Enter now Paris-based Lenio Kaklea, a Greek-born dancer choreographer and director, and her 2025 work, “The Birds.” Seen in its US premiere at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA last weekend as part of Wonmi’s Warehouse Programs, the 70-minute dance, according to Kaklea’s program notes, explored “how humanity can relate to living creatures through the prism of dance.”
And so it did. Featuring seven glorious terpsichores in an array of fabulous bird-themed costumes by Olivier Mulin, the work was set to an electronic score by Eric Yvelin. The latter, also the technical director, was, according to Kaklea, granted access to the bioacoustics laboratory database of the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), which contained a vast number of field recordings.
That said, this deep dive into terns, swallows, hummingbirds, etal, began with a bare-chested Louis Nam Le Van Ho alone on the stage, a slightly raised platform in this vast warehouse. Bathed in Jean-Marc Ségalen’s red light, he wriggled his shoulders, and, swanning his arms, moved his head and neck in a hunt-and-peck-type vibe, his body seemingly double—or triple—jointed as he also bent from the waist while skittering about.
Soon another creature, Luisa Heilbron, whose feathers were attached to gold leather-like pants, swooped in deploying perfect arabesques, as well as running and leaping jubilantly. The rhythmic soundtrack seemed to also amplify her flitty moves, with Dmitri Mytilinaios joining in the preening procession with lovely unison pirouettes that gave way to fugue-like moves. The music, fanfaresque, sounded the arrival of Nefeli Asteriou. Clad in a blue, breast-baring leather jacket and black tights, she executed pendulum-like sideways thrusts in rhythm with the score, near Vangelis-like (“Chariots of Fire”) in sound.
Indeed, these movers personified Kaklea’s intention, that this “represents a queer utopia, where hybrid beings effortlessly transition between rhythmic and repetitive group movements, silence and immobility, and individual scores.”
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