Review | Hong Kong Balletโ€™s Frida is a visually powerful production, if lacking in clarity



Hong Kong Balletโ€™s latest production, Frida, explores the life and art of Mexican painter Frida Kahlo.

The full-length work by choreographer Annabelle Lopez Ochoa was developed from a one-act ballet, Broken Wings, which she created for the English National Ballet in 2019, and the retitled two-act version for the Dutch National Ballet followed in 2020.

Frida is not a narrative ballet as such. Instead, Lopez Ochoa offers a series of snapshots of key moments from Kahloโ€™s life, interspersed with interludes featuring characters from her paintings. This kaleidoscopic concept would have worked as a one-act ballet, but a 90-minute production needs more clarity and structure to keep the audience engaged.

This is a powerful production visually, full of striking, flamboyant images and there is some good choreography โ€“ the first duet for Kahlo and Rivera is outstanding; the scene where she miscarries, her body twisting into terrible contorted poses, is gruesomely dramatic.

However, while Kahloโ€™s admirers will enjoy the references to her paintings, their symbolism and the way Dieuweke van Reijโ€™s ingenious costume designs bring them to life, those not familiar with the paintings are likely to be left bemused.

Kahlo channelled her suffering โ€“ physical and emotional โ€“ into her art. She had a limp from childhood polio, and horrific injuries from a traffic accident when she was 18 left her struggling with pain and disability for the rest of her life.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *