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You are here: Home / Events / Wayne McGregor, Alchemies, The Royal Ballet

Wayne McGregor, Alchemies, The Royal Ballet

April 19, 2026 (2026-04-19T13:45:36+01:00) by Teresa Guerreiro Leave a Comment

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Last Updated on April 19, 2026

A Trio of McGregor Works Old and New

3.5 out of 5.0 stars

The Royal Ballet’s latest triple bill, Alchemies, showcasing the work of its resident choreographer Wayne McGregor, consists of a little gem bookended by two difficult works.   The gem is Yugen, created in 2018 as part of the Leonard Bernstein centenary celebrations.  Either side of it comes Untitled, 2023 and McGregor’s brand new Quantum Souls.

Visually and aurally all are terrific, and the performances by their respective casts of dancers from all ranks of the Royal Ballet are never less than enthralling, the dancers clearly stimulated by McGregor’s demanding and idiosyncratic movement.  The choreographer has always shown a special talent for choosing collaborators that complete and enhance his vision and each of these three pieces comes across as a carefully curated offering.

Royal Ballet dancers in individual green and white costumes dance against the background of a white canvas with a triangular gash of green
Artists of The Royal Ballet in Wayne McGregor’s Untitled, 2023 © 2026 RBO. Photo: Andrej Uspenski

Quantum Souls – the title not immediately relatable, but a reflection of McGregor’s fascination with science – had its world premiere on the opening night of this run.  Its complex stage design (McGregor’s own) required an extra long interval to allow for installation, but when the curtain finally went up it revealed an appealing scene.  The flooring was yellow.  Upstage right was a complicated percussion set.  Assorted dancers in blue/grey and yellow individually styled costumes by the award-winning designer Saul Nash filled the stage, under Lucy Carter’s bright, yet warm light.

Against a complex on-stage percussion set, two male dancers stand immobile while a female raises her left left.  All stand on a yellow floor.
Joseph Sissens, Emile Gooding & Marianna Tsembenhoi in Wayne McGregor’s Quantum Souls © 2026 RBO Photo: Andrej Uspenski

The piece is performed to Bushra El-Turk’s Ka for percussion and string orchestra. In the pit, the strings offer a discreet bed of extended notes upon which on-stage percussionist extraordinaire Beibei Wang has freedom to improvise.  McGregor inverts the normal order of things: instead of the steps following the music, here the percussionist is guided by the steps to offer a fascinating display of improvised sound. Watching Beibei Wang move between instruments proved quite mesmerising.

When it comes to the choreography itself, this 40-minute piece offers few surprises and is, I fear, upstaged by everything else.  A dozen dancers take turns walking on and off stage.  There’s almost aggressive energy in their interactions, all, whether individual or in a number of varying formations, including gender-neutral duets, marked by McGregor’s signature hyper-extensions and quirky lifts.

A male dancer lifts a female over his shoulders.  Her raised lefs form an 180 degree angle
William Bracewell & Melissa Hamilton in Wayne McGregor’s Quantum Souls ©2026 RBO Photo: Andrej Uspenski

For Untitled, 2023, Wayne McGregor sought inspiration from the work of the late minimalist Cuban American artist Carmen Herrera, who created her first and only stage designs for this work.  Visually stunning in its simplicity, Untitled, 2023 is danced against the background of a white canvas cut across by a gash of baize green, a combination reflected in body-hugging costumes by Burberry, again individually styled.

Here, the choreographer opted to bring a range of steps from classical ballet – fouettés, spit jetés, batterie – into his own hyper-modern choreography, with mixed results.  Some work well, for example, when a couple of male dancers suddenly seem to levitate as they perform beautifully coordinated jetés; but a female dancer suddenly marching downstage and breaking into a set of fouettés begs the question “why?” Set to an eerie, transporting score by the Icelandic composer  Anna Thorvaldsdottir, which suggests images of denuded, frozen landscapes, Untitled, 2023 is masterfully lit by Lucy Carter with subtle, almost imperceptible light and colour gradations. 

One male dancer with lifted balances on the back of another who leans forward, both dressed in green and white
Luca Acri & Joseph Sissens in Wayne McGregor’s Untitled, 2024 © 2026 RBO Photo: Andrej Uspenski

Initially interesting with its reliance on the flexibility of bodies in motion, and the way in which the dancers appear to mimic splashes of colour staining an empty canvas, the work runs out of steam half-way through, with the result that it feels much longer than its 35 minutes.

By contrast, Yugen (the title referencing the Japanese concept of beauty only partly perceived)  left me craving a lot more than its 20 minutes. It is set to Leonard Bernstein’s rousing, intensely religious Chichester Psalms, sung in Hebrew by a mixed choir, with an ethereal solo by a boy treble, that truly got under my skin.

Against such powerful music, McGregor was wise to allow his choreographic language to convey emotion and longing for a heavenly connection, with Edmund de Waal’s set design suggesting portals to elsewhere.

Edmund de Waal's set is collectin of rectangular boxes backlit by Lucy Carter.  The dancers are seen in silhouette
Artists of The Royal Ballet in Wayne McGregor’s Yugen © 2026 RBO Photo: Andrej Uspenski

Shirin Guild’s unisex costumes for the 11-strong cast come in tones of deep red, with Lucy Carter’s subdued lighting creating an otherworldly atmosphere.  It’s unfair, I know, to single out one dancer from among a truly thrilling cast, but I was completely taken by Marco Masciari’s emotional solo.

A male dancer in red performs a solo full of religious longing in Yugen
Marco Masciari in Wayne McGregor’s Yugen © 2026 RBO Photo: Andrej Uspenski

Regardless of the merits of the choreography, the sheer quality of the dancing is the standout point of Alchemies, showing once again the verve and versatility of the current crop of Royal Ballet dancers.

Wayne McGregor: Alchemies is at the RBO 18 April – 6 May

RBO
Bow Street
London WC2E 9DD

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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