April 1, 2010

Interview : Maverick Marie-Agnès Gillot in Pointe Magazine (April/May 2010)

Laura @ 21:46 —
Filed under: English,Interviews — Tags: , ,

Marie-Agnès Gillot was the first dancer in the history of the Paris Opera Ballet to be made an Etoile not at the end of traditional full-length ballet, but after a contemporary performance. It was Carolyn Carlson’s Signes, in 2004, and since then Gillot has remained the most peculiar star of the company – with few classical heroines in her repertoire, but instead a wealth of tailor-made creations and avant-garde collaborations. I caught up with her a few months ago for a Reverence interview published in the latest issue of Pointe Magazine, with the lovely Maria Kochetkova on the cover:

Cover of the April/May 2010 issue © Pointe Magazine

Cover of the April/May 2010 issue © Pointe Magazine

You are a choreographer as well as a dancer. What drew you to hip hop for Les Rares Différences, the piece you made for the 2007 Festival of Dance in Suresnes?
My subject was Auguste Rodin. I needed bodies like sculptures—ballet dancers are too lean. Hip hop dancers have an absolutely statuesque upper body. I learned a lot from hip hop, too, especially from the movement dissociations.

What are you currently working on?
I’m putting together the first dance flash mob in France, for a charity. We will have professional dancers performing in a train station.

Who inspires you?
All of my colleagues. I pay a lot of attention to them, and I always find something that I would like to replicate. I love taking a little something from everyone.

Of which accomplishment are you the most proud?
I loved my first Don Quixotes and Swan Lakes. It was a consecration—I was already an étoile, even though I didn’t have the title. The audience and the orchestra were stamping. My dressing room was so filled with flowers I couldn’t sit. (…)

» Read the full interview in Pointe Magazine: ‘The Maverick Star,’ April/May 2010





February 16, 2010

Interview : Yuhui Choe

(scroll down for the English version)

Interview de la délicieuse Yuhui Choe pour Dansomanie, en traduction française :

Yuhui Choe © The Royal Ballet

Yuhui Choe © The Royal Ballet

A l’heure où Miyako Yoshida s’apprête à tirer sa révérence au Royal Ballet après une longue carrière, une autre danseuse venue du Japon s’impose lentement mais sûrement sur la scène londonienne : Yuhui Choe, qui est née à Fukuoka mais a fait ses classes à Paris avec Daini Kudo et Dominique Khalfouni. Après une médaille d’argent au Concours International de Paris en 2000, le Prix de Lausanne lui a permis, deux ans plus tard, de laisser de côté ses rêves français pour intégrer le Royal Ballet. Un choix qui s’est révélé fructueux – distribuée dans le pas de deux de l’Oiseau bleu dès sa titularisation, en 2004, elle devient Première Soliste en 2008 sans même être passée par l’échelon de Soliste, et fait ses débuts dans La Bayadère aux côtés de Sergueï Polunin. Distribuée dans Petipa comme dans Balanchine, elle participe également aux créations de Wayne McGregor et Jonathan Watkins. La pureté cristalline de sa danse et la délicatesse de ses ports de bras en font surtout l’une des héritières naturelles du répertoire de Frederick Ashton, et 2010 devrait lui appartenir avec deux nouveaux rôles de premier plan – La Fille mal gardée et Cendrillon.

Comment avez-vous commencé la danse au Japon?
Quand j’ai eu 5 ans, ma mère m’a poussé à apprendre quelque chose, le piano ou la danse – quelque chose d’artistique. De manière complètement spontanée, j’ai choisi la danse, mais je n’y avais jamais vraiment songé auparavant. Ma mère m’a emmenée à des cours de danse classique aux alentours de Fukuoka, où nous habitions, et j’ai encore le souvenir de mon tout premier cours : l’image est gravée dans ma mémoire, je me souviens de tout, j’étais tellement enthousiaste.

Quels ont été les professeurs qui vous ont le plus influencée?
Daini Kudo en fait partie. Il est installé en France, et je l’ai rencontré à l’âge de quatorze ans – il était alors sur le point d’ouvrir une école de danse pour étudiants japonais à Paris. J’avais toujours voulu aller à l’Ecole de danse de l’Opéra de Paris, et c’est pour cette raison que je suis partie pour la France. Elisabeth Platel était une véritable source d’inspiration pour moi à l’époque – je voulais aller là-bas, étudier son élégance, être comme elle. (…)

» Lire l’interview dans son intégralité sur Dansomanie


And meet The Royal Ballet’s First Soloist in English:

Miyako Yoshida may be about to take her last steps on the stage of the Royal Opera House, but another dancer from Japan has been quietly making her mark at Covent Garden : Yuhui Choe, who was born in Fukuoka. She spent her teenage years training in France with Daini Kudo and Dominique Khalfouni and won a Silver Medal at the last Paris International Dance Competition. She had hoped to stay and work in France, but when a Prix de Lausanne Prize awarded her the opportunity to join the Royal Ballet in 2002, she decided to give it a try.

And London has proved to be an outstanding fit for the lyrical, innately musical Choe. Cast as Princess Florine in The Sleeping Beauty during her second year with the company, she jumped a rank to become a First Soloist in 2008, and went on to dance her first full-length ballet, La Bayadère. She has created works for Wayne McGregor or Jonathan Watkins, but her classical purity and cristalline phrasing also single her out as a natural heiress to the Ashton repertoire – and with debuts in La Fille mal gardée and Cinderella already scheduled for April, 2010 may well be her year.

How did you start dancing in Japan?
When I was 5, my mother wanted me to learn something, and she suggested I learned piano or dance – something artistic. From out of nowhere I said dance, but I had never really thought about it before. My mom took me to ballet classes around Fukuoka, where we lived, and I recall the first time I went to a ballet class: it’s a clear picture in my mind, I remember everything, I was so enthusiastic.

Who were the most influential teachers in your training?
Daini Kudo is one. He is based in France, and I met him when I was 14 – he was then about to open a ballet school for Japanese students in Paris. I had always wanted to go to the Paris Opera Ballet School, and that’s why I went to France. Elisabeth Platel was such an inspiration at the time – I wanted to go there and study her elegance, to be like her. (…)

» Read the interview in full on Dansomanie

Yuhui Choe in La Bayadère © Bill Cooper

Yuhui Choe in La Bayadère © Bill Cooper

Yuhui Choe will appear at the Royal Opera House in Jonathan Watkins’s As One in February-March, in La Fille mal gardée on 5 April and in Cinderella on 17 April.





February 14, 2010

Interview : Voyager Noelani Pantastico in Pointe Magazine (February/March 2010)

Monte-Carlo is home to a hidden jewel – a classically trained company led by an inventive and successful choreographer, Jean-Christophe Maillot. His Roméo et Juliette entered the repertoire of Pacific Northwest Ballet in 2008, and one of the company’s principal dancers, having fallen in love with his style, decided to follow him to France. Noelani Pantastico hasn’t looked back since. I caught up with her on a summer day as the company was getting ready for their annual outdoors festival on the terraces of the Casino, Les Nuits de la Danse.

Cover of the February/March 2010 issue © Pointe Magazine

Cover of the February/March 2010 issue © Pointe Magazine

Do you miss classical tutus?
Not yet. But this morning Sleeping Beauty was on. Dancing Aurora took me to a different level at Pacific Northwest Ballet. That part of my life is done, but it was positive.

Where do you consider home?
I’m still finding myself. I don’t want it to be comfortable here—that was the whole reason I left Seattle.

What qualities do you admire most in other dancers?
Tenacity. In Monte-Carlo, I look up to Bernice Coppieters. She still strives to make each step count. She holds the bar very high for the company.

How do you prepare your pointe shoes?
It’s changed since Seattle. I have to dye my own shoes, and then I glue the insides, very lightly. We do a lot of demi-pointe work, and the shoes need to be softer for me to roll through them easily. (…)

» Read the full interview in Pointe Magazine: “Now, Voyager,” February/March 2010





January 14, 2010

Now online: Brigitte Lefèvre Interview for Pointe Magazine (April/May 2009)

Laura @ 00:16 —
Filed under: English,Interviews — Tags: ,

Early last year I interviewed Brigitte Lefèvre for Pointe Magazine, and asked the almighty Artistic Director of the Paris Opera Ballet how she went about casting the many works performed by the company. The article was published in the April/May 2009 issue of the magazine, but her answers are now also online on Pointe’s shiny new website, in the archives section:

Cover of the April/May 2009 issue © Pointe Magazine

Cover of the April/May 2009 issue © Pointe Magazine

How do you go about casting each program?
I am in charge of all the casting, but it is really a group effort: I work very closely with the chief ballet master Patrice Bart and the administrator Olivier Aldeano. I try to figure out which dancer is best for each type of choreography, and whether it would be interesting to give someone who has been cast in classical works a chance to venture into something different. I don’t want dancers to become specialized.

How does the hierarchy at POB affect casting?
It sets rules—it is a basis for mutual comprehension. It used to be very rigid, but I think we have succeeded in making it both present and very flexible. When Benjamin Millepied choreographed Triade last year, I didn’t hesitate to entrust a young dancer with one of the main roles. I remain very cautious though, because the company has many étoiles and it is my duty to cast them. Everyone wants to dance, obviously. (…)

» Read the full interview in Pointe Magazine: “Classical to Contemporary”, April/May 2009





December 12, 2009

Cloud Interview: Abi Mortimer (Lîla Dance)

Laura @ 02:33 —
Filed under: English,Interviews — Tags: ,

We wrap up our Cloud Interview series with Lîla Dance, a young company with roots in West Sussex. Abi Mortimer and Carrie Whitaker share the credits for the solo they presented at the Cloud Dance Festival, Here, Still Here, Still, and while Carrie was preparing for the performance, Abi kindly discussed the absent presence at the heart of the work, the company’s community projects, and their recent collaboration with outside choreographers.

Can you tell me about your background and Lîla Dance?
It goes back to school – I did GCSE and A-Levels in Dance. I then decided to do a degree, so I went to the University of Chichester, and also completed a Master’s in Choreography. On the back of the Master’s, we formed Lîla Dance – I felt that we had started something in our research, a language, that we hadn’t quite got to grips with yet. Lîla is a Sanskrit word which means “play for no reason”, just for the sake of play. Four of us set up the company, and two of us are now left, as things go in the dance world! Both Carrie [Whitaker] and I work at the University of Chichester, and we’re also an associate company of The Point, a theatre in Eastleigh. They just opened a new creation centre, and we have a “Home from Home” contract with them.
I have personally made four works on Lîla. Well, I direct the works, but the collaboration is between Carrie, me and the dancers – they take care of their movement material, they are very much thinking dancers, as understanding of the language as I am.

What was the thinking behind Here, still here, still?
If I’m honest, it came from losing a dancer. We had to quickly make a quartet into a trio, and we found something quite interesting – that there was a sort of presence of absence left, the feeling that someone who should have been there wasn’t there, a sense that he was still present. That was the beginning seed, although we didn’t think about it until afterwards. It became apparent when we started to make this solo, and we gave Carrie different dance partners, to see what was left when you took the partner away. It was about undergoing a process, we didn’t know before starting what we wanted the solo to look like.
A theatricality came out of it, she often didn’t feel alone – we have moments in it where she says, this is where Abi is. She feels accompanied in her solo. It has a narrative texture, and it’s become for me about a woman who has had a history and now finds herself reflecting on it. We didn’t quite realise how emotional it would be. I think Doug Evans, our composer, really found a distance in the score – and he also came up with words at the end, a line that we felt was right.

What’s next for you after the festival?
At the moment we are in residence for three weeks, working with an Italian choreographer, Simona Bertozzi. This is the first time we have invited choreographers, and we will also have Yael Flexer, formerly from Bedlam Dance, until June. In March we premiere both the piece choreographed by Simona Bertozzi and a re-worked version of Tracker, which we performed at the last Cloud Dance Festival. We will then tour both in our first full-length show. Getting funding for this project was a turning point; we’ve got support from West Sussex County Council, South East Dance, and of course The Point and the University of Chichester. We have been very lucky, and it has made it all possible.

What are your inspirations?
We’ve been very lucky to have had the mentorship of Hofesh Shechter for two years as part of our contract with The Point, and he has been an influence. Siobhan Davies also – I love her treatment of material, her use of narrative without trying to say a story. But for me, it’s the way we work in the studio that has created an identity for our company. It’s interesting now that we’re exploring that with other choreographers and don’t have a complete say, because we do have our way of moving and understanding, and sometimes you want them out of the room! More seriously, I think it will shape and change what we’ve done, and I think we have chosen the right people to let in.
Francis Bacon’s work is another inspiration, because of the way he captures feeling. But mainly my inspirations have come from dance, from play – I think we’re primarily improvisers who shape material into a kind of technique, which always comes from play.

How would you describe your style?
It is not unlike contact improvisation – it features a really dropped use of the pelvis. We also like tu use the floor, to play with the efficiency of going in and out of the floor. But the solo we are doing for the festival is stiller than previous works – we wanted to show more sculpture. Our style is also muscular, athlectic, and very human. It talks about the human condition, in a non-narrative sense.

Any Christmas wishes for your company?
More money, bigger platforms, and apprentices – we have a couple of them and we would love to have the ressources and the money to develop them. Because of the language we use, it’s hard to teach dancers everything we need on a small budget. Apprentices will be an important step forward – we are lucky that we teach 200 people a week between us, we see a lot of young people, a lot of talent. We have a main Lîla’s Youth Company, the MayaKaras, and we create a work with them once a year. There is also a scheme at the Chichester University, where we audition and work with talented people to develop a company. It has become an important feeder for us. And on top of that I am the choreographer for the GCSE’s set study – we are very much involved in the community.

Lîla Dance is a creative associate of The Point, Eastleigh, UK.
Many thanks to Chantal Guevara for making these interviews possible.

Lîla Dance © Mikah Smillie

Lîla Dance at a previous Festival © Mikah Smillie





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