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Brilliant Corners
Emanuel Gat
Coupé Décalé
Robyn Orlin , James Carlès
Asobi
Kaori Ito
Asobi
Kaori Ito
Flag
Yann Lheureux
Acte sans parole I
Dominique Dupuy
Ashbury Street
Claude Brumachon
Deca Dance
Ohad Naharin
Deca Dance
Ohad Naharin
From Ashes
Koen Augustijnen
Amoveo, Les Sylphides, Le spectre de la rose
Benjamin Millepied
Cendrillon : Ballet recyclable
Philippe Lafeuille
Foudres
Dave St-Pierre
Il n’est pas encore Minuit
Jean-Marc Birraux
La preuve par l’autre
Bouba Landrille Tchouda , Farid Berki , Anne Nguyen
Lied Ballet
Thomas Lebrun
Fuenteovejuna
Antonio Gades
Les corbeaux
Josef Nadj
Jazz au CND
Wayne Barbaste , Matt Mattox , Rick Odums , Géraldine Armstrong
La jeune fille et la mort
Thomas Lebrun
La jeune fille et la mort
Thomas Lebrun
Island of no Memories
Kaori Ito
Island of no memories
Kaori Ito
La trilogie de la chair
Claude Brumachon , Benjamin Lamarche
Via Sophiatown
Jean-Marc Birraux
Si je meurs laissez le balcon ouvert
Raimund Hoghe
Sem Mim
Rodrigo Pederneiras
Songook Yaakaar
Germaine Acogny
Roméo et Juliette
Joëlle Bouvier
Wu Wei
Yoann Bourgeois , Marie Fonte
Wu-Wei
Yoann Bourgeois , Marie Fonte
Nuit blanche
Esteban Moreno , Claudia Codega
Öper Öpis
Martin Zimmermann , Dimitri De Perrot
Öper Öpis
Martin Zimmermann , Dimitri De Perrot
Swan Lake
Dada Masilo
Swan Lake
Dada Masilo
Na Grani
Mickaël Le Mer
Mirror and Music
Saburo Teshigawara
Mirror and Music
Saburo Teshigawara
The Roots
Kader Attou
Géométrie Variable
Ammar Benbouzid , Sadeck Berrabah
Le Spectre de la Rose
Benjamin Millepied
Chotto Desh
Akram Khan
Chotto Desh
Akram Khan
Flamenco se escribe con jota
Miguel Angel Berna , Ursula Lopez , Rafael Campallo
Flamenco se escribe con jota
Miguel Angel Berna , Ursula Lopez , Rafael Campallo
Flamenco se escribe con jota
Miguel Angel Berna , Ursula Lopez , Rafael Campallo
Yo Gee Ti
Mourad Merzouki
Yo Gee Ti
Mourad Merzouki
Japanese Delight
Luc Riolon
Programme Benjamin Millepied
Benjamin Millepied
Grenade, les 20 ans
Josette Baïz
Grenade, les 20 ans
Angelin Preljocaj , Philippe Decouflé , Jean-Claude Gallotta , Abou Lagraa , Michel Kelemenis , Jean-Christophe Maillot , Josette Baïz
Play the darkness
Yuichi Yokoï
Möbius
Rachid Ouramdane
Aringa Rossa
Ambra Senatore
Lied Ballet
Documentary on Thomas Lebrun’s ‘Lied Ballet’; declaring itself to be a reflection on the codes of ballet, here the choreographer considers the pleasure of dancing as an engine for creativity.
‘Lied Ballet’ is a modern piece that brings together two major forms of the romantic era: one choreographic, the other musical.
Using lieder texts as a handbook and an original source of choreographic writing, this production makes its mark on the movements of the past. It flirts with the narrative or formal composition of ballet and skips between the melodious thematics so central to romanticism. Death, love, nature, wanderings, solitude are just some of the common themes between these two forms that have nevertheless taken opposite paths: the folk songs that have become high art, or the shows made for the bourgeoisie which today feature in the Zénith theatres, all the while being ignored by the ‘innovative’ arts. Lied and ballet, through their distinct evolutions, examine the place of social issues and tolerance in the world of culture.
With and through them, I want to question the potential “free space” for contemporary creativity, summoning here the concepts of heritage and transmission in a fragile artistic climate where the live show is often marred with elements of commercialism or voluntary inaccessibility.
The first act, based on the strength of simple movement, guided by verse and dreams, cadenced by the post-mortem photos of the Victorian era, brings together dead children or a sweet, pale young girl, the forsaken bourgeoisie on the brink of madness, an ill-fated poet crumbling under the weight of the world… Supported by the insistent strings of ‘Chukrum’ a piece for a string orchestra by Giacinto Scelsi, this act puts forth a pared-down, pictorial pantomime, rattled by the inner turbulence of the performer.
The second act, on the lieder of Berg, Mahler and Schönberg, gives the eight dancers precise, spirited choreographic parts which map out spaces that foster the variations, pas de deux and pas de trois that we know from ballet. With its minutial relationship with music, this act also examines the idea of a modern-day virtuosity that might not be what we expect. Priority is thus given to the individual qualities and singularities of the dancers, the performers – which for me is essential – but also to poetry, lyricism and the pleasure of dance. An act of enchanted resistance, if you will.
A third chorus act, written for a musical composition by David François Moreau, softens and redefines the social issue, quickens the rhythm and traps the individual in an infinite loop in the footsteps of the elders, the strangers, the disappeared or the eradicated. In the very moment of the action, this individual is carried away by us in a form of inescapable language. When the same dance emerges differently from the same body or others, it is an act of resistance and accepted references.
The dance of today was not born yesterday. The dance of tomorrow already knows that.
Source : Maison de la Danse de Lyon