• Home
  • Cultural Reviews
    • Dance
    • Exhibitions
    • Opera
    • Theatre
    • Outdoor
    • London Sights
  • Homes & Gardens
    • Cocktails
    • Homes and Gardens
  • Recipes
    • Meat
    • Starters
    • Lunch
    • Mains
    • Sides
    • Desserts
    • Cakes and Sweets
    • 5:2 Diet Recipes
    • Fish and Shellfish
    • Meat
    • Poultry
    • Vegetarian
  • Restaurants
    • Bloomsbury and Fitzrovia
    • Bermondsey, Borough and London Bridge
    • Chelsea
    • Camden
    • City of London
    • Clerkenwell
    • Covent Garden
    • Docklands
    • East London
    • Kings Cross
    • Knightsbridge
    • Kensington
    • Kings Cross
    • Marylebone
    • Mayfair
    • Oxford Circus
    • Oxford Circus
    • Paddington
    • St James
    • Soho
    • South Bank
    • South London
    • The Strand and Embankment
    • North London
    • Victoria and Pimlico
    • West London
    • Out of London
    • Miscellaneous
  • Travel Features
    • Travel UK
    • Travel Europe
      • France
      • Italy
        • Sicily
      • UK
    • Travel Asia
      • Thailand
    • Cruises
  • News

London Unattached

Cultural News and Reviews - London

You are here: Home / Events / Ballet Nights #010 – DecaDance

Ballet Nights #010 – DecaDance

February 5, 2026 (2026-02-05T15:38:06+00:00) by Teresa Guerreiro Leave a Comment

Tweet
Pin
Share
Flip
Share

Last Updated on June 13, 2026

Ballet Nights Returns to Cadogan Hall in Glowing Form

4.0 out of 5.0 stars

DecaDance was the 10th London iteration of the Ballet Nights brand, now comfortably installed in Chelsea’s Cadogan Hall. Having seen all its predecessors, I feel confident in stating that it was the best so far.

The brainchild of former dancer Jamiel Devernay-Laurence, Ballet Nights’ founder and artistic director, it was originally billed as “a new way of seeing dance”.  I would, however, amend that to read, “an interesting way of breathing new life into the gala format”.  So, like a gala, each programme consists of short numbers – 11 in the case of DecaDance – but rather than tired old chestnuts, they range from ballet to contemporary dance, established numbers and new commissions, performed by star dancers and promising unknowns, and increasingly including performers from foreign companies.  

The whole thing is compèred by the amiable Devernay-Laurence to impart easily digestible morsels of much-needed information. 

Each of the two Acts begins with an instrumental piece.  DecaDance opened with Debussy’s ethereal ‘Clair de Lune’ by Ballet Nights’ resident pianist Viktor Erik Emanuel; in glaring contrast, Act II was introduced by an angry snatch from Hindemith’s ‘Viola Sonata Op 25 No 1’ played by Dominic Stokes, on his return to Ballet Nights.

The dance part began with a delightful performance by two Royal Ballet young dancers: newlyweds Harris Bell and Sae Maeda in Moszkowski Waltz. A bright, joyous, flowing piece of classical ballet, it was danced with tremendous charm by both partners. 

Royal Ballet dancer Sae Maeda lifted by partner Harris Bell in Moszkowski Waltz, part of Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance
Sae Maeda, Harris Bell in Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance. Photo: Deborah Jaffe

Then came Out of Breath, choreographed by Northern Ballet’s George Liang on music by Olafur Arnalds, beautifully danced by Northern Ballet soloist Alessandra Bramante and leading man Joseph Taylor, now a key member of London City Ballet.

It was a dark, intense meditation on the pressures of time, where the two characters struggled for physical connection.  Just like the preceding piece, it used the language of classical ballet, but with totally different accent and intention.

Dancer and choreographer Travis Clausen-Knight is a Ballet Nights regular – we’re familiar with his muscular choreography.   DecaDance hosted the world premiere of his AE, exploring the question “how do you prove you’re human?”, which he danced with Isabelle Evans.   It was a spiky, characteristically disturbing duet, relying on jerky movement and bodies building fleeting architectural shapes.  I liked it a lot.

Dancer Isabelle Evans partnered by Travis Clausen-Knight in AE, part of Ballet NIghs #010 DecaDance
Travis Clausen-Knight, Isabelle Evans in Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance. Photo: Deborah Jaffe

Next came a misfire: 20 graduating students of Central School of Ballet performed Times Square Ballet, Ashley Page’s take on the Leonard Bernstein musical On The Town.  The Broadway pizzazz was a huge ask for these young non-American dance students.  Commendably, they gave it their all.  It just didn’t fit in.

Act I ended very strongly, with Dov’è La Luna, choreographed by the director of the prestigious Ballets de Monte Carlo, Jean Christopher Maillot, and performed by two sculptural dancers in flesh-coloured unitards, Lou Beyne and Jaat Benoot. 

Sculptural dancers Lou Beyne & Jaat Benoot from Ballets de Monte Carlo performing in BalletNights #010 DecaDance
Ballets de Monte Carlo’s Lou Beyne, Jaat Benoot in Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance. Photo: Deborah Jaffe

Again, it used classical ballet language but pushed it to its limits, as the two dancers, first placed on opposite angles, sought each other.  Benoot’s movement was at times reminiscent of the Nijinsky’s Faun; Beyne was a cold, distant, yet magnetic figure.   I loved this piece.

Robert Cohan’s affecting Lachrymosa came in Act II.  We’ve recently reviewed it as part of Yorke Dance’s Modern Milestones programme; it was cogently danced here by Edd Mitton and Amy Thake.

Dancer Amy Thake holds a fallen Ed Mytton in Lacrymosa, part of Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance
Edd Mitton, Amy Thake in Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance. Photo: Deborah Jaffe

Very different but equally entrancing was Joshua Junker’s 324A, conceived during lockdown by The Royal Ballet dancer and choreographer and performed by himself.   It built on the harmonious shapes a body can produce; Junker’s long, wing-like arms particularly impressive.

The students of Rambert School have become regulars at Ballet Nights, and they never disappoint.  Atlas, choreographed and performed by Chrysanthi Nicolaou and Django Bates-Blower, was an assured contemporary pas de deux, a raw, abstract piece with intricate partner work, set to urgent music by Ori Litchik.

Rambert students in their own piece Atlas, part of Ballet Nights #010 DecaDancce
Rambert students Chrysanthi Nicolaou, Django Bates-Blower in Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance Photo: Deborah Jaffe

Can you make a metal stick dance?  Royal Ballet principal Matthew Ball can, but that doesn’t make his piece The Measure of Things particularly interesting.  Inspired by people’s dependence on tools, Ball devised a whimsical piece centred on a metal stick.  Ball has already put down his marker as a choreographer to watch, but this one will probably not join his canon…

The final piece was a gala staple: the virtuoso duet Diana and Acteon. I confess to being a little sick of seeing it, though when performed with bravura, it can still enthuse.   This rendition marked the Ballet Nights debut of dancers from Mexico’s Ballet de Monterrey – Laura Rodriguez and Gael Ventura.

Ballet de Monterrey dancers Laura Rodriguez and Gael Ventura pose in Diana And Acteon, part of Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance
Laura Rodriguez and Gael Ventura in Ballet Nights #010 DecaDance. Photo: Deborah Jaffe

Rodriguez, former unofficial first lady of Acosta Danza, displays spectacular Cuban technique, with steely balances, powerful jumps, beautiful arabesque lines and a strong stage presence; I do wish, though, she’d add a little more expression – at times she gave the sense of dancing by numbers.

Gael Ventura was disadvantaged by a truly awful gold skirt that cut the line of his legs.   His dancing was solid, but not spectacular, and a misunderstanding between the two at the very end rather marred the finale.

No matter, this was still a hugely enjoyable evening, showcasing engaging works with strong identities.

Ballet Nights #010 was at Cadogan Hall on 4th February

Cadogan Hall
5 Sloane Terrace
London  SW1X 9DQ

Looking for something different – do check our dance previews for 2026

Filed Under: Events, Dance Tagged With: Cadogan Hall, dance

About Teresa Guerreiro

Teresa Guerreiro is a Portuguese journalist, who moved to London after completing her MA in English at the classical university of Lisbon, and has been living in London for most of her life. During her career as a broadcast journalist with the BBC World Service radio she won two international journalism awards; but her life-long passion has been dance, particularly ballet. Since leaving the BBC she's become increasingly involved with dance, both running her own website and as Dance Editor of the now defunct online magazine Culture Whisper. She's also written for The Times, for Dancing Times and was commissioned to write an article for a Royal Ballet performance programme.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

Recipe Rating




Follow Us

  • Bloglovin
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter

About London-Unattached

  • Contact Us
  • Enquiries/PR
  • London Unattached Contributors
  • London Unattached Privacy Policy
  • Media Pack

Recently Published

  • Sinatra the Musical – Aldwych Theatre
  • Phoenix Dance Theatre, Interplay
  • Monarchs Anonymous – The Other Palace Theatre
  • The Truth – Apollo Theatre

Sign up for our Newsletter

Sunday Roast Restaurant Reviews and New Restaurant Openings

Check our feature on the best Sunday Roasts in London - read the guide: Tried and Tested Sunday Roasts

Find out more about the New Restaurants in London in our guide - updated monthly after we've found our recommendation: The Best New London Restaurants

Copyright © 2026 · London-Unattached.Com