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You are here: Home / Events / Still Pointless: BalletBoyz at 25

Still Pointless: BalletBoyz at 25

May 1, 2026 (2026-05-01T11:46:37+01:00) by Teresa Guerreiro Leave a Comment

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Last Updated on May 1, 2026

The All-Male Troupe Resumes its Stage Journey

In the event you haven’t heard of BalletBoyz (unlikely, I know, but just to be on the safe side), I’ll let one of the company founders, Michael Nunn, do the introductions:

“A high quality dance company that doesn’t take itself too seriously, but takes the art seriously. And I think we try and package our performances so that there’s something for everybody, that will make you laugh, make you think, and will create some sort of emotional response. Primarily, it’s about entertaining people.  We’re not there to teach them a lesson or give them any medicine, maybe just keep edging things forward. 

“I’ve always thought if we have a casual, fun approach to what we do, we can sell more difficult work, because we’re taking people on that journey.”

BalletBoyz’s own journey started a quarter of a century ago, though it feels like only yesterday that two former Royal Ballet dancers, Michael Nunn and William Trevitt, said goodbye to Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty and the like, and set off on a radical change of course. Pointless, their very first show at London’s Roundhouse in 2001, was a clear statement of intent, but it was more than that, too.

Pointless by name – a playful reference to the pointe shoes we associate with ballet –  but certainly not by nature: Nunn and Trevitt brought their impeccable Royal Ballet training and preternatural mutual connection to bear on the unique movement language of Russell Maliphant’s Critical Mass, with its grounded push and pull see-saw, fluid transfers of weight, bodies alternately cooperating and competing.  They did it in such perfect synchrony, that they left me breathless. 

William Trevitt and Michael Nunn in jeans with bare torsos.  Nunn sustains the weight of Trevitt, whi crouches bending back
Michael Nunn and William Trevitt in Critical Mass. Photo: Hugo Glendinning

There clearly was a point to it:  it was something genuinely new and thrilling, which appeared to open endless possibilities for dance in the 21st century.

BalletBoyz 25 Years Later

In a large studio the current 10-strong cohort of BalletBoyz pose in front of a white screen wearing white T-shirts with the company name across the front.
BalletBoyz 2026. Photography by ASH

The past 25 years have more than fulfilled the initial promise, not only with regular new and enticing live dance performances by carefully chosen cohorts of 10 to 15 male dancers, but also with an increasingly prominent sideline in film-making, which offers different insights into dance itself.

So, a birthday bash is definitely in order.  It’ll take the shape of a wide-ranging UK tour, starting at Sadler’s Wells in mid-May. To find out more, I’ve been speaking to Michael Nunn and William Trevitt at their Kingston-upon-Thames base.  

It’s taken a while for BalletBoyz to return from the ravages of Covid and its attendant lockdowns; the company went a little off-piste three years ago with England on Fire, an ambitious,  large-scale but short-lived collaborative project, which had an uncharacteristically lukewarm reception. Still Pointless, though, sounds like vintage BalletBoyz. 

Dancers in grey jeans and white T-shirts pull together moving right to left
BalletBoyz in Javier de Frutos’ Fiction. Photo: George Piper

The programme includes, obviously, Critical Mass, which Nunn and Trevitt will themselves dance – and to say I’m really looking forward to seeing them perform again is a massive understatement.  Then, as Nunn explains,

“The rest of the show has been completely commissioned by us – music and movement – and it’s really just tied into significant moments for the company.”

Still Pointless – The Repertoire

As well as Critical Mass, the programme includes extracts from seven BalletBoyz epoch-making pieces by choreographers such as Christopher Wheeldon, Javier de Frutos, Maxine Doyle and Liam Scarlett, and musical scores by Max Richter, Keaton Henson and Cassie Kinoshi. 

Five dancers jump under a square neon frame on a blue lit stage
BalletBoyz in Maxine Doyle’s Bradley 4:18. Photo: George Piper

There is also, William Trevitt stresses, a brand new piece:

“The thing that we’ve always been focused on is commissioning new collaborations, something original, and so we had to have a new commission. We’ve been working with Seirian [Griffiths], who’s the choreographer of the new work. He came straight from school to work with us [after Covid],  and he’s been developing his choreographic career alongside his dance.  We just thought it would be a fantastic opportunity to showcase his work on an international stage like Sadler’s Wells.”

Then what turned out to be a very silly question: did they give Seirian Griffits free hand to create his new commission?  A mischievous smile crossed Trevitt’s face:

“We never give free hands – It might feel like we do” (both burst out laughing), “but there’s always some conditions. 

“I mean, part of it was the duration: we wanted it to be something that we would be able to develop into a bigger work later.  And we asked him to include eight of the dancers, so, not a solo.”

On the right three dancers sit on the ground while on the left one dancer rises up one foot standing on another dancers thigh.  The light is green
BalletBoyz in Russell Maliphant’s Fallen. Photo: George Piper

One of the remarkable things about all BalletBoyz cohorts over the years has been the way in which the dancers’ mutual understanding mirrors that of Nunn and Trevitt, something which is not always apparent in many companies, even long-standing ones; so it is with the current 10-strong company, which includes seasoned BalletBoyz dancers and four newcomers.  They’ve really gelled as a company, says William Trevitt:

“Post-COVID, there’s a really strong network, and they’ve all worked with each other, because jobs are smaller and shorter; so, dancers like the ones we’re working with, they all know each other. They’ve all worked together on something at some point.”

Two dancers in black pants with naked torsos, bent knees open wide lean on each other
BalletBoys in Christopher Wheeldon’s US. Photo: Annabel Moeller

Nunn and Trevitt – Film Makers

Like previous BalletBoyz shows, Sill Pointless includes film.  Michael Nunn explains the thinking behind its inclusion.

“Because it’s a retrospective and we’ve basically documented our entire lives, between the [live] pieces you’ll learn a bit more about the company, why we’re doing what we do, who the people are.  And then, also, we have a section from Young Men, the war movie we made [in 2016], which incorporates live dance, which we tried as a hybrid in Wilton’s Music Hall and in New York.

Against a dark, duaty background a dancer leaps up, while another lies on the ground
BalletBoyz, Young Men. Credit: Hugo Glendinning

“And I think it always helps, especially with regional venues that don’t know you, just to explain a bit more about what you’re seeing, what to expect.”

Dancers and company directors, Nunn and Trevitt are also seasoned film-makers, respectively director and cinematographer.  Film, they feel, can bring something extra to dance – tailor-made film, they mean, not just relays of live performances. As Michael Nunn puts it:

“We were always interested in being inside narrative productions.”

The aim, in William Trevitt’s words, is, “to make it feel like it feels if you’re a member of the cast. You know, to see the quality of the performances first-hand.”

At the time of writing, Nunn and Trevitt are putting the final touches to a dance movie planned to hit cinemas in September, part of their “moving pictures programme’, a new platform for dance on the big screen to be shown nationwide.

And they are also working on a big-scale stage production, a 70-minute piece with a live orchestra, projected to come to Sadler’s Wells in the Autumn. BalletBoyz are back with a vengeance – watch this space!

Still Pointless: BalletBoyz at 25 is at Sadler’s Wells 12 – 16 May

Touring until 11 July – full details and tickets here

Sadler’s Wells
Rosebery Avenue
London EC1R 4TN

Check out our London Dance Previews – January to July 2026

Filed Under: Events, Dance Tagged With: 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.

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