Mockery

“Die Fledermaus” (“The Bat”)
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
November 21, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. T.Afshar (Johann) and O.Esina (Bella), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor2. T.Afshar (Johann) and O.Esina (Bella), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor For Johann Strauss II’s bicentennial, the Vienna State Ballet revived Roland Petit’s 1979 ballet adaptation of Strauss’s famous operetta, Die Fledermaus (The Bat). It’s accompanied by a “best of” selection of compositions by Johann Strauss II, his father, Johann Strauss I, and his brother, Josef. The score’s oomph and gaiety are infectious. Strauss’ music, particularly the Viennese waltzes (of which Die Fledermaus has plenty), is part of the DNA of the Vienna State Opera’s orchestra, and under Luciano Di Martino’s baton, it fizzed like champagne. Melodies rose boisterously to a tipping point, balanced provocatively on the edge, and rippled down with relish as if on a rollercoaster ride.

4. O.Esina (Bella) and D.Dato (Ulrich), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor3. O.Esina (Bella), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorExcept for the core theme (male infidelity and female maneuvers to deal with it), Petit’s version has little in common with the operetta. He employs only three protagonists: Bella (Olga Esina), her husband (Timoor Afshar), who is named Johann (maybe an ironic jab at Strauss II, whose second wife, Angelika, cuckolded him?), and the family’s friend, Ulrich (Davide Dato). In Ulrich, Petit combined two characters of the operetta, the schemer, Dr. Falke, and the seducer, Alfred.

While the operetta’s Dr. Falke was ridiculed for wearing a bat costume, the ballet’s Johann transformed into a bat at night, flying from his conjugal bed to seek pleasure at other establishments. Bella no longer excited his senses, and their austere, Mondrian-style home (designed by Jean-Michel Wilmotte) presumably didn’t either.

5. Ensemble, “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor6. G.Wielick (Servant), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorOne night, she found out that Johann was leading a double life and called Ulrich. He rushed in as if he were waiting for the moment, covered Bella’s arm with an armada of kisses (in contradiction to his purported, noble altruism to save her marriage), and took action. Under his supervision, Bella metamorphosed into an Odile-like diva who ensnared her prince, Johann, at Maxim’s in Paris. (Bella and Johann live in an Austrian-Hungarian capital, so how they managed to get to Paris in no time was a mystery.)

8. K.Pokorný, G.Wielick, and G.Li Mandri (Servants), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor7. T.Afshar (Johann), O.Esina (Bella), V.Cagnin, and ensemble; “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorDressed as a waiter, Ulrich coached Bella’s performance as if he were Rothbart. She enraptured Johann, who failed to recognize his wife. When Bella and Ulrich escaped by carriage in the purple morning light, Johann jumped on as a stowaway. He stood on top in a bold arabesque like a hood ornament while the horse galloped off—a smashing exit!

9. G.Fredianelli, A.Cavallo, and N.Butchko; “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor10. F.Cesaro and D.Tariello, “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorBella then moved on to a seductive gig at a masquerade ball reminiscent of the hunting scene in The Sleeping Beauty. In contrast to Prince Désiré, who followed his spiritual calling to search for Aurora, Johann was driven by sexual appetite. The parody intensified when Bella turned up. Wearing a scant, red tutu and a black neck ribbon (costumes by Luisa Spinatelli), she resembled a hybrid of Kitri and Carmen and danced like a frivolous Paquita. The Hungarian Csárdás that was part of the ball also turned farcical when Ulrich joined, his cheeks clownishly red.

11. D.Dato (Ulrich), O.Esina (Bella), A.Cavallo, and ensemble; “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorNight fell as Johann, fueled by spiking hormones, tried to conquer Bella (he made me think of an unstoppable steam engine). Inevitably, Johann turned into a bat and fluttered above the guests. But Bella lured him to a lower altitude, and the trap snapped shut. Policemen arrested Johann. Behind bars, he lip-synced tenor Lukas Schmidt who didn’t sing about Bella, but the lovely Rosalinde, begging her to quench his desire (Rosalinde is the operetta’s heroine, and Alfred sings the song). Indeed, the beloved Bella appeared, effected his release, and, dropping her mask and clothes (except for a skin-colored, full-body leotard), rekindled their marital love.

12. T.Afshar (Johann) and ensemble, “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor13. O.Esina (Bella) and T.Afshar (Johann), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor
The couple’s intimate pas de deux was the only scene that Petit didn’t turn into a comedy. But not for long. The moment Johann succumbed to Bella’s allure, Ulrich (this time dressed up as a prison guard) handed her huge scissors, and gone went the bat wings. As if stripped of his balls, Johann instantly transmuted into a henpecked husband, whose feet Bella tucked into felt slippers. She had realized her initial dream. Men orbited her; she called the shots, and life was as spiffy as a waltz.

Esina’s Bella cleverly hid her hurt from Johann’s disinterest under a shiny surface. It was unclear if her masquerade was motivated by true love or to secure her well-off status. Compared to Bella, Afshar’s Johann was an open book. His turns were hasty when he was impatient to break free, pretentious when he was eager to stand out, and spicy when he burned with lust. Women other than his wife lent wings to his showmanship.

15. T.Afshar (Johann) and O.Esina (Bella), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor14. D.Dato (Ulrich) and ensemble, “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorDato’s feet moved with such lightning speed and precision that I thought of hot needlework. A string puller, his Ulrich always turned up at the right moment. He puffed himself up like a toreador at Maxim’s, played the goof at the ball, and in prison he acted like a companion in crime.
Céline Janou Weder played Bella and Johann’s sometimes zealous, sometimes drowsy maidservant, Eno Peci was the police commissioner who arrested Johann. As servants at Maxim’s, Gaspare Li Mandri, Kristián Pokorný, and Géraud Wielick buzzed around, their spins, split jumps, and bobbing bottoms adding heat to the already hot atmosphere. The three can-can ladies (Francesca Cesaro, Sveva Gargiulo, and Chiara Uderzo) achieved the same by lifting their skirts extra high. Like a remnant of the good old times of ballet, Alessandro Cavallo continued to lead the Csárdás with composure, regardless of Ulrich’s interference. He only gave him a raised eyebrow.
The corps’ waltzes had pep, but their routine at the ball (including hands flapping up and down and heads turning left and right) looked silly.
16. D.Dato (Ulrich), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor17. D.Dato (Ulrich) and C.J.Weder (Servant), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor18. T.Afshar (Johann) and O.Esina (Bella), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor

Links: Website of the Vienna State Ballet
“Die Fledermaus” – Trailer
Photos: 1. Timoor Afshar (Johann) and Olga Esina (Bella), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
2. Timoor Afshar (Johann) and Olga Esina (Bella), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
3. Olga Esina (Bella), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
4. Olga Esina (Bella) and Davide Dato (Ulrich), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
5. Ensemble, Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
6. Géraud Wielick (Servant), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
7. Timoor Afshar (Johann), Olga Esina (Bella), Victor Cagnin, and ensemble; Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
8. Kristián Pokorný, Géraud Wielick, and Gaspare Li Mandri (Servants), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
9. Gaia Fredianelli, Alessandro Cavallo, and Natalya Butchko; Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
10. Francesca Cesaro and Duccio Tariello, Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
11. Davide Dato (Ulrich), Olga Esina (Bella), Alessandro Cavallo, and ensemble; Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
12. Timoor Afshar (Johann) and ensemble, Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
13. Olga Esina (Bella) and Timoor Afshar (Johann), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
14. Davide Dato (Ulrich) and ensemble, Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
15. Timoor Afshar (Johann) and Olga Esina (Bella), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
16. Davide Dato (Ulrich), Die Fledermaus by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
17. Davide Dato (Ulrich) and Céline Janou Weder (Servant), “Die Fledermaus” by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
18. Timoor Afshar (Johann) and Olga Esina (Bella), “Die Fledermaus” by Roland Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025
all photos © Vienna State Ballet/Ashley Taylor
Editing: Kayla Kauffman

Reborn

“Callirhoe”
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
October 19, 2025 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. M.Young (Callirhoe) and ensemble, “Callirhoe” by A.Ratmansky, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor 2. V.Caixeta (Chaireas) and ensemble, “Callirhoe” by A.Ratmansky, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorThe title of Martin Schläpfer’s farewell choreography, Pathétique, summarized the condition of the Vienna State Ballet he left behind after five years as its artistic director. His successor, Alessandra Ferri, restructured the company. Some dancers left, and others joined, some of whom were returnees. Last weekend, she presented the first premiere under her reign, Alexei Ratmansky’s Callirhoe (which he choreographed for ABT in 2020 under the title Of Love and Rage). It felt like the rebirth of the company. I cannot remember when I last saw the Vienna State Ballet perform with such force. Congratulations! Continue reading “Reborn”

A Farewell Triplet

“Pathétique” (“Divertimento No. 15”/“Summerspace”/“Pathétique”)
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
April 09, 2025 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Divertimento No. 15” by G.Balanchine © George Balanchine Trust, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorTriple bills have become a trademark of the Vienna State Ballet since Martin Schläpfer took over as artistic director in 2020. The latest, Pathétique, is titled after Schläpfer’s newest and last creation. As on previous occasions, the program’s safe and well-tested base was a Balanchine followed by Cunningham’s Summerspace. Continue reading “A Farewell Triplet”

Incomprehensible

“The Lady of the Camellias”
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
March 24, 2024, (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

 1. Ensemble, “The Lady of the Camellias” by J.Neumeier, Vienna State Ballet 2024 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorShouts of “Bravi!” mingled with enthusiastic applause after the curtain closed on John Neumeier’s The Lady of the Camellias last Sunday at the Vienna State Opera. I, who was following the performance on screen, was less happy. Being familiar with this piece as it was performed by other companies, I felt that this premiere left a lot to be desired.

To begin with, the choreography—almost forty-five years after its creation—suffers from the same mannerisms present in large parts of Neumeier’s oeuvre. The tools that he uses to express his protagonists’ inner life are repetitive. For example, books, confectionery, and bunches of flowers slipped from the dancers’ grip to signal astonishment or absent-mindedness. The number of people who stumbled, fell, barged into one another, and ran around precipitously was remarkable. As in other Neumeier-ballets, the buffoon (in this case, Count N., whom Géraud Wielick turned into an especially silly specimen of jealous lover) wore glasses. That Neumeier intertwined Marguerite and Armand’s fate with that of Manon Lescaut—a connection that is inherent in Alexandre Dumas’s novel—would be ingenious if the relevant scenes were less mawkish and didactic. Continue reading “Incomprehensible”

Rekindled

“Shifting Symmetries” (“Concertante”/”Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet”)
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
December 23, 2023, (online: December 27, 2023)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Concertante” by H.van Manen, Vienna State Ballet 2023 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor The Vienna State Ballet’s newest triple bill combines pieces by Hans van Manen, William Forsythe, and George Balanchine. As Forsythe doesn’t allow video streaming of his works, his In the Middle, Somewhat Elevated wasn’t part of the online broadcast on December 27th (which showed a recording of the premiere on December 23rd).
I’ve often been unhappy about the Viennese performances, but what’s to expect when the choreographies given to them are mediocre? This time though, a meaty dance-diet was on the menu, and the company rose splendidly to the occasion.

Concertante (1994) has the punchy elegance that van Manen is known for. It’s sophisticated (but without frills) and so densely energetic that my eyes stayed glued on the dancers. Van Manen doesn’t choreograph pretty steps. His dancers prance cooly and strongly, throw challenging glances, and are forcefully present on stage. Continue reading “Rekindled”

Unpalatable

“The Sleeping Beauty”
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
October 24, 2022 (livestream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2022 by Ilona Landgraf

1. J.Carroll (Catalabutte) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by M.Schläpfer and M.Petipa, Vienna State Ballet 2022 © Vienna State Ballet / A.TaylorA few months before the premiere of his “Sleeping Beauty” with the Vienna State Ballet, artistic director Martin Schläpfer stated that he did not intend to alter Petipa’s original – that he was not creating something “a bit Schläpfer and a bit Petipa”. There are already enough of these blended works in the canon; instead of adding another, he preferred to stick with the original. Back then, though, he did not have a detailed vision for his production. So – how did his version finally turn out?

I’ll make one thing immediately clear: Schläpfer did not deliver a radically new take on the fairy tale. The three-acter still unfolds at court, includes the key characters, and follows the well-known storyline. Florian Etti’s modern and unsophisticated set includes an open yard looking out on a king-sized garden of red roses. Nestled among the twigs is the crib of the newborn Aurora, her birth an airy dream. Continue reading “Unpalatable”