This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

In the Light

Guillaume Côté's new ballet, “Being and Nothingness” made its premiere alongside two-thirds of Alexei Ratmansky's “Shostakovich Trilogy.” Two quite different pieces to put together and yet the bill was a success. Côté's existential mood allowed the dancers to explore darker shades in vingettes, while Ratmansky's “Shostakovich Trilogy” kept a steady flow of movement.

Performance

The National Ballet of Canada: “Ratmansky and Côté”

Place

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts, Toronto, Ontario, May 30, 2015

Words

Penelope Ford

Kathryn Hosier and Félix Paquet in Guillaume Côté's “Being and Nothingness.” Photo by Karolina Kuras

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

Côté, who was appointed choreographic associate with the National Ballet in 2013, shows considerable style with “Being and Nothingness” as well as choreographic interest. There's something a little unbridled, a bit raw, and it's refreshing to see. The stage was ripped open, minimalist, as might be expected for a ballet after Jean Paul Sartre's essay. A single lightbulb hung middle front, just higher than Greta Hodgkinson's reach, and she danced a lucid, cold solo, “The Light” in its glow, occasionally referencing it, calling to it, and it would now and then respond. Is anyone out there?

The abstract use of objects—there were several others delicately suspended on wires, a mirror here, the corner of a painting—were objects of torment for our characters. This is existentialism at your feet; made vivid in the bedroom, the bathroom, living room. After she's finished with the lightbulb, Hodgkinson turns to a figure lying on a bed. And yet, we find her rehearsing, recounting something obsessively to herself in the depths of the night as though alone. This is a false lead—the next section reveals not one but two figures in the bed.

And so it builds, piece by piece. There is a brilliant and unsettling telephone motif, and another involving a carpet in “The Living Room,” danced with raw intensity by Svetlana Lunkina and Brent Parolin. And a favourite, and the cheers were loud at curtain call, Dylan Tedaldi in moment of angst featuring a bathroom sink. The dancers were riveting, as much for their faces as the no-room-for-error dance phrases; Kathryn Hosier and Jack Bertinshaw being highlights.

In a final phrase, a corps of men, shirtless in dark grey suits jackets and homburgs, expanded the scene, colluding with the opened set by hanging deep upstage, murmuring with their elbows, until gradually being drawn forth for a vignette entitled “The Street” that included a cool quintuple pirouette from Francesco Gabriele Frola.

“Being and Nothingness” while occasionally overstaying its welcome, but very occasionally, shows great choreographic promise, and I look forward to seeing more from Côté as he progresses.

Penelope Ford


Penelope is the founding editor of Fjord Review, international magazine of dance and ballet. Penelope graduated from Law and Arts with majors in philosophy and languages from the University of Melbourne, Australia, before turning to the world of dance. She lives in Italy.

comments

Featured

Sarasota Ballet at Jacob's Pillow
REVIEWS | Carrie Seidman

Sarasota Ballet at Jacob's Pillow

The Sarasota Ballet’s return to Jacob’s Pillow for five days of a triple bill that included two little-seen works by Sir Frederick Ashton and a world premiere by Jessica Lang, was charged with anticipation and curiosity. Not only has it been a decade since the Florida Gulf coast company made its debut at the iconic American dance festival—a scheduled return in 2020 was dashed by the Covid pandemic—but it marked the first appearance of the troupe since reporting in June revealed 18 dancers had departed the company amidst charges of a “toxic” work environment and internal strife.

Continue Reading
An Artistic Evolution, in Fragments
INTERVIEWS | Candice Thompson

An Artistic Evolution, in Fragments

Choreography wasn’t on Lia Cirio’s radar when artistic director Mikko Nissinen asked her to participate in Boston Ballet’s ChoreograpHER initiative in 2018. The principal dancer had always thought, “Oh, that's not something for me. I just like being in the room and helping people and being choreographed on.” But her good friend and colleague at the time, Kathleen Breen Combes, gave her a nudge.

Continue Reading
Good Subscription Agency