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Tanztheater All-Stars

London loves Pina Bausch. The Tanztheater legend is an annual fixture at Sadler’s Wells, and her work still manages to be one of the hottest tickets in town. So when it was announced there was to be the London premiere of one of Bausch’s final works, including most of the original cast, the city’s dance scene was abuzz. “Sweet Mambo” premiered in 2008, a year before the choreographer's death, and the wait was entirely worth it. And with many of Tanztheater Wuppertal’s greatest icons (including Nazareth Panadero, Julie Shanahan, and Andrey Berezin) in tow, it proved to be another resounding victory for the veteran performers.

Performance

Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch: “Sweet Mambo”

Place

Sadler's Wells, London, UK, February 11, 2026

Words

Eoin Fenton

Pina Bausch's “Sweet Mambo.” Photograph by Karl-Heinz Krauskopf

The work begins with the amazonian Naomi Brito gently chiming a praying bowl as if lulling us into a trance, a world of meditation. She is a vision of zen, gently smiling while Berezin pecks her with gentle kisses. Her arms begin to undulate around her in her bright slip-dress, in typically Bauschian fashion. Before leaving she asks us to not forget her, a request repeated by many of the other dancers throughout the work. Throughout we are constantly reminded of the transient nature of a performance, of a life that exists in nostalgia and glamour.

And there is a lot of glamour in the work. The set is composed of rows and rows of silky white sheets that flow with help from an offstage wind machine. The women, dressed in evening gowns with hair flowing freely, are modelesque beauties in a shimmery perfume ad. The three men oftentimes play the role of bodice-ripping lovers and admirers, sometimes as flunkies at the heel of the women waiting for commands. Bausch however is never one to shy away from brutality in her work. One sequence sees Shanahan running after Panadero, but always being pulled away by two men before being able to reach her. The increasing stress and strain of the exercise leaves Shanahan a wailing mess, as if trapped in a looping dream.

Pina Bausch's “Sweet Mambo.” Photograph by Karl-Heinz Krauskopf

Pina Bausch's “Sweet Mambo.” Photograph by Karl-Heinz Krauskopf

And yet, unlike other works in Bausch’s repertoire, the balance between the dreamy and the brutal largely skews to the former in “Sweet Mambo.” There is a gentleness to this windswept world. Even while sulking about to the melancholic tones of the loungey soundtrack there is something angelic about the figures on stage. Perhaps it is the retrospective nature of their musings, recalling the features they inherited from various relatives, reminiscing on their tours across the world. Peter Pabst’s flowy set and black and white projections certainly amp up the celestial vibes. Even as intensity mounts in the second act, with the wind machine at full throttle, the joy of the work resounds.

This joy is especially evident in how playful the work is, particularly in the hands of Panadero. She lumbers on stage, occasionally in a platinum blonde wig, bespectacled, and wielding a mic. In her gravelly voice, flavoured with a heavy Spanish accent, she barks out wooden lines to the audience like a stand-up from a David Lynch movie. Panadero, a legend of Wuppertal, straddles between the absurd and the hilarious with gusto. One feels that after the years of angst and turmoil these dancers endured on stage, Bausch gave them a gift in this divine piece. “Sweet Mambo” is their chance to remember the fonder times and go forth with grace. Undoubtedly it is one of Pina Bausch’s finest works. 

 

Eoin Fenton


Eoin (they/he) is a dance maker and writer based in Cork and London. They have danced across Ireland and London in venues including The Place, Project Arts Centre Dublin and Galway Cathedral. Eoin graduated with a BA in Choreography from Middlesex University in 2024 and began writing as part of the Resolution Reviews programme. They are a regular contributor to A Young(ish) Perspective. 

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