Award-Winning Ballet Production Comes Exclusively To Te Ahurei Toi O Tāmaki Auckland Arts Festival
Scottish Ballet’s powerful adaptation of
A Streetcar Named Desire, originally
staged in 2012 when it was nominated for an Olivier Award,
proudly announces its exclusive NZ season at the Te
Ahurei Toi O Tāmaki Auckland Arts Festival in
March 2025.
Regularly described as ‘narrative
ballet at its very best’, the production uses stunning
dance, devastating drama, pitch-perfect period design and a
sizzling score used to tell the iconic story. Blanche
DuBois. Stella and Stanley Kowalski. Tennessee Williams -
they may be familiar names, but audiences won’t truly know
Streetcar until they’ve seen it as a
ballet.
Injecting dance and live music into the
beating heart of this iconic play, Scottish Ballet has come
up with something special — a vital, achingly intense
tribute to the eternally misunderstood Blanche, who
struggles to live her personal truth amid family turmoil in
1940s New Orleans. Bernie Haldane, Artistic Director,
Kaitohu Toi of Te Ahurei Toi o Tāmaki Auckland Arts
Festival was moved by the depth of feeling and
storytelling, that they just had to bring this exceptional
production and dance company to
Aotearoa.
“We’re excited to welcome this
world-leading ballet company to Aotearoa for the first time.
Fans of the story in its various forms and dance enthusiasts
alike will be captivated by the company’s dramatic
storytelling, with a sublime stage design and score
performed by the Auckland Philharmonia. If you’ve been
curious about the festival, this is the perfect opportunity
to dive in and experience something truly exceptional,"
says Haldane.
Scottish Ballet’s stylish
production breathes new life into the classic tale, with
graceful waltzes at the DuBois family home, electrifying
lindy jives in a Louisiana nightclub, and intense duets in
the caged heat of Stella and Stanley’s
apartment.
Set in sultry 1940s New Orleans,
where fading Southern belle Blanche DuBois moves into her
sister Stella’s apartment. However, Stella’s brutish,
volatile husband Stanley sees that Blanche is not what she
appears to be, and sets out to destroy her...
Scottish Ballet is Scotland’s national
dance company and has been based in Glasgow since 1969.
A Streetcar Named Desire has toured
throughout the UK and internationally, and for Te
Ahurei Toi O Tāmaki Auckland Arts Festival, it
will be the production’s first time in New Zealand,
bringing with them a touring party of 48
people.
This adaptation of Tennessee
Williams’ play is a contemporary narrative ballet. In
place of dialogue, dance and music tell the story. Principal
dancers play the main characters and alongside soloists,
perform over two acts. The original score is performed live
by Auckland
Philharmonia.
Christopher Hampson,
Artistic Director/CEO of Scottish Ballet said: “The
love and demand for Streetcar is huge, so we’re delighted
to be bringing it to audiences in New Zealand. 75 years on,
the themes in this classic tale are as urgent as ever, and I
am thrilled that new audiences can experience our
award-winning interpretation.”
Directed
by Nancy Meckler and choreographed by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa,
with set and costume designs by Nicola Turner, and score by
Peter Salem (The Crucible), A Streetcar Named
Desire is presented by Te Ahurei Toi O
Tāmaki Auckland Arts Festival 2025.
“a
punchy and very grown-up piece of entertainment that does
Williams’ masterpiece full justice, repeatedly tugging at
the heart-strings even as it shreds the
nerves”
THE
TELEGRAPH
“this is Scottish Ballet at its
blistering, impactful best”
THE
HERALD
“Stylistically bold, cleverly
told and beautifully danced, A Streetcar Named Desire is,
once again, Scottish Ballet at its
finest”
THE
SCOTSMAN
“Magnificent”
THE STAGE
“contemporary narrative ballet at
its very best”
ARTS
DESK
A Streetcar Named Desire, Scottish
Ballet
Te Ahurei Toi o Tāmaki
Auckland Arts Festival
20 March 2025 – 23
March 2025
Kiri Te Kanawa Theatre, Aotea
Centre
Tickets from $59
Important info:
Early bird offer, A reserve $99, B reserve $75 from
3 September – 11.59pm 17 September 2024
https://www.aaf.co.nz/
Running
time: approx. 2 hrs (inc 20 min
interval)
Recommended 15+
Content warning:
please note this production includes themes of suicide,
addiction, and domestic and sexual
violence.