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Michael Flatley's Feet of Flames: The Impossible Tour -- Entrapment

We left off at the end of Stolen Kiss on a cliffhanger: Morrighan pulls the #LordOfTheDance away from Saoirse and weakens him with a poisoned kiss, stealing the title belt from him as he is captured by Don Dorcha's Warriors. Now: the conclusion. If you've only ever seen the classic versions of the show, either in person or on film, then this number -- Entrapment, also referred to informally by the cast as "Cats" -- is going to be a shock. In the classic version of the show, the equivalent original number would have been Fiery Nights: the temptress Morrighan dancing with Don Dorcha while their clans intermingle for the first time. Entrapment is...different. Here, there is almost no interaction between the genders; after a brief interaction between Morrighan and Don Dorcha, he departs, leaving her and her clan to celebrate on their own. One gets the sense that they are still separate forces with their own respective agendas; equals and allies of convenience, but not dependent upon each other. What makes this particularly ironic is that the lead performers in this number -- Zoltan Papp and Andrea Papp-Krén -- are married in real life. This marks, we believe, the first time that a married couple has ever been shown in a commercial LOTD video performing together. (There have been other married Team Lord couples in the past who performed lead roles together -- Damien O'Kane and Bernie Flynn come to mind -- but this is the first time we've seen married leads perform together on *film.*) The end result: this is Morrighan unleashed. We've written extensively about Andrea Papp-Kren's incredible interpretation of Morrighan, but here it really does shine. Andrea's Morrighan is no coquettish flirt, no teenage ingenue; this is a maneater, completely in control of her own destiny, and woe to any who dare cross her. Andrea's Morrighan makes it clear that you know you're playing with fire. You can't resist her, and you've already lost to her. Her beauty is not an end unto itself for others to enjoy; hers is weaponized beauty, turned toward her own goals. Hence why, for those paying attention, Morrighan has never been present at the execution scene. Remember, this show follows the Hero's Journey Monomyth story structure, and the lead characters are archetypes; if we assume Morrighan is based on the Celtic legend of the Mórrígan, then she is a war goddess -- a guardian of the territory and its people. She is, arguably, not on Don Dorcha's side -- because no true hero would fail her trials. There's another clue to this at the very end of the number: after Morrighan and her clan depart, Don Dorcha and the Warriors celebrate. But, at the end, they are quietly mocked yet again by the Little Spirit. Isn't that somewhat odd? At this point in the story, the Warriors have fought the Warlords to a standstill, the Lord of the Dance has been captured, and it appears that evil has all but triumphed in Planet Ireland. But remember: unbeknownst to Don Dorcha and Morrighan, the Little Spirit's magic flute has been repaired. There is still hope as we head into the final heroic trials of the second act. We've written this before, but it bears repeating: there's a lot going on sub rosa in the story of Lord of the Dance, if you piece together the clues. Sometimes the "simplest" stories offer the most to digest. The other item worth mentioning: how much fun is it to watch Zoltan Papp performing as the Dark Lord? Every single second he's onstage, you can just tell that he's having the time of his life up there. You can't have a good story without a good villain, and Zoltan is having so much fun onstage that it's incredibly infectious. Villains often have license to have fun because they don't have to play by the rules; they can embody all of our darkest impulses. Zoltan gleefully brings them to life onstage and venerates them. Twilight is falling upon Planet Ireland; we are heading for the Lord of the Dance's final trials on his hero's journey. This is Feet of Flames: The Impossible Tour. This is Entrapment. And this is the New Generation. #FollowYourDream

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