This content contains scenes that may shock an uninformed audience.
Do you still want to watch it?
Si c’est un nègre / autoportrait
Faustin Linyekula
Paris-Alger
Nacera Belaza
Un-2-Men-Show
Thomas Lebrun , Foofwa d’Imobilité
Traffic
Rosalind Crisp
Tahaman
Georges Momboye
Spécimen et autres phénomènes pata, para, supra et meta physiques pour danser la fin de la guerre froide…
Sébastien Lefrançois
Solum
Filiz Sizanli
I’m sitting in a room different from the one you are now
João Fiadeiro
Self(ish) Portrait
João Fiadeiro
Je ne sais pas, un jour, peut-être…
Nathalie Pernette
Le pur hasard
Nacera Belaza
A posteriori
Georges Appaix
Le loup et l’agneau [Duo]
Béatrice Massin
Laisser frémir
Elsa Wolliaston , Loïc Touzé
Hors sujet ou le bel ici
Martine Pisani
La Flûte enchantée
Nathalie Pernette
Effroi
Réalisation Centre national de la danse
Dolap
Mustafa Kaplan
Décompositions 1 et 2
Emmanuelle Vo-Dinh
Bribes
Haïm Adri
Back up
Haïm Adri
N° 11 : Le bleu est à la mode cette année…
Laure Bonicel
1 zeste 2
Bruno Sajous , Frédéric Werlé
Triptyque sans titre
Faustin Linyekula
Prologue – La longue histoire de « Vieilles gens, vieux fers »
Jean Weidt
Danser avec J. Weidt – La longue histoire de « Vieilles gens, vieux fers »
Françoise Dupuy , Jean Weidt , Dominique Dupuy
La griserie de l’espace, soirée autour de Jerome Andrews
Jerome Andrews , Dominique Dupuy
Le loup et l’agneau [Traqué]
Béatrice Massin
Atelier performance
Robyn Orlin
We must eat our suckers with the wrappers on
Robyn Orlin
Dans la rue
Robyn Orlin
Au restaurant
Robyn Orlin
Cygne – Daddy, I’ve seen this piece six times before and I still don’t know why they’re hurting each other
Robyn Orlin
Confit de canard [Tigresse et mouton]
Robyn Orlin
Confit de canard – Ann Crosset
Robyn Orlin
Performance / Installation
Faustin Linyekula
Entrée – Don Quichotte, solo provisoire
Dominique Boivin
Errance – Don Quichotte, solo provisoire
Dominique Boivin
Don Quichotte, solo provisoire [Dédale]
Dominique Boivin
La danse, une histoire à ma façon [D’Isadora Duncan à Valeska Gert]
Dominique Boivin
La danse, une histoire à ma façon [Diaghilev et Bauhaus]
Dominique Boivin
La danse, une histoire à ma façon [Années 1950-1970]
Dominique Boivin
Ce dont nous sommes faits [Marques, slogans, pays]
Lia Rodrigues
A quoi tu penses ? [Audition]
Dominique Boivin
A quoi tu penses ? [Solo]
Dominique Boivin
Bonté divine [Rencontre amoureuse]
Dominique Boivin , Pascale Houbin
Bonté divine [Lettres des amants]
Dominique Boivin , Pascale Houbin
Le Lion et le rat
Dominique Boivin
Incarnat [La mère et l’enfant]
Lia Rodrigues
Souffrances et genre humain – Incarnat
Lia Rodrigues
Chantier poétique [Le groupe]
Lia Rodrigues
Chantier poétique [Des corps différents ou violents]
Lia Rodrigues
Chantier poétique [Du solo au groupe]
Lia Rodrigues
Im Kopf – Le Cygne
Andrea Sitter
Le Cargo
Faustin Linyekula
Transmut-2 soli
Marie-Laure Agrapart
Cabinet des figures
Vanessa Le Mat
Zombie Aporia
Daniel Linehan
Pina Jackson in Mercemoriam
Foofwa d’Imobilité
Blackbird
Jiří Kylián
ATTENTE Dov’è la luna
Jean-Christophe Maillot
Closer
Benjamin Millepied
Hommage d’un demi-dimanche à un Nicolas Poussin entier
Hélène Iratchet
Krafff
Yan Raballand
Entrelacs
Lionel Hoche
La confidence des oiseaux
Luc Petton
Ouvrez !
Sylvain Prunenec
Imago
Frédérike Unger , Jérôme Ferron
Dervish in progress
Ziya Azazi
Le Ballet de la Merlaison
Christine Bayle
Le Bal Pendule
Nadine Beaulieu
Tango – Bal au centre… Balez donc
Thomas Lebrun , Christine Corday , Claudia Miazzo , Jean-Paul Padovani
Le Bal [Tango]
Brigitte Seth , Roser Montlló Guberna
Le Bal – Sevillanas
Brigitte Seth
Danses de société – Bal au Centre… Balez donc
Thomas Lebrun
Feue
Thomas Lebrun
Kawa, solo à deux
Aïcha M’Barek , Hafiz Dhaou
Popydog
Jonathan Capdevielle , Marlène Saldana
Un faible degré d’originalité (suffit à conférer une protection)
Antoine Defoort
Le répertoire en mouvement
Isadora Duncan , Noëlle Simonet , Jean-Marc Piquemal
Faites demi-tour dès que possible
Pierre-Johann Suc , Magali Pobel
Eikon [danse de Michael J]
Raphaëlle Delaunay
Eikon [duo Faune doré]
Raphaëlle Delaunay
Apparemment, ce qui ne se voit pas
Anne Le Batard , Jean-Antoine Bigot
Unfinished Fragments : Butterfly
Patricia Greenwood-Karagozian
Unfinished Fragments : Acknowledged
Patricia Greenwood-Karagozian
Une hypothèse de réinterprétation
Rita Quaglia
Grande leçon de danse Ingeborg Liptay
Ingeborg Liptay
Lumière du vide
Ingeborg Liptay
Wave 02
Hervé Robbe
Slogans / opus 1
Hervé Robbe
Une pièce mécanique
Pierre Cottreau , Geisha Fontaine
San
Vincent Mantsoe
Nkululeko
Réalisation Centre national de la danse
Plasticization
Nelisiwe Xaba
Black ! White ?
Nelisiwe Xaba
It’s not over until the fit phat fat lady sings
Hlengiwe Lushaba
Miss Thandi
Gregory Vuyani Maqoma
Beautiful me
Gregory Vuyani Maqoma
Beautiful
Gregory Vuyani Maqoma
Le cerf se voyant dans l’eau
Boyzie Cekwana
Parallèle
Amala Dianor
Noces / Quatuor
Aurélien Richard
Coco le roi du balai
Béatrice Massin
Warm
David Bobée
Hors jeux
Iffra Dia
The Nikel Project, songs & poems
Réalisation Centre national de la danse
Enjoy the Silence
Mickaël Phelippeau
Tempéraments
Shlomi Tuizer
JINX 103
Jozsef Trefeli , Gabor Varga
Le bal tango
Nadine Beaulieu , Brigitte Seth , Philippe Lafeuille , Roser Montlló Guberna
Planes
Trisha Brown
Quatre ciels
Thomas Lebrun
In no sense
Nicolas Paul
Tableaux vivants
Anne Juren
Dokuman
Mustafa Kaplan , Filiz Sizanli
Ô Senseï
Catherine Diverrès
Stance II
Catherine Diverrès
Sacre
David Wampach
Les modulables – Equally loud and in the same tempo
Joanne Leighton
Les modulables – Erasure duet
Joanne Leighton
Les modulables – Fibonacci fugue
Joanne Leighton
Les modulables – I’m getting nowhere and it is a pleasure
Joanne Leighton
Les modulables – I’m sitting in a room
Joanne Leighton
Fragment(s)
Arthur Harel
Des branchés
Céline Léfèvre
Watch iT!
Tony Mills
Popular Music [extrait 2]
Yuval Pick
Popular Music [extrait 1]
Yuval Pick
No play hero [extrait 2]
Yuval Pick
No play hero [extrait 1]
Yuval Pick
Very Wetr ! [extrait 2]
Régine Chopinot
Very Wetr ! [extrait 1]
Régine Chopinot
Sacre #197
Dominique Brun
Covariance
Niv Sheinfeld , Oren Laor
Big mouth
Niv Sheinfeld , Oren Laor
Danseuse piétonne
Maroussia Vossen
Cascade
Cécile Loyer
Mono
Itamar Serussi
Les yeux dans les yeux
Pierre Cottreau , Geisha Fontaine
Faux mouvement
Fabrice Lambert
Silhouette
Mlu Zondi
Ja,nee
Boyzie Cekwana
This is concrete
Jefta Van Dinther , Thiago Granato
Nervures
Fabrice Lambert
D’indicibles violences
Claude Brumachon , Benjamin Lamarche
La fille qui danse
Daniel Dobbels
Un son étrange
Daniel Dobbels
Sang froid
Julia Cima
Two room apartment
Niv Sheinfeld , Oren Laor
La nuit transfigurée
Philippe Saire
Double Take
Filipe Lourenço , Panagiota Kallimani , Emilio Urbina , Rafael Pardillo
Suivront mille ans de calme
Angelin Preljocaj
Marché noir
Angelin Preljocaj
Douve
Tatiana Julien
Final/ment/seule
Cécile Proust
Flat/grand délit
Yann Lheureux
Insensiblement
Myriam Gourfink
Flaque
Éric Longequel , Guillaume Martinet
Clinamen… ou l’Art de (ne pas) gérer une carrière
Lila Greene
Impair
Jérôme Brabant
Coupé décalé [1ère partie] – Robyn Orlin
Robyn Orlin
Coupé décalé [2e partie] – James Carlès
James Carlès
Répète
Fanny de Chaillé
Bruit de couloir
Clément Dazin
Ce que le jour doit à la nuit
Hervé Koubi
Vertige d’Elle
Claire Moineau
Drift
Cindy Van Acker
It's not over until the fit phat fat lady sings
Recorded at the CND 24 June 2005
In this third production – with its title inspired by the English saying “it ain’t over till the fat lady sings” [1], reminding us that nobody can predict the outcome of an event still in progress – the choreographer and director Hlengiwe Lushaba narrates the fate of three women from a small remote village. On stage, the narrator introduces this “modern fairy-tale” with the following sentences [2]. “In a small village, far, far away, lived three enormous women, Gcina, Nuh and Badigé. These three large women shared a house. All they did was talk on the telephone, go shopping and eat. They were so found of eating that they did not have time for anything else. People from the village were anxious because these women did not have friends other than themselves. Some thought that they were ashamed of their weight. But in fact, they were very proud of who they were and of their appearance.” By turns griot, pastor, slam poet, staff sergeant and auctioneer, the same narrator creates a parody auction to sell – “piecemeal” to the highest bidder – a dark, caricatured portrait of Africa, from the traditional African dancer to the colonists travelling through the desert on camels and the African Mafia.
Throughout this show with its cabaret influences, H. Lushaba depicts the post-apartheid identity crisis. The programme which accompanies the show sheds some more light on the choreographer’s aim: “And now, what will happen? Now that we are here, where will we go tomorrow? Two recurring questions in a work which deals in turn with religion, politics and territorial identities. (…) How do we confront a present deprived of its history, stolen from the black majority? How do we deny a colonial heritage, that of apartheid, whose mental, social, economic and cultural implications affect us every day? As if South Africa had been able, in the name of a hypothetical reconciliation, to make a clean break with a past of several centuries in just a decade… So should we forget? No, definitely not, Hlengiwe could forget neither the execution of her political activist brother, nor the white women’s vaguely anxious glances at their handbag in the lifts of the shopping centres…” [3]
In 2005, the piece toured Europe and was performed at the Festival de Liège (Belgium), the Festival Afrique noire in Bern (Switzerland) and at the Centre national de la danse in Pantin (France).
[1] Literally: “It’s not over till the fat lady sings”
[2] M.L.G, La Libre Belgique, 25 January 2005
[3] Virginie Dupray, Centre national de la danse programme, June 2005
Programme extract
Since the abolition of apartheid in 1991 and the gradual introduction of democracy, it’s easy to think that everything in South Africa has been resolved, that black people have found a place equal to those of the white, and that all the citizens of the nation which calls itself the rainbow nation live in equality and fraternity. However, wealth remains white, poverty, black. And many have not yet been made truly accountable for the crimes of the past, something which robs black people of part of their history. In short, it’s still not easy to be black in this country. And then, in addition, if you are a large black woman, at least twice the size of a white woman, you have to ask yourself what kind of a place you have in this kind of society. And what if you like to wear cycling shorts and just a bra? Are you beautiful, ugly or something else? The choreographer Hlengiwe Lushaba’s piece, which will be shown for the first time in Europe, is built freely on these questions of identity, politics and many other things. Freely because someone who dares to suggest – with all the audacity of her youth (she is just over twenty) – that she understands nothing about dance, has created a performance which involves much more than just dance. The work features three strange women, generously built, who walk around with a mobile phone, two dancers who never cease advancing and withdrawing, a slam poet (urban poetry similar to America rap) dressed as a pastor, all caught up in the songs of the fat ladies and their magical voices (they are as likely to sing gospel as Zulu chants) and the frenzied percussion.
Festival de Liège, 2005
Updating: June 2013