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Les métiers de Chaillot – Cintrier / Cintrière
Thomas Rollo
Les métiers de Chaillot – Régisseur son / Régisseuse son
Thomas Rollo
Les gestes de la danse : Olivier Dubois
Olivier Dubois
Les métiers de Chaillot – Électricien / Électricienne
Thomas Rollo
Les métiers de Chaillot – Responsable du bureau d’études
Thomas Rollo
Les métiers de Chaillot – Tapissier / Tapissière
Thomas Rollo
Thomas Bradley – créateur de costumes
Emanuel Gat
Les métiers de Chaillot – Menuisier / Menuisière • Serrurier / Serrurière
Thomas Rollo
Chaillot expérience
Thomas Rollo
Chaillot en tournée dans les écoles
Thomas Rollo
Les gestes de la danse : Michelle Noiret
Michèle Noiret
Les gestes de la danse : Noé Soulier
Noé Soulier
Les gestes de la danse : Abou Lagraa
Abou Lagraa
Les gestes de la danse : Jann Gallois
Jann Gallois
Les gestes de la danse : José Montalvo
José Montalvo
Les gestes de la danse : Tatiana Julien
Tatiana Julien
Paroles croisées : Maud Le Pladec & Hyacinthe Ravet
Maud Le Pladec
Paroles croisées : Damien Jalet & Emanuele Coccia
Damien Jalet
Paroles Croisées : François Chaignaud & Clovis Maillet
François Chaignaud
Les gestes de la danse : Carolyn Carlson
Carolyn Carlson
Borrowed light
Tero Saarinen
Asobi
Kaori Ito
Dah-Dah-Sko-Dah-Dah
Saburo Teshigawara
Auguri
Olivier Dubois
Morphed
Tero Saarinen
Bosque Ardora
Rocío Molina
The art of Ohad Naharin
Ohad Naharin
Teaser de “Grito de Pelao” Rocío Molina et Sílvia Pérez Cruz
Rocío Molina , Sílvia Péres Cruz
Teaser – “D. Quixote” by Andrés Marín
Andrés Marin
La Grande Rencontre avec William Forsythe
William Forsythe , Noé Soulier
La Grande Rencontre avec William Forsythe
William Forsythe , Noé Soulier
Mandala (Short Story)
Carolyn Carlson
Inanna
Carolyn Carlson
Vue sur les marches – Daniel Dobbels
Daniel Dobbels
Vue sur les marches – Koen Augustijnen
Koen Augustijnen
Vue sur les marches – Hervé Robbe
Hervé Robbe
Vue sur les marches – Krzysztof Warlikowski
Jarmo Penttila
Vue sur les marches – Joanne Leighton
Joanne Leighton
Vue sur les marches – Cie 14/20
Jarmo Penttila
Vue sur les marches – Carolyn Carlson
Jarmo Penttila
Vue sur les marches – Marc Lainé
Jarmo Penttila
Vue sur les marches – Luc Petton
Luc Petton
Vue sur les marches – Cirque Eloize
Jarmo Penttila
Vue sur les marches – Bertrand Bossard
Bertrand Bossard
Vue sur les marches – Patrice Thibaud
Patrice Thibaud
Rencontres : Carolyn Carlson & Eva Yerbabuena
Eva Yerbabuena , Carolyn Carlson
Danzaora
Rocío Molina
La Familia de los Reyes
Chaillot-Théâtre National de la Danse
La jeune fille et la mort
Thomas Lebrun
La Bossa Fataka de Rameau
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Vue sur les marches – Catherine Diverrès
Catherine Diverrès
Zoom on a Chaillot nomade at the Louvre Museum
José Montalvo
Orphée
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Paradis
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Zoom on a lecture around “On danse”
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Vue sur les marches – Thomas Lebrun
Thomas Lebrun
Zoom on a Nocturne at the Louvre museum
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Deca Dance
Ohad Naharin
On danfe
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Vue sur les marches – José Montalvo
José Montalvo
Hollaka Hollala
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Zoom on an interview with Trisha Brown
Trisha Brown
Double trouble
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Orphée
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
The Rite of Spring
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Vue sur les marches – Trisha Brown
Trisha Brown
Zoom on a Nocturne at the Louvre museum
Carolyn Carlson
Zoom on a Chaillot nomade
Farid Ounchiouene
I’m going to toss my arms, if you catch them they’re yours
Trisha Brown
Vue sur les marches – Saburo Teshigawara
Saburo Teshigawara
Zoom on a ball in Chaillot – The Gershwin Ball
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Zoom on a ball in Chaillot – The Bal rêveur
Thomas Lebrun
Zoom on a Chaillot nomade
Chaillot-Théâtre National de la Danse
El Djoudour, the roots
Abou Lagraa
Babelle heureuse
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Vue sur les marches – Arkadi Zaides
Arkadi Zaides
Good morning, Mr Gershwin
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
O Senseï – Stance II
Catherine Diverrès
Un nioc de paradis
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Workshop around “Orphée”
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Les Paladins
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Opal Loop
Trisha Brown
Zoom backstage : auditions for “Orphée”
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Zoom on a small popular dance university – Standing
Chaillot-Théâtre National de la Danse
Vue sur les marches – Russell Maliphant
Russell Maliphant
Watermotor
Trisha Brown
Zoom on a Nocturne at the Louvre Museum
Frédéric Flamand
Le Corbeau et le Renard
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Mirror and Music
Saburo Teshigawara
Borrowed light
Choreographer Tero Saarinen has been intrigued by the Shakers since the late 1980’s, when he first saw a documentary about Doris Humphrey’s Shaker-inspired choreography. The strong communal values and strikingly beautiful, functionalistic aesthetics of this radical religious movement of the 18th and 19th centuries made a strong impression on Saarinen. Over the years, he continued studying Shaker architecture, design and ideas.
At the start of the 21st century, Saarinen came across The Boston Camerata album Simple Gifts. The music’s manic repetition touched him deeply and the idea of a new work began fermenting in his mind. In 2002, he contacted Joel Cohen, then Artistic Director of The Boston Camerata, about the possibility of a joint production.
The co-creative process with The Boston Camerata began with Cohen humming melodies to Saarinen. The selection of 20 Shaker songs was made from an archive of hundreds – some never published before. Saarinen and Cohen met several times in Europe and the U.S., and also travelled to the Sabbathday Lake Community in Maine to meet the four remaining Shakers still alive at that time.
It took eighteen months of hard work for Saarinen and his collaborators to finalise the choreography and the visual form of Borrowed Light. The work is named after the architectural practice, common for the Shakers, of building windows into interior rooms, thus maximising daylight and productivity. Saarinen and his trusted collaborators, Lighting and Set Designer Mikki Kunttu and Costume Designer Erika Turunen, approached light as a religious metaphor. The visual appearance of the work is rooted in the aesthetic of frugality and the accentuation of opposites. The costumes combine heavy felting with airy, transparent fabrics. The lighting design emphasises the opposite worlds of mystical shadows and piercingly bright light.
Even though the entire production team did not meet in one place until a week before the premiere, the xtended working period and the devotion of all the artists involved allowed these teo ensembles to be seamlessly integrated into each other, into one performance.
Despite the strong influences of the Shakers, Borrowed Light addresses the themes of communitarian society on a general level: “My main source of inspiration was the Shakers and I ended up using only original Shaker music, but this work is not about Shakerism. It is about community and devotion. To me the nature of total commitment – whether religious, artistic or political – is fundamentally the same.”
Source: Tero Saarinen Company
About the musical tradition of the Shakers
Shaker music employs the simplest means to achieve extraordinary levels of beauty and emotional intensity. The forms are generally short and binary, and use the melodic and modal language of English folk songs. The composers of these pieces were ordinary Shakers encouraged by the community to express their spirituality through song. At the height of the Shaker movement, the performance of this music was exclusively vocal, performed by a chaste community, a cappella and in unison. Thus, this repertoire of sacred vocal music is in a way the American equivalent of Gregorian chant. However, an important difference from the latter is the frequent presence of spirited dance rhythms which make these songs, yesterday as today, perfect means of expressing religious sentiment through movement. Several thousand of these songs have been transcribed by the Shakers, but until recently only a few were known outside the community. Much of the music in Borrowed Light was transcribed from manuscripts and remains unpublished to this day. For two songs, in this case – Repentance and Verdant Grove – we believe Borrowed Light is playing them for the first time outside of the community, and has done so for over 150 years.
Source: Theatreonline.com