![]() ![]() “It’s totally weird, and obviously, it’s something that I never planned,” Mower said last month via Skype from a New Adventures tour stop in Washington, D.C. But he’s always in charge of what happens.” … Sometimes that’s not good, because there are times in the story where things are not going so right for her. “He’s more of a symbol of hope, I guess, and of positivity, and of Cinderella’s fate,” Mower said of the spirit whose presence hovers about Bourne’s World War II-era re-imagining of the classic fairy tale, set during the Blitz of London. through March 10, he’s a fairy godfather-like figure known as the Angel. premiere at the Ahmanson Theatre in 1999 and is back in L.A. In Bourne’s “Cinderella,” which had its U.S. In “Sleeping Beauty,” Mower plays not a mauve-clad queen of the fairies but a blood-sucking Count Lilac. ![]() Now 26, the dancer travels the world with Matthew Bourne’s company New Adventures, performing roles that most male dancers only dream of: the Lilac Fairy from “Sleeping Beauty” and the fairy godmother from “Cinderella” - roles that come with a particularly Bourneian twist. If “Billy Elliot” had a sequel, it might look like the life of Liam Mower.Īt age 12, Mower won the title role of the original West End production of “Billy Elliot: The Musical” in London. ![]()
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