
New Adventures in Matthew Bourne’s The Midnight Bell. Picture: Johan Persson
YORK had to wait 30 years for a first visit by Matthew Bourne’s dandy dance company. That came in March 2017 with Early Adventures, when he vowed to return in his post-show Q&A.
True to his word, he did so in October 2021 with another mid-scale touring work on his world premiere tour of The Midnight Bell, and now he does again with the same show in a case of For Whom The Midnight Bell Tolls Twice.
No complaints here, nor from the exhilarated, enraptured full house on the first night. Some of the original cast remains, joined by actor-dancers steeped in his dance dramas.
Not a word is said in The Midnight Bell, but evocative 1930s’ music abounds – dancers miming in character to the oh-so very English Al Bowlly, Elisabeth Welch and Leslie A. “Hutch” Hutchinson’s male interpretation of George and Ira Gershwin’s The Man I Love – to complement Terry Davies’s nightlife score and Paul Groothuis’s supreme sound design, ear-piercing tinnitus screeching, rain dancing on the roof, et al.
Inspired by the novels of Gaslight playwright Patrick Hamilton, Bourne’s storytelling through dance is so expressive that he creates a narrative language in visual form. You find yourself drawn to each character’s path as seamlessly as that story moves from beautifully framed scene to beautifully framed scene on a typically wondrous set design by Lez Brotherston, replete with the ever-changing London skyline that matches the mood of the scene.
Even the Magritte-style multitude of suspended window frames, the ever-populated bed and the pub bar move with the graceful swish of choreography. Bourne applies wit too: a red telephone box is represented by only the Telephone neon sign and the top of the box; the phone itself is pulled discreetly from the jacket of waiter Bob (Andrew Monaghan).
Brotherston’s costume designs are fabulous too. From lines and contours to hats and correspondent brogues, here is such elegance to meet Bourne’s eloquence in sensuous movement.
Set in The Midnight Bell pub, the surrounding bedsitland, rooms to rent, gated park, members-only club and cinema seats of London, Bourne’s work is billed as a “dance exploration of intoxicated tales from darkest Soho, delving into the underbelly of early 1930s’ London life”.
Devised and directed by Bourne, he peoples the tavern with a lonely hearts’ club of drinkers and staff; troubled souls more at the unhappy hour, rather than happy hour, stage of intoxication.
All have a drink in one hand, slammed down on tables at the outset. All are looking for a refill as much of the heart as the glass, or at least some form of connection, but will they be sated or are they destined for the loneliness of the lovelorn?
What couplings will end up in that bed in cleverly overlapping storylines involving a young prostitute, Jenny Maple (Ashley Shaw), the waiter, the barmaid Ella (Bryony Pennington) and the oddball regular Mr Eccles (Danny Reubens)?
On to the not-so-merry-go-round spin the bespectacled lonely spinster Miss Roach (Michela Meazza); the pickpocket cad Ernest Ralph Gorse (Glenn Graham); the out-of-work actress Netta Longdon (Cordelia Braithwaite), and the schizophrenic, tinnitus-troubled, tortured romantic George Harvey Bone (Alan Vincent).
The forbidden The Man I Love storyline entwines West End chorus boy Albert (Liam Mower) with new customer Frank (Edwin Ray), taking risks in that repressed era, captured in Bourne’s most sublime, serpentine choreography of this remarkable show.
Bourne calls these stories of requited and more often unrequited love in restlessly on-edge London “bitter comedies of longing, frustration, betrayal and redemption”. “Bitter comedies” could not put it better, the humour being as dark as London porter in this neon-lit world, but all life is here, sad, bad, mad, yet hopefully happy hereafter too, stamped with the distinctive Bourne identity, as full of panache as punch.
After Emma Rice’s take on Alfred Hitchcock’s North By North West and Gary Oldman’s residency in Krapp’s Last Tape, and now The Midnight Bell, York Theatre Royal is having a cracking 2025, as bright as Bourne’s dance hall mirror ball that dances with delight.
New Adventures in Matthew Bourne’s The Midnight Bell, York Theatre Royal, tonight and tomorrow (6/6/2025) at 7.30pm; Saturday, 2.30pm and 7.30pm. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk. Choreographer Sir Matthew Bourne will be in conversation with Theatre Royal chief executive Paul Crewes after tomorrow’s performance (6/6/2025).