In “Body and Soul (Part 1),” resistance and dissent darken the air. Pite created the ballet in 2019 for the Paris Opera Ballet as the first instalment in a trilogy. Dark suits suggest capitalist homogeny. A breathy narration in French issues simple commands: left, right, left, right, neck, mouth, hip. Two men grasp at each other, their interaction turning combative. Another three dozen dancers join them, flooding the stage, heads twitching and backs hunched, heaving in menacing unison. Over half an hour, across many different configurations, they channel suggestions of malice, rapture, conquest and grief.
Couples reject the fray for private tussles that go to rousing, unexpected places. I’m reminded of how a student of Martha Graham once described her mentor’s work: “It wasn’t cool, it was hot . . . like a knife cutting each time.” Every interaction here is sliced through with feeling: arms outstretched then fiercely retracted, heads wrenched towards chests. Intimacy on the knife-edge of violence, intensified by frantic whispering in the voiceover. We know Pite to be an extraordinary choreographer, but with so many companies now in receipt of her work—from the Royal Ballet to English National Ballet, here taking their first run at it—it’s clear she’s equally talented at getting performers to inhabit the nuances of her compositions. When ENB’s dancers shrug their blazers off, for example, it doesn’t signal relaxation but deficit, a tiny but perceptible distinction.
Tension breaks momentarily as Alice Bellini and Lorenzo Trossello lose themselves in a smooth, silky swell of partnering with all of the tautness of previous duets but none of the fury. A mournful piano kicks in, and we’re beckoned into their haven.
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