The programme devised for this tour, a prelude to the 2027 season marking both the centenary of Béjart’s birth and the fortieth anniversary of his company in Lausanne, opens with “Béjart et nous,” a medley by Julien Favreau: a florilegium of moments masterfully drawn from Béjart’s creative world, offering an expressive and intelligently shaped introduction to the choreographer’s language. Artistic director of the company since 2024 and himself a former leading interpreter of the repertoire, Favreau frames the programme as a living reactivation of Béjart’s legacy. It begins with a burst of solar energy in Stravinsky’s “Concerto en ré,” unfolding in iconic bright yellow costumes with immediate, vital clarity. This gives way to “Héliogabale,” a far more impulsive and earthy fragment, shaped by Béjart’s fascination with ritual and the expressive force of the body, and set to the rhythmic drive of traditional music from Chad. In “Chambre séparée,” the atmosphere becomes more rarefied. This pas de deux, drawn from “Wien, Wien, nur du Allein,” offers a poised and tender interlude; Solène Burel and Josué Ullate appear as two pale blue silhouettes, tracing crystalline balances with exquisite musicality. By contrast, the solo “Trish Trash,” superbly delivered by Daniel Aguado Ramsay, playfully unsettles the classical idiom through athletic wit, sudden bursts of exuberance, and a final flourish of turns that draws the audience into delighted applause.
Among the other excerpts, “Le Tango de Faust” was one of the evening’s most fully realised moments. It shifted the programme’s emotional temperature, becoming at once more erotic, more intimate and more highly charged, and was compellingly danced by Aubin Le Marchand and Antoine Le Moal. The duet also gave striking form to Béjart’s enduring interest in the expressive potential of the male body, and in the singular dramatic and physical presence male dancers can bring to the stage. From there, the programme opened onto the sea-swept world of the celebrated “Seven Greek Dances.” Set to Mikis Theodorakis’s score, the piece unfolds in a vigorous movement language marked by folk inflections and archaic resonances, bringing a surge of open air vitality to the stage, before the Jewish dance from “Dibouk” burst through with thrilling speed and whiplash chaîné turns. One of the programme’s most affecting passages came with excerpts from the ballets devoted to Jacques Brel and Barbara, tributes not only to two legendary chansonniers, but also to the deeply personal Belgian world of memory, friendship and feeling that runs through Béjart’s life and work. In “Ne me quitte pas,” Elisabet Ros, its original interpreter, performed barefoot with exceptional intensity and rare dramatic concentration. The finale, “Le Jerk” from “Messe pour le temps présent,” returned to Béjart’s collaboration with Pierre Henry, a pioneer of electroacoustic music. Danced by an ensemble in jeans and trainers, it remains a vivid testament to Béjart’s openness to popular culture, and to his gift for channelling its energies into eclectic, unforgettable forms that themselves became part of cultural memory.
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