Nadia Beugré began her career in a traditional dance theatre in the Ivory Coast and was one of the founders, along with Béatrice Kombé, of the all-female Tché Tché dance company. She later moved to France, where she worked on solo projects and in 2020 founded Libr’Arts in Marseilles. About two years ago, she traveled to Abidjan, the city of her birth, to meet with members of the transgender community there. Specifically, she spoke with a group of trans women, many of whom work as hairdressers by day and club divas by night. With the members of this community, Beugré began to develop a choreographic investigation into gender, identity, and life on the margins of society (although Côte d'Ivoire—and Abijidan in particular—is known for its general permissiveness in comparison to neighboring countries, there are still no specific legal protections for lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender Ivorians, making them vulnerable to violence and hostility).
“Prophétique (on est déjà né.es),” Beugré’s work presented at the Tanz im August festival, is the result of that very investigation. Featuring six performers from Abijidan, Europe, and Brazil, the work is an energizing, ever-shifting blend of vogueing, coupé-décalé (a cross between Congolese rumba, hip-hop, Caribbean music and French folk songs, it is a type of popular dance music from Côte d'Ivoire), and other contemporary dance elements. To the sounds of Ravel’s Bolero, folk songs, and even a nursery rhyme, the performers (some professional dancers, others not) carry out a series of solos and group dances, each one more vibrant than the last.
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