Ce site Web a des limites de navigation. Il est recommandé d'utiliser un navigateur comme Edge, Chrome, Safari ou Firefox.

You Cannes Dance

The last edition of Cannes’ Festival de danse was a kind of mirror of the times. Biennial, it skipped last year’s lockdown but called to account the new incertitude of this season. Director Brigitte Lefèvre, at her last mandate before the arrival of the newly appointed Didier Deschamps, rooted her last program in the metaphoric security of two themes: “earth” (after the other three elements: water, air, fire) and “femininity.” A link with the territory was also essential in the program: in cooperation with the Cannes based École Supérieure de danse, professional students could benefit from masterclasses, the Nice University organized a thematic conference, the city offered films projections and expositions, one of them dedicated to the famous ballerina Rosella Hightower, founder of the local academy.

CCN - Ballet de Lorraine perform “Sounddance” by Merce Cunningham at Cannes Dance Festival. Photograph by Nathalie Sternalski

In a 15-day program with 28 companies, French and international, we caught two performances representative of the festival's artistic line.

In spite of the difficulties, Lefèvre managed to invite the Martha Graham Dance Company from the US to open the program. Moreover: a photo of one of the company’s dancers, So Young An, was chosen as the image of the festival. After some years absent from Europe, the (good) feeling was that of an evening through the company’s history. The director Janet Eilber chose a program featuring pieces by Martha Graham, opening with the signature choreography “Steps in the Street,” from 1936’s “Chronicle.“ Performed by 10 female dancers in the iconic black dresses signed by Graham herself, it still remains one of the most contemporary pieces in the company’s repertory, perfect to open every show.

Martha Graham Dance Company in “Acts of Light” at Cannes Dance Festival. Photograph by Nathalie Sternalski

In comparison “Acts of Light,” a piece from 1981, looked very “vintage.” Anyway, it was historically interesting and appreciated by today’s audience, the big group of 16 dancers impressed with their sunny costumes. An interesting way to pursue the company’s life is through the “creative reconstructions,” such as “Exstasis,” based on a solo choreographed in 1933 by Graham (who signed also the extensible costume) now staged by Virginie Mécène. While the choreographic future of the company could be exemplified by a piece like “Umbra” by Andrea Miller. Maybe not so original but finely composed and exciting at the same time, with its passionate taking and leaving of four couples, very different lines and colours, styles and costumes.

CCN Ballet de Lorraine in “For Four Walls” at Cannes Dance Festival. Photograph by Nathalie Sternalski

The CCN - Ballet de Lorraine is one of those many companies without a well-defined identity, which may be the reason it has never found international claim. The program reflected this lack of a clear profile, starting with the company’s name “Ballet,” where the repertory is totally contemporary. Nevertheless, CCN is by now one of the few companies to keep Merce Cunningham’s pieces in its repertory. The Ballet de Lorraine performed “Sounddance,” a 1975 piece for 10 dancers and a one musician playing John Cage’s music, especially fascinating for the contrast between the austerity of the choreography and the baroque style of the scenography.

CCN - Ballet de Lorraine perform “Static Shot” at Cannes Dance Festival. Photograph by Nathalie Sternalski

A passionate devotee of Cunningham, Ballet de Lorraine’s director Petter Jacobsson, together with Thomas Caley, created “For Four Walls,” imagining what would have been Cunningham’s “Four Walls,” a lost choreography from 1944. Although too long, the new one is an elegant piece for 24 dancers, shown during a Cunningham lesson in a dance room with barres and mirrors. A total change of atmosphere came with “Static Shot,” a very new piece by Maude Le Pladec. The young choreographer, raised with some of the most radical authors of the French scene, composed an exciting show, half a catwalk half a rave, with a techno score and beautiful dresses by the French brand Koché. Reminiscences from Karole Armitage and Jean-Paul Gaultier’s shows looked like updated quotes or homages. Seeing the long standing ovation at the end of the show revealed a lot about the preferences of contemporary dance’s young audience.

Valentina Bonelli


Valentina Bonelli is a dance journalist and critic based in Milan, and a longtime contributor to Vogue Italia and Amadeus. She is a correspondent from Italy for international dance magazines such as Dance Europe and Dance Magazine Japan. As a scholar her main interest lies in the XIX century Russian ballet, in its connections with the Italian ballet school. She has translated and edited Marius Petipa’s Memoires (2010) and Diaries (2018) into Italian, and she is currently writing essays and biographies about La Scala ballerinas dancing at Russian Imperial theatres.

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

comments

Veuillez noter que les commentaires doivent être approvés avant d'être affichés

Featured

Healing Together
REVIEWS | Sophie Bress

Healing Together

Gibney Company’s season at the Joyce Theater was full of common threads, promising beginnings, and lingering energy.

Plus
Steps in the Street
REVIEWS | Karen Hildebrand

Steps in the Street

It seems fitting that as the world held its collective breath over violent threats from the US White House, the Martha Graham Dance Company would perform “Chronicle,” an anti-war statement from 1936, as the centerpiece for the opening of its New York City Center season.

Plus
Ballet in the City with Joshua Beamish
INTERVIEWS | Rachel Howard

Ballet in the City with Joshua Beamish

Perhaps best known for touring with New York City Ballet associate artistic director Wendy Whelan in her show “Restless Creature,” Joshua Beamish grew up dancing in his Canadian hometown of Kelowna, British Columbia, founding his own company when he was just 17.

Plus
Emotionality Unbound
REVIEWS | Steve Sucato

Emotionality Unbound

Ballet Unbound” was a diverse mixed repertory program that landed squarely in Ohio Contemporary Ballet’s sweet spot as a company presenting classical modern dance, and neo-classical and contemporary ballet works.

Plus
Good Subscription Agency