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The BNP Paribas Foundation
Fondation BNP Paribas
Mirage
Vaclav Kunes
Plexus
Aurélien Bory , Kaori Ito
Plan B
Aurélien Bory
Constellation
Alonzo King
Triangle of the Squinches
Alonzo King
l’Espace d’un Instant
Kitsou Dubois
Resin
Alonzo King
Extraits de répertoire
Angelin Preljocaj
Songes
Béatrice Massin
Terpsichore
Béatrice Massin
Fantaisies
Béatrice Massin
Meyer
Alonzo King
Hans was Heiri
Martin Zimmermann , Dimitri De Perrot
May
Vaclav Kunes
Taoub
Aurélien Bory
Wind-up
Vaclav Kunes
Héros Ordinaires
Sylvain Groud
Sinué
Mauro Paccagnella
Le Bal des Intouchables
Les Colporteurs
Hautes pointures
Les Colporteurs
Tarina
Les Colporteurs
Sur la route
Les Colporteurs
Traversées
Kitsou Dubois
Questcequetudeviens ?
Aurélien Bory
Azimut
Aurélien Bory
Géométrie de caoutchouc
Aurélien Bory
Daral Shaga
Feria Musica
Infundibulum
Mauro Paccagnella
Le vertige du papillon
Fatou Traore
4D
Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui
PUZ/ZLE
Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui
Plus ou moins l’infini
Aurélien Bory
Öper Öpis
Martin Zimmermann , Dimitri De Perrot
Micro
Pierre Rigal
Micro
Pierre Rigal
Empreintes Massaï
Georges Momboye
A small hour ago
Vaclav Kunes
Sacrebleu
Fondation BNP Paribas
Reen
Vaclav Kunes
Cordes
Sylvain Groud
People
Sylvain Groud
Donc
Sylvain Groud
Chambre 209
Sylvain Groud
Gaff Aff
Martin Zimmermann , Dimitri De Perrot
Chouf Ouchouf
Martin Zimmermann , Dimitri De Perrot
Les lieux de là
Mathilde Monnier
Sans Objet
Aurélien Bory
La Belle Dame
Béatrice Massin
Collusion
Sylvain Groud
Collusion
Sylvain Groud
Empreintes Massaï
Georges Momboye
Plan B
Plan B is the second spectacle of a trilogy, which combines juggling and acrobatics with space constraints.
Interview of Aurélien Bory
by Stéphane Boitel, published in Le Journal du Théâtre Garonne, January 2003
Plan B?
Aurélien Bory. – An expression used mainly in whodunits and action films. You go on to plan B when plan A didn’t work. I enjoy all that enormously: building up a plan, providing a spare one, in the knowledge that if that also fails, there will be no “plan C”. The characters of Plan B are in that state of mind, action, hope, fragility. Alone with their plans…
Ground plan?
A. B. – Plan B is the second spectacle of a trilogy, which combines juggling and acrobatics with space constraints. In JUI, the work on the cube, the volume, had revealed the rhythm and musicality of juggling and offered a different perception of this discipline: instead of displaying it, approaching it from its visual side, we proposed listening to it. With Plan B, it’s the plan we explore. Which puts the scenography at the centre of our work. This special geometry requires a certain reference to movement and acrobatics, in a tenuous link with the laws of physics. We attempt to incorporate it in the broadest possible way, and to perceive what dreams, qualities, dangers are concealed behind this dialogue with gravity.
Plan sequence?
A. B. – Decomposition of movement reminds us of the cinema and of photography, for example the work of Muybridge or Marey – who in fact took a great interest in acrobatics. For the cinema, I would cite Méliès, who used cinematic artifices for the purposes of magic and illusion. We pay tribute to him in Plan B, except that with us, the artifice doesn’t disappear behind the illusion: on the contrary, it’s rather a question of revealing the device, underlining its simplicity, the paucity of technical resources, and only using its poetical content. Different episodes of the show are inspired by the cinema, citing Keaton for example, who remains the actor’s reference, in the sense that his work consisted in adopting several artistic practices. We are fond of this approach: bringing together on the stage music, acrobatics, juggling and dance, as means of doing our job as actors.
Plan of attack?
A. B. – Basically, my role was to design and construct Plan B, then bring together the artistic team. Light and sound are very important in our shows. The actors are acrobats, jugglers, musicians in one. They all create the entire artistic material based on the constraints of the show, in particular the scenography. Each member of the team is responsible for their own work, develops their own scenic style, while trying to connect it with their internal universe. This produces a fragmented style, which Phil Soltanoff bases himself on to develop the staging. His presence is very important, not only for the show, but also for each one of us.