve tried to connect the characters and places in Act One to Act Two more to build a through line, and Clara is the person we follow throughout. It will hopefully have a really long future and become a new staple Nutcracker that lasts for years and years to come.”


Clara and The Nutcracker

Wk 50 Nutcracker

Ivana Bueno and Francesco Gabriele Frola. Sky Arts

Ivana Bueno and Francesco Gabriele Frola

“The Nutcracker represents everything Clara wants to be — powerful, strong and fearless, but don’t underestimate her! She actually comes to his rescue during the battle with the Rat King,” Smith says. “In a lot of productions, Clara might throw her slipper and then run and hide because she’s scared, but we’re in a very different time now to when The Nutcracker premiered. Why does Clara need someone to protect her? She’s a young woman full of agency,” Watkin adds.


Ice Queen

Wk 50 Nutcracker Emily Suzuki

Emily Suzuki Sky Arts

Emily Suzuki

“We have a mix of people for the parts, who play them very differently,” Smith says. “We want to champion that and empower them. They don’t need to be carbon copies of one another.” As the ballet is so physically demanding, up to eight different dancers play each character, some of them playing different characters across the production. “The personalities of our dancers and finding their special qualities is very important,” Watkin adds.


Sugar Plum Fairy

Wk 50 Nutcracker

Emma Hawes and Aitor Arrieta Sky Arts

Emma Hawes

“In the Edwardian era, women didn’t have the right to vote, but if you’re a child growing up in that period, you’re surrounded by Sufragettes,” explains Smith. “That was important when we were evolving Clara as a character, because she is inspired by strong women like her mother. In our version, the Sugar Plum Fairy in Clara’s dream in Act Two is her mother.” “We liked the idea that the people she’s surrounded by manifest in her dreams,” says Watkin.

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