“You feel trapped, like the walls are closing in,” said the ballet mistress, demonstrating a sequence of frantic, elbow-jutting arms. “Keep the legs low, it’s not about the height, it’s about wanting to get out of here.”
Devon Teuscher, Misty Copeland and Isabella Boylston, the American Ballet Theater principals who are all cast in the title role in Cathy Marston’s “Jane Eyre,” opening at the Metropolitan Opera House on Tuesday, listened intently as they copied the movements and tried to absorb the intentions behind them. It was February, and an early rehearsal for the full-length ballet, based on Charlotte Brontë’s 1847 novel.
With its first-person narrative and intense focus on an interior consciousness, Brontë’s novel isn’t an obvious candidate for a ballet. But Ms Marston, 43, a British choreographer who has slowly forged a reputation for her ability to create narrative works, seems undaunted by the challenges of transmuting literary complexity into dance.
It was the strength and unpredictability of Jane’s character that attracted her, she said, adding that she was often drawn to strong women as protagonists, including Mrs Alving in Ibsen’s “Ghosts,” Cathy in “Wuthering Heights” and Queen Victoria — all characters around whom she has created ballets.
Jane, she added, “is a kind of early feminist, fighting both the world and questioning her own emotions and reactions.” “Jane Eyre,” to a score by Philip Feeney that incorporates music by Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn and Fanny Mendelssohn, was first created for Northern Ballet in England in 2016. It has proved a game changer for Ms Martson.
British critics praised the clear storytelling in “Jane Eyre,” Ms Marston’s craft and her innovative physicality. This Jane is “emancipated from the conventional tropes of the ballet heroine,” Judith Mackrell wrote in The Guardian.
After years of relative obscurity, Ms Marston was suddenly on the radar. Helgi Tomasson, the director of the San Francisco Ballet, invited her to create a work (“Snowblind”) for the company’s “Unbound” festival last year; she also made a full-length ballet, “Victoria,” about the queen, for Northern Ballet. A new piece for the Royal Ballet is scheduled for February 2020.
“It’s funny how things slowly trickle through,” Ms Marston said over coffee at the Royal Opera House in London recently. “Once you have a couple of big companies backing you, others
follow suit.”
She acknowledged that the pressure on ballet directors to find and feature female choreographers, hasn’t hurt. “The woman thing is certainly part of it,” she said. “And I think that companies know that narrative ballets often end up being productive for all in the end, and I have a lot of experience with narrative ballets by now.”
Kevin McKenzie, the director of American Ballet Theater, said he first heard about Ms Marston after “Snowblind” was commissioned. “Then her name kept coming up,” he said. “I liked that she was a storyteller at heart and the sound of her process.” Still, when he met her after her stint in San Francisco, “I had to be blatantly honest and say I had never seen anything she had done.”
After that meeting, Ms Marston sent Mr. McKenzie videos of her work, including one of “Jane Eyre,” which he found “unusual and fascinating.” He asked her to create a new one-act ballet for Ballet Theater’s fall 2020 season. Then a crisis loomed. A full-evening program planned for this year’s Met season fell through. Mr. McKenzie thought of “Jane Eyre.” “I told Cathy that if she could figure out how to stage the ballet in a short time, let’s do it.” Ms Marston didn’t hesitate. “You have to grab the moment,” she said firmly.
Her interest in choreography began early. She took part in workshops and looked up to older students like Christopher Wheeldon and David Dawson, who were making choreographic inroads. There was certainly a glass ceiling, she said.
“I wasn’t the ballerina type, and I didn’t get offered a place in the company,” she said. “The fact that I was a choreographer, and had won the school’s choreographic prize, didn’t make a difference, whereas I think for a man it probably would have.”
Instead, she joined the Zurich Ballet in Switzerland, later moving to companies in Lucerne and Bern. She continued to make dances and in 2001 returned to Britain, determined to focus on choreography. There she created “Ghosts,” her first full-length work, in 2005.
“Ghosts” led to an offer to direct the Bern Ballet, where she worked from 2007 to 2013, choreographing more than a dozen works, but also commissioning pieces. It was, she said, “a huge wake-up call about what it means to be a director.”
© 2019 The New York Times News Service