“She’s moving the story to a female lens” explains Maddux, “she’s simply called the Woman rather than Ariadne, the Minotaur is called the Creature of Fear,” while Theseus is cut out altogether. It’s a thrilling, deeply psychological duet when performed in the capable hands of the veterans at the Graham Company. However, in a feat of ambition, the role will be shared by four ballerinas as it enters the repertoire of English National Ballet. Before the company’s debut of the work as part of their R:Evolution mixed bill at Sadler’s Wells this October, I had the chance to watch rehearsals and chat with three of the four women facing the beast: Emily Suzuki, Alice Bellini, and Anna Ciriano.
By now the work is coming together, but the challenge is still present. “This part still doesn’t feel natural to me” says Ciriano, her pelvis jutting out and twisting behind her as she shuffles her feet. There’s a lot in Graham’s choreography that is almost contortionist in its pursuit of expression. The women wring themselves into anxious knots, their arms shield themselves from the Creature of Fear like the gnarled branches of a tree. We’re worlds away from the airs and graces of the classical idiom. “In Graham we want to see the effort” insists Maddux, “we want to see you struggle, the resistance, the rough elasticity, the twist and twitch.” There's plenty of struggle in the work, the Woman is often percussively jerking her body as she darts her gaze around her prison, stabbing her feet into the floor as she seeks her escape.
Graham’s athletic movements root from her all-important relationship with the body's centre, initiating nearly all movement from the abdominals in an exhalation—a contraction. “It’s like, screaming” says Suzuki, pointing to her stomach, “this is the voice, the core is the voice.” Most of the cast had never encountered the Graham technique before. How does one begin to transfer an entirely new, highly codified technique to a group of dancers in such a short amount of time? “In a kind, nurturing way!” laughs Maddux. Over the course of two weeks dancers took Graham classes every morning while workshopping the roles before casting decisions were made. “Everybody worked really hard, yes their hips were screaming out my name, but they did really well” says Maddux with a smile. The crash course had its uses outside of rehearsals: “It really uses the core and the back” says Bellini, “when I swapped into ballet rehearsals I suddenly felt so pulled up!.”
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