IMPRESSIONS: Faces

IMPRESSIONS: Faces

Published on October 24, 2012
Jean-Pierre Maurin

IMPRESSIONS OF: Maguy Marin's FACES

Ballet de l'Opéra de Lyon
at Theatre de la Ville
October 16, 2012

Published October 24,  2012

 


Ann Moradian for The Dance Enthusiast

I love Maguy Marin's choreography, or at least, I have in the past, so I was excited to see one of her newer works. The theatre was packed, and the buzz of energy and excitement gave the impression that others felt the same way.

Rumor has it that Lyon Opera Ballet's dancers are fierce. It was my first time seeing them. All I can tell you is that they are wicked costume changers. The speed and agility with which they changed their many, many, many, many costumes was like lightning. The problem was that all motion happened in the dark and all we ever saw was the photographic tableaux in between when they were catching their breath. You didn’t see them panting or heaving though. No sir, not them!

The piece started with a giant, slightly warped mirror filling the back of the stage, a lot like what they used for the set of A Chorus Line. Each of the 28 dancers came in one by one by one (okay, sometimes in twos or threes towards the end). They stood staring out at us. I felt as if I had seen this before, a long time ago.
 

Maguy Marin work entitled FACES. Image © Jean-Pierre Maurin


It was clever how the video projections created lighting, but I was frustrated about not being able to see anything. Admittedly, the reflections against the backdrop created a sense of a painted space that was quite beautiful in an abstract way.

A book on propaganda was for sale in the lobby; it was labeled as inspiration for the creation of the piece, but frankly, I just didn't get it.

A dancer would take his or her stance, enact something such as putting on a crown, and then very slowly and very simply, one by one by one (okay, twos and threes too), others would join in. But 28 dancers was far too many for this particular formula, especially when there was no dancing and no change in the rhythm or dynamics. The lights were so dark that you couldn’t see what they were doing anyway. Unsurprisingly, a number of people left early.

I felt sorry. Maguy Marin's work has influenced my own, with her tongue-in-cheek humor that almost passes for seriousness, and the beautiful way she extends human expression through movement as if it were the most natural thing in the world (when it clearly is not)...

Eight of her works created between 1981 and 2012 are being celebrated in New York City this Fall in conjunction with the Festival d'Automne in Paris. I know at least one of these is a masterpiece, so if you are in town before December 15th, do check them out. However, skip Faces.

 

 

For More Information about
Compagnie Maguy Marin click here

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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