Distribution
Conception and choreographic writing inspired by Vaslav Nijinski and Valentine Gross-Hugo’s drawings Dominique Brun
Assisted by Clarisse Chanel, Marie Orts, Marcela Santander
Music writing inspired by Igor Stravinsky Juan Pablo Carreño
Musics interpretation Marine Beelen
Original cast Cyril Accorsi, François Chaignaud, Emanuelle Huynh, Latifa Laâbissi, Sylvain Prunenec, Julie Salgues
Light Sylvie Garot
Costumes La Bourette
Technical manager Christophe Poux
Light production Matteo Bambi
Sound Eric Aureau
Photos and videos Ivan Chaumeille
Running time 60 minutes
Thanks to Gisèle Vienne, Christophe Wavelet, Tanguy Accart, Isabelle Ellul, Nicolas Vergneau, Amélie Couillaud, Laure Chartier et Clémence Huckel
credits
Coproduction Association du 48 | Théâtre des Bergeries (Noisy-le-Sec) | Arcadi (Action régionale pour la création artistique et la diffusion en Île-de-France) | Centre national de la danse (Pantin) | Centre national de danse contemporaine (Angers) | Centre chorégraphique national de Montpelllier-Languedoc Roussillon (programme Résidences) | Centre chorégraphique national de Rillieux-la-Pape, Musée de la danse – Centre chorégraphique national de Rennes et de Bretagne | Le Vivat – scène conventionnée pour la danse et le théâtre | Association Ligne de Sorcière
La résidence de Dominique Brun au Théâtre de Bergeries de Noisy-le-Sec est soutenue par le Conseil général de Seine-Saint-Denis
With the support of La DRAC Île-de-France / Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication au titre de l’aide au projet de création et de l’aide à la résidence chorégraphique and Arcadi
FIrST PERFORMED
December 15, 2012 | Théâtre des Bergeries, Noisy-le-Sec
SACRE # 197
La Sacre du printemps, Vaslav Nijinsky’s third piece, after Afternoon of a Faun (1912) and Jeux (1913), is a ballet which was first performed on the 19th of May 1913 at the Théatre des Champs-Elysées in Paris by Serge Diaghilev’s Ballet Russes.
This piece’s anchoring point is in the Nijinksy and Stravinsky’s famous Sacre du printemps’ (1913) danse sacrale. We still have fourteen of Valentine Gross-Hugo’s drawings left, testifying to the fact that in this final dance of the Sacre, the “Chosen One” sacrifices herself for her community, by dancing until she eventually dies. Six dancers, Cyril Accorsi (later Johann Nolhès), Francois Chaignaud, Emmanuelle Huynh (later Marie Orts), Latifa Laâbissi (later Marcela Santander-Corvalàn), Sylvain Prunenec, and Julie Salgues, are all aligned with one or more of these drawings. They undo the lifeless fragments to invent a danse of sacrifice. This one dance is best understood alongside the others that Dominique Brun has composed. The dancers are, one by one, “élu-sacrifié” [“elected-sacrificed”] or one of the members of this primitive community, this “other” who enacts the sacrifice.
That which Dominique Brun seeks to study and illuminate, by virtue of the movement that is Scare #197, can be summed up like this: that which brings us back to Nijinksy’s Sacre is perhaps expressed, from Debussy to Stravinsky, from Greek vases to Gross-Hugo’s drawings, not forgetting Rembrandt and Manet, from his annotated Faun to the 1919 Notebooks… This choreographic work served to support the composer Juan Pablo’s Carreño musical creation. For him, it was a question of clarifying the instrumental register of the orchestral score of Stravinsky’s Sacre, of exploring them in order to come up with a vocal score, sung by Marine Beelen, with electrical music in the background. We are also able to hear a few quotations from Stravinsky’s Noces, as well as Des pas sur la neige and fragments from Debussy’s Prelude a l’Apres-midi d’un faune.