This content contains scenes that may shock an uninformed audience.
Do you still want to watch it?
Daphnis é Chloé
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Rei Dom ou la légende des Kreuls
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Le genou de mathilde [Portrait de Jean-Claude Gallotta]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
99 duos
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Fragments d’une nuit [Hommage a Yves P.]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Mammame [Le desert d’Arkadine, acte 1]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Presque Don Quichotte
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Presque Don Quichotte
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Carnets d’un rêveur
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Trois Générations
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Rue de Palanka
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Ulysse
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Sunset Fratell
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Montalvo et l’enfant
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Rue de Palanka
Jean-Claude Gallotta
La Légende de Roméo et Juliette
Jean-Claude Gallotta
La Légende de Roméo et Juliette
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Prémonitions
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Prémonitions [extrait]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Paroles sur Don Quichotte
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Montalvo et l’enfant
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Mammame
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Mammame à l’Est
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Mammame à l’Est
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les Louves [d’après le spectacle Les Louves et pandora]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les Louves
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les Louves [plan séquence]
Jean-Claude Gallotta
L ‘Homme à tête de chou
Jean-Claude Gallotta
L’Homme à tête de chou
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Hommage à Pavel Haas
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Les Fantômes du temps
Jean-Claude Gallotta
L’Enfance de Mammame [duo Petite tête]
Jean-Claude Gallotta
L’Enfance de Mammame [duo Dans le corps]
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Cher Ulysse
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Daphnis é Chloé
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les bergers qui s’attrapent [extrait de Daphnis é Chloé]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les bergers qui s’attrapent [Daphnis é Chloé]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les Aventures d’Ivan Vaffan
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les Aventures d’Ivan Vaffan
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les Aventures d’Ivan Vaffan [acte 1]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les Aventures d’Ivan Vaffan [acte 2]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Carnets d’un rêveur
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Des Gens qui dansent
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Des Gens qui dansent
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Carnets d’Angkor
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Carnets d’Angkor
Jean-Claude Gallotta
99 duos
Jean-Claude Gallotta
La Rue
Jean-Claude Gallotta
99 duos
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Mammame [1998]
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Quelques notes de Mammame
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Les Larmes de Marco Polo
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Memoire d’une création
CN D – Centre national de la danse
La Chamoule ou l’Art d’aimer
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Un chant presque éteint
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Fragments d’une nuit [Extrait Hommage a Yves P.]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Quelques notes de l’art d’aimer
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Bach danse expérience
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Mammame 2002
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Racheter la mort des gestes : Chroniques chorégraphiques 1
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Le Sacre du printemps précédé de I-Tumulte, II-Pour Igor
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Yvan Vaffan
CN D – Centre national de la danse
L’Enfance de Mammame
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Docteur Labus
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Vue sur les marches : Jean-Claude Gallotta
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Entre fiction et frictions, rencontre avec Jean-Claude Gallotta
Jean-Claude Gallotta
Mammame’s Childhood [teaser]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Mammame : Les enfants qui toussent (acte II)
CN D – Centre national de la danse
The Rite and its revolutions
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Mammame’s Childhood [illustrated]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
The Stranger [Teaser]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Des Gens qui dansent
Artist’s statement
Des gens qui dansent is the third episode in a trilogy that started in 2002 with 99 duos and continued in 2004 with Trois Générations.
A mother and her daughter, an old, dying writer, a man who came out of nowhere, a Little Red Riding Hood, some wolves, a couple on a bridge, a dancer in high heels, two merry baritones, two lovers from somewhere else, and others. This show brings together on stage a group of ten dancers of different ages who intertwine in passionate twos, tender threes and unusual fours. This is a way of Jean-Claude Gallotta wishing us to be loved madly. Figures who evoke, between friction and fiction, stories such as our own, or glimpsed in the lives of others.
He uses ever fewer devices on stage. The characters who appear, use the same name as off stage: Béatrice, Camille, Françoise, Ximena, Mathilde and Benjamin, Christophe, Darrell, Martin, and Thierry. Perhaps they even wear the same clothes. One thing is for sure, they experience the same joy and the same anguish, and the same energy and the same poetry. Des Gens qui dansent is a flowing transposition of life onto the stage. At times the difference is so slight; Jean-Claude Gallotta sets out to introduce so little “machinery” into his show that it might initially be thought that, on stage, he wanted more to arrange from life rather than to choreograph it. Whereas, of course, the choreography that he does offer, although it appears to be lifelike, if at this stage it is life, is simply set free from the mask of the spectacular. It presents itself here without manipulation, without wrapping, and without subterfuge.
For the spectacular has today changed sides; it has left the theatre and spilled over outside, where it now dresses up and disguises what is real. Consequently, the stage has to repopulate itself otherwise, with people. Better still, with beings. Of course, most of these beings on stage in Des Gens qui dansent are dancers, great dancers. However, they are not there to parade their virtuosity, nor their muscles or flesh. What they have to bare are primarily the relationships that men and women foster with each other and with the world, whose dismantling, turmoil and fragmentation this show does not imitate identically. On the other hand, the stage of Des Gens qui dansent is obviously crossed by their fracture lines. And it is precisely there, on that narrow wire, on those scars, balanced, that there is something to dance about and think perhaps a little about, if that is possible, with all our might.
Claude-Henri Buffard