Flight Pattern

Flight Pattern
A woman is leaning towards the audience while another dancer is holding her torso. In the background, people are walking in a queue.
An image from Flight Pattern
ChoreographerCrystal Pite
MusicHenryk Górecki
Premiere16 March 2017 (2017-03-16)
Royal Opera House
Original ballet companyThe Royal Ballet
DesignJay Gower Taylor
Nancy Bryant
Tom Visser
Genrecontemporary ballet

Flight Pattern is a one-act contemporary ballet by Canadian choreographer Crystal Pite, set to the first movement of Henryk Górecki's Symphony No.3. It premiered at the Royal Opera House, London, on 16 March 2017, making Pite the first woman to choreograph for The Royal Ballet's main stage in 18 years. The ballet won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Dance Production in 2018.

Flight Pattern examines the plight of refugees, drawing inspiration from 20th and 21st-century events, particularly the refugee crisis caused by the Syrian civil war. The ballet starts with 36 dancers performing on stage, and transitions to a series of duets and solos originated by dancers Marcelino Sambé and Kristen McNally. The piece was mostly positively reviewed by critics, with many praising the performance of the two soloists and the choreography of the ensemble. In 2022, Pite expanded the ballet into Light of Passage, with Flight Pattern becoming the first part of the ballet. The narrative is non-linear and the movement uses lines created by the dancers' bodies and formations of queues to create tension on stage.