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The Royal Ballet

  • Kevin O'Hare CBE

    Director

  • Dame Ninette de Valois OM CH DBE

    Founder

  • Sir Frederick Ashton OM CH CBE

    Founder Choreographer

  • Constant Lambert

    Founder Music Director

  • Dame Margot Fonteyn DBE

    Prima Ballerina Assoluta

Woolf Works

A TRIPTYCH

Friday 6 February 2026 7.30pm

The 36th performance by The Royal Ballet at the Royal Opera House.

Please note that casting is subject to change up until the start of the performance. Please continue to check the website for the most up-to-date information.

Approximate Timings

The performance lasts approximately about 2 hours 45 minutes, including two intervals

  • Act I

    40 minutes

  • Interval

    30 minutes

  • Act II

    35 minutes

  • Interval

    30 minutes

  • Act III

    30 minutes


Credits

  • Direction and choreography

    Wayne McGregor

  • Music

    Max Richter

    © Mute Song Ltd 2014

  • Designers

    Ciguë

    We Not I

    Wayne McGregor

  • Costume designer

    Moritz Junge

  • Lighting designer

    Lucy Carter

  • Film designer

    Ravi Deepres

  • Sound System designer

    Chris Ekers

  • Make-up designer

    Kabuki

  • Dramaturgy

    Uzma Hameed

  • Staging

    Amanda Eyles

    Mikaela Polley

    Jenny Tattersall

    Antoine Vereecken

  • Répétiteur

    Zhan Atymtayev

  • Principal Coaching

    Edward Watson

Cast

I NOW, I THEN

(from Mrs Dalloway)

  • Virginia Woolf / Older Clarissa

    Lauren Cuthbertson

  • Richard

    Thomas Whitehead

  • Young Clarissa

    Ella Newton Severgnini

  • Peter

    Reece Clarke

  • Sally

    Charlotte Tonkinson

  • Septimus

    Nicol Edmonds

  • Rezia

    Annette Buvoli

  • Evans

    Liam Boswell

BECOMINGS

(from Orlando)

  • Nicol Edmonds

    Emile Gooding

    Joonhyuk Jun

    Chisato Katsura

    Harrison Lee

    Caspar Lench

    Taisuke Nakao

    Viola Pantuso

    Calvin Richardson

    Sumina Sasaki

    Ella Newton Severgnini

    Marianna Tsembenhoi

TUESDAY

(from The Waves)

  • Lauren Cuthbertson

    Reece Clarke

    Nadia Mullova-Barley

  • Denilson Almeida

    Madison Bailey

    Bethany Bartlett

    Ravi Cannonier-Watson

    Martin Diaz

    Olivia Findlay

    Luc Foskett

    Emile Gooding

    James Large

    Caspar Lench

    Rebecca Myles Stewart

    Aiden O'Brien

    Hanna Park

    Maddison Pritchard

    Katie Robertson

    Isabella Shaker

    Blake Smith

    Ginevra Zambon

  • George Earley

    Perla Ferrari

    Spencer Martin

    Catherine Pinnells

    Rafferty Smale

    Sophie Stewart

  • Soprano

    Marianna Hovanisyan

Voiceover from a letter by Virginia Woolf spoken by Gilllian Anderson

With special thanks to The Estate of Virginia Woolf

Students of The Royal Ballet School appear by kind permission of the Artistic Director, Iain Mackay

Music and orchestra

  • Conductor

    Koen Kessels

  • Orchestra

    Orchestra of the Royal Opera House

  • Associate Concert Master

    Peter Schulmeister

The Royal Ballet

  • Director

    Kevin O’Hare CBE

  • Music Director

    Koen Kessels

  • Resident Choreographer

    Sir Wayne McGregor CBE

  • Artistic Associate

    Christopher Wheeldon OBE

  • Administrative Director

    Heather Baxter

  • Rehearsal Director

    Christopher Saunders

  • Clinical Director Ballet Healthcare

    Shane Kelly

Synopsis

I NOW, I THEN

Mrs Dalloway, Woolf’s 1925 stream of consciousness novel, is set over the course of one day and alternates between two stories: a society hostess preparing for an important party and a shell-shocked war veteran on his way to a psychiatric assessment. Though they never meet, both Clarissa, the protected insider and Septimus, the social outcast, are haunted by the past. Opening with an excerpt from Woolf’s recorded essay, On Craftsmanship, I now, I then is a journey into the writing of Mrs Dalloway, interweaving narrative fragments from the novel with aspects of Woolf’s autobiography including the experience of drawing on her own mental illness as subject matter.

BECOMINGS

‘on or about December 1910 human nature changed’ – Virginia WoolfWritten in an epoch of recalibration in every sphere including the roles and rights of women, modes of representation in art and literature, and rapid advances in cosmology, Woolf’s iconoclastic 1928 novel Orlando centres around a fantastical figure who journeys through three hundred years without growing old, and changes sex along the way. Relationships prove transient, even with himself, while relativity and plasticity define her experience of time and space. Becomings presents Orlando’s dizzying wide-angle vision of a vast, ever-altering universe in which life is energy passing through a multiplicity of forms – a brief, gorgeous flaring of insect wings, gestating, emerging, extinguishing and moving on.

TUESDAY

Grand and elegiac, The Waves (1931) is Woolf’s most experimental novel, conceived in response to her own childlessness and the contrasting fierce maternity of her sister Vanessa. In the novel, the voices of six people growing from childhood to old age are punctuated by symbols of natural decay and renewal, the most important of which is the ever-returning sea. Responding to Woolf’s unique fascination with underwater imagery in all her writing, Tuesday merges themes of The Waves with a portrayal of the writer’s suicide by drowning. As Woolf counts her steps towards the river Ouse and her final journey, so too the world of her novel moves towards abstraction and silence.

Guidance

Suitable for ages 8+

This production contains references to suicide. There are flashing lights and smoke throughout in this production. Lasers are projected into the auditorium during Becomings.

Generous support from

Further information

Digital Cast Sheets

We are working hard on our commitment towards becoming more sustainable and are striving for our net zero goal of 2035. By using digital cast sheets and e-tickets, we have reduced our paper consumption by over five tonnes per year. You can view our digital cast sheets on a computer, tablet or smartphone by scanning the QR codes displayed around the building using your smartphone’s camera app. They are also displayed on screens outside the auditoria.

Guidelines

Photography and filming are prohibited during performances in any of our auditoriums. You are welcome to take pictures throughout the rest of the  building and before performances and share them with us through social media. Commercial photography and filming must be agreed in advance with our press team.

Larger bags and backpacks need to be check into our complimentary cloakrooms. Unattended bags may be removed.

Please do not place any personal belongings on the ledges in front of you. Mobile phones should be turned off and stored away safely during performances.

Only bottled water and ice cream purchased from the premises can be taken into the auditorium.

If you arrive late to the auditorium or leave during a performance, you will not be allowed back to your seat until the interval or a suitable break.

Smoking and vaping are not permitted anywhere on the premises.

The safety of our visitors, staff and artists is our priority. To help us provide a comfortable experience for everyone, please be mindful of others and their personal space.

Our staff are committed to treating everyone with dignity and respect and we ask that you show them and your fellow audience members respect too. We adopt a zero-tolerance approach in response to anyone who interacts with our staff or with fellow audience members in an intimidating, aggressive or threatening manner.

Support Us

We rely on your support to make world-class ballet and opera for everyone. With your donations we can ensure a bright future for the Royal Ballet and Opera, bringing communities together and inspiring future generations up and down the country.

For people, not profit.

rbo.org.uk/donate

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Royal Opera House Covent Garden Foundation, a charitable company limited by guarantee incorporated in England and Wales (Company number 480523) Charity Registered (Number 211775)