Category: Dance

Vollmond from Tanztheater Wuppertal, A Magnificent Opus that leaves us with the memory of one of the great figures of contemporary dance.

Vollmond from Tanztheater Wuppertal, A Magnificent Opus that leaves us with the memory of one of the great figures of contemporary dance.

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Vollmond from Tanztheater Wuppertal. Foto: Jochen Viehoff

What happens the night of a full moon!  The world  is transformed! A playful and totally liberating event that brought us back to the corporeal experiments of Pina Bausch’s earlier years. Such a wonderful relief this is!!

A huge rock looms up in the middle of the stage. A heavy volume that grounds the eyes , that grounds the dancers, that grounds the stark landscape providing a strange space for the dancers who eventually ( Act II), include that rock in their choreography as they slide and slip down its slopes. Or they climb over it and slither around its sides. It is almost alive even though that great volume of unmovable matter holds our attention because it shrinks the dancers, it invigorates the movements, it slurps up the bodies in a tiny stream that appears to be drawn along underneath that rocky mass.

Bausch has recreated a new universe of bodies that, as her earlier work always did,  imposing normal gestures but deconstructing the gracefulness of human corporeal expression to give it all new meaning. She uses other forms of dance , she disrupts everyday moves disarticulates the dancers,  shifts in emotion and their impact on lther bodies. The results are unexpected, beautiful and even joyous but  this time the playful, the “ludique” a great joy of living, dominates . The figures do not mistreat each other the way they used to. They launch themselves into moments of harmonious affection,  playful longings, Instinctual relationships that inspire harsh gestures ( a slap, a twist, a push) but nothing more. Individual women turn to the audience and hiss commonplace challenges at them, always with a slight tilt of the head, a face harbouring  naughty gestures or tricky glances. 

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Fish Eyes and Boys with Cars: Marriage of Dance and Acting Wows Audiences

Fish Eyes and Boys with Cars: Marriage of Dance and Acting Wows Audiences

Photo: Andrew Alexander
Photo: Andrew Alexander

Living in a well regulated, multicultural country such as Canada feels about as safe and cozy as it could. This is probably why we rarely stop to think how hard it could be for newcomers, young and old, to adapt to a new environment while still preserving their own culture. The generation gap could not be any deeper than in this kind of reality: while the young want to blend, the older people tend to resist to any, even the smallest change. This is exactly what the multitalented artist, Anita Majumdar, deals with in a fascinating story about the life and struggle of a teenage Indo-Canadian girl who desperately tries to fit into a predominantly white society in Port Moody Senior Secondary in British Columbia.

Fish Eyes is the first part of a trilogy (consisting of Fish Eyes, Boys with Cars and Let Me Borrow That Top). Here, we meet Meena, a high school girl who takes lessons in traditional Indian dance with a teacher she calls Aunty. While preparing for a dance festival in India, Meena shows a very strong resistance to anything that is typical of the country of her origin, culminating in a decision to not participate in the event. The reason: her first love, the not so smart but very popular boy Buddy, is in love with another (blonde) girl.

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Rodin/Claudel : Valérie Legat from Les Grands Ballets Canadiens shines as Camille Claudel, the fragile, vulnerable genious driven to despair.

Rodin/Claudel : Valérie Legat from Les Grands Ballets Canadiens shines as Camille Claudel, the fragile, vulnerable genious driven to despair.

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The passionate and troubled love story between Auguste Rodin and Camille Claudel has a become a near legendary tale that has attracted artists, feminists, art historians, theatre specialists, psychiatrists and all manner of people interested in the functioning of the artistic genius. rodin11359013758_preview_preview-rodin-1 (Photos: André Tremblay)

Les Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montréal has brought in choreographer Peter Quanz’s version of this relationship which highlights Camille Claudel’s links to her family, her famous brother who was about to become a poet, diplomat and playwright (l’Annonce faite à Marie, le Soulier de Satin, Partage de midi et many more), her ongoing affair with the sculptor, the jealousy of Rodin’s wife, Camille’s plunge into the depths of depression, the fact that she destroyed most of her sculpture and the fact that her devoutly Catholic family, conscious of its good place in society, refused to support her. They  would not recognize her genius and kept her interned for over 30 years. Brother Paul Claudel apparently did not make any attempt to help her either, something which strengthens my dislike of his theatre even more.

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THE NATIONAL ARTS CENTRE UNVEILS SPECTACULAR 2014-15 DANCE SEASON

THE NATIONAL ARTS CENTRE UNVEILS SPECTACULAR 2014-15 DANCE SEASON

LPH0447014  Photo: Vollmond, Cie Pina Bausch

March 18, 2014 – OTTAWA (Canada) – The National Arts Centre today unveiled details of its spectacular 2014-15 Dance season that celebrates artistic excellence with a dynamic lineup of innovative voices, featuring some of the biggest names from across Canada and around the world. From traditionally sumptuous classical ballet to the most expressive frontiers of contemporary dance, the 2014-15 season includes 30 choreographic voices that represent a vast range of ideas, styles, contexts and cultural influences.

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Swan Lake by the National Ballet of Canada: At the NAC Jan. 30 -Feb.1, 2014

Swan Lake by the National Ballet of Canada: At the NAC Jan. 30 -Feb.1, 2014

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Swan Lake

January 30 – February 1, 2014

NAC Southam Hall | Running time is approximately 2 hours and 10 minutes with intermission.

Sonia Rodriguez and Aleksandar Atonijevic with Artists of the Ballet in Swan Lake

Photo: Bruce Zinger

James Kudelka Choreography  with the NAC Orchestra

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Flashdance: Lots of Dance but Little Flash

Flashdance: Lots of Dance but Little Flash

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Handout  photo: Broadway Across America. Jillian Mueller as Alex in “Flashdance”.

The show’s big number is What a Feeling, but What Feeling? might better describe the touring version of Flashdance: The Musical which arrived in town Tuesday. A stage remake of the hit 1983 film Flashdance, the live version is written by Canadian Tom Hedley who created the original story and most of the screenplay, and Robert Cary. Music is by Robbie Roth who also wrote the lyrics with Cary. The film, a commercial success although generally mauled by the critics, catapulted Jennifer Beals in the main role of Alex from obscurity to stardom.

Hedley hopes to take his stage version – it’s not the one that played in England a few years ago – to Broadway after touring it for the next several months. Unfortunately, while there’s ample dance there’s little flash, at least in this production. Granted, the company was operating at a disadvantage because a badly balanced sound system left performers overwhelmed by the orchestra (Nicholas Williams conducts) and rendered their voices unpleasantly reedy…….read more…

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/entertainment/movie-guide/Review+Lots+dance+little+flash+this+remake/9073433/story.html

Salves, Compagnie Maguy Marin: A Contemporary Gaze on the Ultimate Destruction of Humanity.

Salves, Compagnie Maguy Marin: A Contemporary Gaze on the Ultimate Destruction of Humanity.

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Courtesy Théâtre de la Ville © photo Christian Ganet

A glowing last supper that explodes in a burst of colour, announces the end of humanity. A reversal of all the Christian symbolism that has penetrated western society as the performers emerge from a fragmented darkness, punctuated by flashes of light, by shadowy moments where dark figures scurry by like rats, where humans are lit as though struck by lightning or bathed in ominous rumblings of machines, and sound bites extracted from a dying culture. Salves by Maguy Marin is a powerful gaze projected on our contemporary world that captures the way we are defiling and ultimately destroying ourselves. This visual sound poem is dominated by Antoine Garry’s sound design, by Alexandre Béneteaud’s lighting design, by the collected efforts of Louis Gros and Pierre Treille with their magnificent props, and ultimately by Maguy Marin’s deeply layered choreography and visual design – a great global retelling of human history.

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Alonzo King Lines Ballet: Resin and Scheherazade. A woundrous state of human bonding that calls up the origins of the human species.

Alonzo King Lines Ballet: Resin and Scheherazade. A woundrous state of human bonding that calls up the origins of the human species.

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Photo: Bruce Barrett

Watching these two performances by the Alonzo King Lines Ballet I felt myself being transported into an archaic world configured by the power of heat, and light, and air and earth, yet drawing our gaze into a world of highly ritualized human movement that has clear links to the present. The two performances, Resin and Scheherazade were very different. Resin had no narrative. It was abstract and yet the music, taken from Sephardi music, Israeli teaching  of an alphabet lesson, songs in Yiddish , in Ladino, in Arabic, create a soundscape of Mediterranean non-western tones, produced by sad wailing voices and instruments of multiple origins that prepare us for the exploding of our classical notions of balletic movement. Highly formalistic, this company is bathed in a rethinking of the human body subjected to a rigorous ballet training completely transformed by a new sense of bodily stance and new

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Alonzo King Lines Ballet making its début at the National Arts Centre

Alonzo King Lines Ballet making its début at the National Arts Centre

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Corey Scott Gilbert and Meredith Webster in Scheherazade

Photo: RJ Muna

Making its NAC Debut, San Francisco’s acclaimed Alonzo King LINES Ballet performs Scheherazade and Resin at the National Arts Centre on May 4, 2013

OTTAWA, April 24, 2013 — Making its anticipated NAC debut, Alonzo King LINES Ballet presents a double-bill including an innovative reimagining of Scheherazade. Founder, Artistic Director and choreographer, Alonzo King fuses ancient Persian, Sanskrit, and Arabic stories with ballet filtered through a contemporary lens. In Resin, the company gloriously interprets rhythm and melody in a suite of solos, duets, and ensemble dances. 

Alonzo King LINES Ballet takes to the Southam Hall stage at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Saturday, May 4, 2013. The matinee was added due to popular demand.

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