Inspired by the iconic novel by D. H. Lawrence, long censored for its audacity, British choreographer Cathy Marston has created a powerful narrative ballet of rare emotional depth. With finesse and humanity, she explores the impulses of the body, the longing for freedom, and the reclaiming of desire as a vital necessity.
In post-World War I England, frozen in its social hierarchies and rigid moral codes, Constance Chatterley feels suffocated in a marriage devoid of physical intimacy and desire. Her encounter with Mellors, the estate’s gamekeeper, opens an unexpected breach in her carefully circumscribed life. Between them grows a relationship as intense as it is unlikely, a love that defies convention and unsettles the established order.
Through dance that is both intimate and deeply sensitive, Lady Chatterley tells the story of a love that dares to exist outside the norm, and reminds us that freedom often begins with the courage to listen to one’s own heart.