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Bolero Variations
“After ‘Swan Lake’ and ‘The Rite of Spring’, I wanted to work on another famous piece: Maurice Ravel’s ‘Boléro’. This short piece, so well known these days, was first performed in 1928 at the Paris Opera, and has inspired many choreographers such as Maurice Béjart and Odile Duboc, conductors like Leonard Bernstein and the band leader Glenn Miller. My first memory of ‘Boléro’ is the interpretation by Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean during the Sarajevo Olympic Games in 1984: a presentation on ice that was revolutionary in its field and has since become legendary. But the bolero is not just a work by Maurice Ravel; it is also a Spanish dance invented in the 18th century and a South American style of music and dance. ‘Besame Mucho’ is a bolero, as is the song ‘Somos Novios’. In this new piece I wanted to work with this other dimension of bolero.”Raimund Hoghe
Source: Maison de la Danse programmingCreditsConception, chorégraphie Raimund Hoghe collaboration artistique Luca Giacomo Schulte avec Ornella Balestra, Ben Benaouisse, Lorenzo De Brabandere, Emmanuel Eggermont, Raimund Hoghe, Yutaka Takei lumière Raimund Hoghe, Johannes Sundrup son Patrick Buret musique Maurice Ravel, Guiseppe Verdi, Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky et Boleros d’Amérique du Sud Production Compagnie Raimund Hoghe (Düsseldorf-Paris) coproduction Les Spectacles vivants-Centre Pompidou, Festival d’Automne à Paris, Centre Chorégraphique National de Franche-Comté/Belfort avec le soutien de la convention CULTURESFRANCE / Conseil Régional de Franche-Comté / DRAC Franche-Comté ; Tanzquartier Wien (Autriche) avec le soutien de la ville de Düsseldorf remerciements particuliers à la Tanzhaus NRW Düsseldorf et à la Ménagerie de Verre/Paris Réalisation vidéo Charles Picq date du document vidéo 2007 production Maison de la Danse
Durée de l’œuvre 2h