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‘Hard’ return: Nutty holiday classic bounces back to BAM

‘Hard’ return: Nutty holiday classic bounces back to BAM
Julieta Cervantes

This show keeps dancers on their toes!

The beloved ballet “The Hard Nut” — a joyfully strange take on “The Nutcracker” — will leap back into the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Dec. 14. The Mark Morris Dance Group debuted the show at BAM in 1992 and has performed it somewhere every holiday season since — but the show never gets old, says one of its stars.

“The show is always different, every single night,” said Lauren Grant, who has played the leading role of Marie for 20 years. “It’s finely choreographed, but there is room to make changes as you go, especially in the party scene. You’re always getting a fresh show, but it’ll always be the show you know and love.”

Creator and choreographer Mark Morris used Tchaikovsky’s classic music, but set his show in an indeterminate 1970s-ish era, opening at a swinging suburban house party. He also restored a then-little known scene from the ballet’s original inspiration “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King” by E.T.A. Hoffman, in which a Rat Queen promises to restore beauty to a princess if a young man can crack the “hard nut” with his teeth.

Morris said that he wanted to restore some of that story’s energy to the ballet.

“I wanted it to be really interesting and fun and scary and delightful, like the Hoffmann story,” said Morris, from his company’s headquarters in Fort Greene.

Morris also plays a role in his show, playing party host Dr. Stahlbaum and, in a later scene, the King. He dreads the makeup and wig, but said still enjoys working with his fellow dancers each night.

“It’s fun, and I’m very close with the gentleman who plays Mrs. Stahlbaum [John Heginbotham],” said Morris. “There’s a lot of spontaneity, I love that.”

Over the years, his take on Dr. Stahlbaum has only varied to the degree that physics has required, said Morris.

Raising the barre: Lauren Grant, right, has played the role of Marie in “The Hard Nut” for 20 years, and says that she finds something new in the role each time.
Julieta Cervantes

“I’ve tried to make him age gracefully,” he laughed. “He’s gotten a little kookier. It’s not exactly autobiographical, but his knees have gotten worse.”

Lauren Grant, meanwhile, is eternally youthful in the role of Stahlbaum’s middle child, Marie. All of the child characters are played by adults, said Morris, because “children are terrible at playing children.”

Grant finds new aspects of her character every year, she said.

“I’ve had over 20 years to grow the role, to become deeply nuanced. Whenever you bring a show back, there’s an opportunity to enhance the performance — it just gets more vibrant,” said the Prospect Heights dancer.

The show was seen as subversive when it debuted, with a shocked New York Times review noting in a headline that it had “men in tutus,” but the show has since become a Brooklyn tradition.

“It’s stood the test of time,” said Morris. “People who saw it as kids are bringing their own children — I love that. It’s really becoming a family event.”

And Morris says that “The Hard Nut” will continue for as long as audiences keep showing up.

“This has been a great run,” he said. “And we’ll keep doing it until something better comes along.”

“The Hard Nut” at BAM Howard Gilman [30 Lafayette Ave. at Ashland Place in Fort Greene, (718) 636–4100, www.bam.org]. Dec. 14–23; Thu–Fri at 7:30 pm; Sat at 2 pm and 7:30 pm; Sun at 3 pm. $25–$125.

The host with the most: “The Hard Nut” creator Mark Morris did not always play Dr. Stahlbaum. “I used to be the drunk party guest and the beautiful princess, and then I wasn’t,” he said. “I don’t know if I was promoted or demoted.”
Stephanie Berger

Reach arts editor Bill Roundy at broundy@cnglocal.com or by calling (718) 260–4507.