What distinguishes a dancer from a choreographer? This is, in the end, an empirical question, one that can only be answered in the theatre. To discern the creator from the interpreter, the former must be given the conditions to try, to experiment and, yes, to fail: a team of dancers and, ideally, the full apparatus of theatre making, from costumes and lighting to, above all, an audience. Danseurs Chorégraphes, relaunched in 2024 after more than a decade by artistic director José Martinez, offers the Paris Opéra dancers exactly that. The initiative also reflects and capitalises on another frequently debated choice of the current leadership: sustained collaboration with contemporary choreographers. Rather than reverentially repeating codified classics, dancers are consistently drawn into stylistic negotiation, adaptation and the living, shared process of making work.
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Americans in Paris
There is something charmingly didactic and intellectually generous about American dance companies touring Europe. At the start of a performance, it is not unusual for a director to step forward and offer a brief introduction, explaining the reasons for the tour and sketching the wider context of the programme. Paris audiences experienced this with the Martha Graham Dance Company last autumn, and now again with Dance Theatre of Harlem. Robert Garland, at the helm of the ensemble, took a moment to anchor the performance in lineage, recalling the company’s origins and its illustrious founder, Arthur Mitchell. As Garland recounted, Mitchell...
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What are you looking for in a night out in the theatre? Do you seek beauty? The ethereal? That may be the case for most at a ballet, but CCN Ballet de Lorraine’s double bill at the Southbank Centre wants to bring us on a whole trip.
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