The closing moments in which Sansom circles round his ballerina and sweeps away into the night is a wonderful choreographic image.
Neither Lesley Collier nor Bruce Sansom convinced me of the otherworldly allure of Titania and Oberon; the lovers played for laughs in a singularly leaden way.
David Mink, an owner of the Sansom Street Oyster House, doesn't object to the extra $500 a year the new plan would cost him.
Also, like too many young Royal women, her dancing is not truly coordinated. She was fortunate in the exemplary partnering and dancing of her Romeo, Bruce Sansom.
It is a glorious performance. Among the other principals, Lesley Collier is an intelligent if rather mature Roxane; Bruce Sansom an agreeable Christian, though the role looks papery.