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Behind the scenes of Matthew Bourne's all-male production of Swan Lake

The production of Swan Lake where all the birds are men is flying into Birmingham. Roz Laws went backstage.

Matthew Bourne's production of Swan Lake.(Image: Bill Cooper)

The Swan Room. It sounds like an ornate restaurant in an upmarket hotel, where elegant ladies take afternoon tea.

But not when it refers to a makeshift dressing room for the male dancers in Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake.

Then it’s probably the most masculine place you can find. You can almost smell the testosterone as 14 lithe young men are squashed together in the wings at Sadler’s Wells Theatre in London, methodically applying make-up.

They have just two minutes to transform themselves into swans by putting on their swan legs, covering their bodies with white paint and applying black eyeshadow and a diamond shape on their foreheads to represent the swan’s beak.

This is a Swan Lake like no other. Instead of rows of ballerinas gliding across the stage, all the swans are played by men.

Bourne’s production is coming to the Birmingham Hippodrome next week. For the first time, it is playing for two weeks instead of one to cope with the demand for tickets. Most other venues on the tour get it for less than a week.

Bourne himself describes the Hippodrome as “one of the most important dance venues in the country”, with which he has built up a strong relationship.

The Swan Room, in which the swan ensemble stands shoulder to shoulder, is no bigger than 20ft by 10ft.