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Le Sacre du printemps

Maison de la danse 2023 - Directors : Plasson, Fabien - Belanger, Juliette

Choreographer(s) : Harriague, Martin (France) Malandain, Thierry (France)

Present in collection(s): Maison de la danse , Saisons 2020 > 2024

Video producer : Maison de la Danse de Lyon

Integral video available at Maison de la danse de Lyon

en fr

Le Sacre du printemps

Maison de la danse 2023 - Directors : Plasson, Fabien - Belanger, Juliette

Choreographer(s) : Harriague, Martin (France) Malandain, Thierry (France)

Present in collection(s): Maison de la danse , Saisons 2020 > 2024

Video producer : Maison de la Danse de Lyon

Integral video available at Maison de la danse de Lyon

en fr

Le Sacre du printemps

The relationship between man and nature fascinates and  worries Martin Harriague. Which he already evoked in his recent  choreographic creations (Sirènes, Fossile, Serre) – the rebirth  of the living, its power, the struggle for its survival – Stravinsky’s  iconoclastic and brilliant work for the Ballets Russes contains  everything, and more. In many ways, The Rite of Spring was revolutionary  progress, both in its choreography by Nijinksy and the score. Harriague  decided to use the myth while respecting the composer’s original  intention illustrated by a pagan rite, “it is an obscure and immense  sensation when nature renews its shapes, and it is the vague and  profound disorder of a universal impulse,” Stravinsky explained in an  article that Martin Harriague uses as a reference (CND, Montjoie  magazine, May 29, 1913). Jacques Rivière, the NRF’s insightful director,  spoke at the time of a “biological ballet”, “spring in its effort, in  its spasm... one would believe we were attending a drama under a  microscope”. The complex rhythmic hammering that gives the work its wild  and threatening force suits Martin Harriague’s explosive and earthy  body language. This time he renounces all physical lyricism because the  music makes him do so; he concentrates on the expressive power of  primitive movement and fractal figures through which the group coils,  unfolds, contracts as the living reappears, and makes its way everywhere  before exploding. To Nijinsky, who had dared to make this transgressive  break with classical language, Harriague borrows the trampling of the  spring Augurs who “mark the pulse of Spring with their footsteps”. The  quotes from the original ballet stop there, but the entire piece shows a  willingness to draw on the music’s expressiveness, which was  particularly brilliant under the baton of Teodor Currentzis, to bring  Stravinsky’s vision to life. One physically feels the wild energy and  timeless fear that inhabits this group confronted with the violence of  the living, purified by the rite. We perceive the savagery and the  necessity of the final offering of the chosen one, a feminine principle  embodying the energy of spring, the sap, pure and healthy, which rises,  an allegory of the living that rises towards the light.

Special thanks to Nuria López Cortés, Choreographic Artist. 


Source: Malandain Ballet Biarritz

More information: malandainballet.com

Harriague, Martin

Born in 1986 in Bayonne, France, Martin Harriague started classical and contemporary dancing at the age of 19.

​He  joined the Malandain Ballet Biarritz Junior (France) in 2007,  the Ballet National de Marseille (France) in 2008, and Noord Nederlandse  Dans (Netherlands) from 2010 until 2013.

He danced with Kibbutz Contemporary Dance Company (Israel) from September 2013 until december 2018. 

He is now a freelance choreographer and artist-in-residence at the Malandain Ballet Biarritz. 

Martin  has worked with Itzik Galili, Thierry Malandain, Emmanuel Gat, Roy  Assaf, Rami Be'er, Keren Levi, Stephen Shropshire, Frederic Flamand.

In  parallel to his dancing career, he is choreographing his own work and  composing his own music. His work has received international recognition  and awards in competitions: Stuttgart, Hanover as well as in  Copenhagen. He has created for the Malandain Ballet Biarritz (France),  Leipzig Opera (Germany), Scapino Ballet (Netherlands), Kibbutz Contemporary Dance Company, Metz Opera (France), Project Sally  (Netherlands) and Dantzaz Konpainia (Spain).


Source: Artist's website

More information: www.martinharriague.com

Malandain, Thierry

 Born on the 13th April 1959 in Petit-Quevilly, Thierry Malandain  followed the usual path of a classical dancer but with a strong taste  for the unconventional and an unusual tenacity. Instead of undertaking  training in famous institutions, he followed the teachings of Jacques  Chaurand, Monique Le Dily, René Bon, Daniel Franck, Gilbert Mayer and  Raymond Franchetti. All of them are eminent and engaging teachers with a  strong and picturesque personality… Violette Verdy, who chaired the  Prix de Lausanne at which Thierry Malandain competed in 1978, hired him  to join the Paris Opera Ballet for the season 1977-1978. There, he met  Jean Sarelli, who was then “The” ballet master, and followed him when  Sarelli took over the direction of the Ballet du Rhin. Thierry Malandain  stayed in Mulhouse until 1980 and then joined the Ballet Théâtre  Français de Nancy, directed by Hélène Traïline and Jean-Albert Cartier,  until 1986. He successfully made his first experiences as a  choreographer during the six years he stayed in Lorraine. In 1984, he  won the 1st Prize of the Volinine competition with Quatuor op3, to a  score by Guillaume Lekeu. In 1985 and 1986, he succeeded Maguy Marin as  winner of the 1st Prize of Nyon choreographic competition in Switzerland  with Sonatine, to a score by Karlheinz Stockhausen, and Métamorphosis,  to the music of Benjamin Britten. At this time, Thierry Malandain was  already ambitious and very demanding in his choice of music.


In 1986, Thierry Malandain made a bet. He left the  Ballet Théâtre Français de Nancy with eight dancers and set up the  Compagnie Temps Présent in Elancourt (78), in the suburbs of Paris. He  deliberately chose to get off the beaten track and undertake a mammoth  task. The following season, he was awarded by the Fondation de la  Vocation and the Fondation Oulmont and won the 1st Prize of La Baule  choreographic competition, the 1st Prize of Vaison-la-Romaine  choreographic competition and the Prix de la Nuit des Jeunes Créateurs  in Paris with Angelin Preljocaj and Claude Brumachon. Thierry Malandain  began to make himself known as a promising young talent thanks to  several works: ­­L’Homme aux semelles de vent (1986), created to the  music of Benjamin Britten and staged again under the title Les  Illuminations (1989) for the dancer Patrick Dupond and the Ballet  National de Nancy, Edgar Allan Poe (1988), to scores by Claude Debussy  and André Caplet, and especially Folksongs (1986), choreographed to the  music of Benjamin Britten and performed by several companies, including  the Ballet de Tours of Jean-Christophe Maillot. As people only talked  about the “jeune danse française” in 1988, Thierry Malandain, like his  colleagues, contributed to the development of dance in the suburbs while  proclaiming his attachment to the vocabulary of classical dance. He  even created ballets for opera house companies, such as Danses qu’on  croise (1987), choreographed to the music of Johannes Brahms for the  Ballet de l’Opéra de Nantes. His unique positioning was confusing for  the French choreographic community but not for the international  audience. On the contrary, people, especially in Belgium, started to  talk about the French choreographer who achieved the feat of creating  Les Sylphides, to the music of Frédéric Chopin for the Ballet royal de  Wallonie, and Petite Lune, to a score by Dmitri Shostakovitch for the  Royal Ballet of Flanders, in the same year (1990).


In 1991, Thierry Malandain created Pulcinella by  Igor Stravinsky on the stage of the previously called Maison de la  Culture in Saint-Etienne. At this time, the director Jean-Louis Pichon  was trying to turn the institution into an Opera Theatre—named  L’Esplanade in 1994. He needed a choreographer who would be sensitive to  music and able to have a strong presence on the ground. He invited the  Compagnie Temps Présent for a residence in Saint-Etienne. This event  marked the beginning of a collaboration that lasted six years, during  which the choreographer created several of his best-known ballets: La  Fleur de pierre (1994) by Sergei Prokofiev, L’Après-Midi d’un faune  (1995) by Claude Debussy, Ballet mécanique (1996) by Georges Antheil,  Sextet (1996) by Steve Reich, Casse Noisette (1997) by Piotr Illitch  Tchaikovsky… It was also during these years that Thierry Malandain came  up with the original idea of recreating the ballets composed by Jules  Massenet.


In 1997, the French Ministry of Culture and  Communication and the City of Biarritz offered Thierry Malandain to set  up the first classical Centre Chorégraphique Contemporain in the Basque  coastal resort of Biarritz. It happened so fast that the Centre  Chorégraphique National – Ballet Biarritz opened in September 1998 in  the Gare du Midi, a large building abandoned by trains and whose two big  square towers overlook Biarritz pleasant gardens.

  

The company did not reduce its activity. With the support of  Jean-Louis Pichon, Thierry Malandain began to recreate the complete  works of Massenet (Le Cid, Le Carillon and Cigale) from 1999. In 2000,  La Chambre d’Amour, a musical creation by Peio Çabalette telling a  beautiful local legend, came as a tribute to the new integration of the  choreographer in the city. In 2001, Thierry Malandain paid tribute to the Ballets Russes by creating an eloquent, touching and audacious programme.

In 2003, Ballet Biarritz took a major creative step  with Les Créatures, choreographed to the music of Ludwig van Beethoven.  This powerful, graphic and ambitious work engendered a feeling of  maturity and poise that earned the Ballet greater recognition. For the  first time in its history, the troupe officially performed in Paris  (Théâtre national de Chaillot) thanks to Dominique Hervieu and José  Montalvo, while Les Créatures were nominated at the Benois de la Danse  in Moscow and received the Critics Prize at the 19th International  Ballet Festival of Havana in Cuba.

 

In 2004, Le Sang des Etoiles confirmed the  company’s success. The CCN then became one of the most productive  choreographic centres, with the biggest number of performances per year  and a strong international presence. The institution also grew in  strength. In 2000, Thierry Malandain’s ability to create unanimity led  him almost naturally to the head of the Temps d’Aimer festival,  organised in Biarritz. In the same year, he founded a cross-border  junior ballet in collaboration with the Basque Spanish community in  Donostia-San Sebastián. He juggled all these projects during four years.

In 2005, the choreographer gave up his post as  artistic director of Le Temps d’Aimer festival to focus on his work. He  then created two works based on the spirit of Pre-romantic ballet: Les  Petits Riens (2005), to the music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Don  Juan (2006), to a score by Christoph Willibald Gluck. In the meantime,  the Paris Opera Ballet commissioned Thierry Malandain to create L’Envol  d’Icare (2006), a ballet set to a score by Alfred Schnittke, which was  later nominated at the Benois de la Danse in Moscow. Most of Thierry  Malandain’s ballets are now listed in the repertoire of other big  companies worldwide, such as the Sadamatsu Hamada Ballet, the Teatro di  San Carlo of Naples, the Staatsoper and the Volksoper in Vienna and  numerous ballet troupes from Caracas, Hong Kong, West Palm Beach, Aspen,  Cairo, Riga, Tunis, and Karlsruhe… In France, his works entered the  repertoire of the Ballet de l’Opéra national du Rhin, the Ballet  national de Marseille, the Ballet de l’Opéra national de Bordeaux, the  Ballet du Capitole de Toulouse…


In 2008, Thierry Malandain created L’Amour sorcier  by Manuel de Falla and Le Portrait de l’Infante, choreographed to the  music of Maurice Ravel. In this ballet, the dancers performed around  three Ménines of Manolo Valdès, a Spanish painter and sculptor  influenced by Diego Vélasquez. Thierry Malandain began to miss the  fieldwork. By the end of 2008, after having celebrated the ten years of  his company in Biarritz, the choreographer resumed his post as artistic  director of Le Temps d’Aimer festival to the request of Didier Borotra,  the mayor of the city. In December, Thierry Malandain staged a new  production of Carmen (1996), to the music of Franz Schubert. This work  marked his appointment to the head of the CCN Ballet Biarritz.


In August 2009,  Thierry Malandain was made an “officier” in the Order of Arts and  Letters. The new name of the company, “Malandain Ballet Biarritz”,  heralded a new era for the choreographer. Two new creations followed:  Magifique (2009), to the music of Piotr Illitch Tchaikovsky and Roméo et  Juliette (2010) by Hector Berlioz. Both found favour with audiences and  critics. For the second time of his career, Thierry Malandain  collaborated with a composer, Guillaume Connesson, resulting in the  ballet Lucifer (2011). The score was interpreted by the Orchestre de Pau  Pays de Béarn, conducted by Fayçal Karoui, who is also the musical  director of the New York City Ballet. In 2012, the Opéra de Reims  commissioned Thierry Malandain to create a ballet to celebrate the tenth  anniversary of their fruitful collaboration. As he was given a free  rein, the choreographer chose to explore an unusual musical world by  using traditional French songs interpreted by Le Poème Harmonique of  Vincent Dumestre to create Une Dernière Chanson. This work was awarded  by the Grand Prix du Syndicat de la Critique Théâtre, Musique et Danse  in the dance category in 2012.


In 2013, as Malandain Ballet Biarritz gave more than  hundred performances per year, Thierry Malandain created Cendrillon to  the music of Sergei Prokofiev to the request of Laurent Bruenner, the  director of the Opéra royal de Versailles. The performances of this  ballet were given on the wonderful stage of the Royal Opera of the  Palace of Versailles with the accompaniment of the Orquesta Sinfónica de  Euskadi from Donostia-San Sebastián, conducted by Josep  Caballé-Domenech. A triumph of humanity, Cendrillon was unanimously  acclaimed by the press and audiences. In 2014, Thierry Malandain was  named “Best Choreographer” at the Taglioni European Ballet Awards,  organised by the Malakhov Foundation in Berlin.

French association of professional critics gave the “Best company »  of the year 2017 Award to the Malandain Ballet Biarritz following its  performances of Noah in Chaillot, national theatre of the Danse.

I

n 2019, Thierry  Malandain was appointed at the Académie des beaux-arts in Choreography  Department, along with Blanca Li, Angelin Prejlocaj and Carolyn Carlson.  

In 2020, Thierry Malandain win the SACD 2020 award in the Choreography Department,.  

In 2021, as part of his commitment to supporting  young and emerging dancers, Thierry Malandain will be sharing the bill  with Martin Harriague, associate artist at the CCN Malandain Ballet  Biarritz, for an evening of Stravinsky. They created L’Oiseau de feu and  Le Sacre du printemps respectively at the Scène nationale Le Cratère in  Alès and then at Chaillot-Théâtre national de la Danse in Paris.

In 2023, based on an idea by Laurent Brunner,  Director of Château de Versailles Spectacles, and Stefan Plewniak,  violinist and Principal Conductor of the Royal Opera of Versailles,  Thierry Malandain will create Les Saisons to music by Antonio Vivaldi  and Giovanni Antonio Guido. The premiere will take place on 25 November  2023 at the Palais des Festivals de Cannes – Festival de Danse Cannes –  Côte d’Azur France and then at the Opéra Royal de Versailles with the  Orchestre Royal de Versailles conducted by Stefan Plewniak.               

Source : Malandain Ballet’s website

More on : http://malandainballet.com/

Plasson, Fabien

Born in 1977, Fabien Plasson is a video director specialized in the field of performing arts (dance , music, etc).

During his studies at the Ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts de Lyon (joined in 1995) Fabien discovered video art. He was trained by various video artists (Joel Bartoloméo Pascal Nottoli , Eric Duyckaerts , etc).
He first experimented with the creation of installations and cinematic objects.

From 2001 to 2011, he was in charge of Ginger & Fred video Bar’s programming at La Maison de la Danse in Lyon. He discovered the choreographic field and the importance of this medium in the dissemination, mediation and pedagogical approach to dance alongside Charles Picq, who was a brilliant video director and the director of the video department at that time.

Today, Fabien Plasson is the video director at La Maison de la Danse and in charge of the video section of Numeridanse.tv, an online international  video library, and continues his creative activities, making videos of concerts, performances and also creating video sets for live performances.

Sources: Maison de la Danse ; Fabien Plasson website

More information: fabione.fr

Belanger, Juliette

Juliette Belanger is a director and editor, mainly in the field of live performance (theater, dance, music, etc.).

It was during her first years of study in Métiers des Arts et de la Culture, which she began in Lille in 2018 and finished in Paris in 2021, that Juliette developed her skills and taste for images and video creation. 

She soon became intrigued by the world of live performance, and her first professional experiences began in 2019. Between theater festivals, companies and other production associations, she discovers and defends the stakes of video for the dissemination of live performance. She completed her university studies in 2022, taking the Licence Professionnelle Techniques et Pratiques Artistiques du montage at Lyon II.  

She discovered the world of dance in 2023, working with Fabien Plasson, video director at the Pôle Image de la Maison de la Danse. 

Today, she produces and edits video footage of theater and dance performances for various festivals, companies and cultural events, while continuing to create various video content around the performing arts (reports on creations, artist portraits, etc.).

Malandain Ballet Biarritz

With more than eighty works to his credit, Thierry Malandain developed a very personal vision of dance. Deeply linked to the concept of "Ballet" as an aesthetic movement, he gives priority to the dancing body and the celebration of its sensuality and humanity.

Men and Dance are in the heart and soul of Malandain Ballet Biarritz.

Deep human values underpin Thierry Malandain’s approach, as he leads a troupe of performers who master the grammar of classical dance with a contemporary expression. His search for meaning and aesthetics led to a timeless tough energetic and sober style, which draws its wealth from the roots of dance as well as a dynamic vision of this art. 

"My culture and my genetic heritage come from classical dance and I assuredly remain attached to it. While I gladly admit that some of classical dance’s artistic and social codes are from another time, they give me the information I need to run and develop this company as an organism. As DNA found in all living cells and passed down through generations, this information might be altered over time to result in species diversity and evolution. That is why my dancing style leaves room for variation. Considered as a classical choreographer for some, a contemporary one for others or even seen as hereditarily neoclassical, I am simply on the lookout for a dance I like. A dance that would not only leave traces of pleasure but that would also revive the essence of the Sacred as an answer to the difficulty of being."

Throughout his creations that might be both serious and bold, Thierry Malandain is committed to developing a writing whose goal is to find harmony between classical and contemporary dance and between history and today's world. He then alternates between his own versions of classical ballets, like Roméo et Juliette, Cendrillon, Casse Noisette or L’Après-Midi d’un faune, and pure creations, such as Magifique, Une Dernière Chanson, Estro, and Lucifer, choreographed to a previously unreleased score composed by Guillaume Connesson. 

Thierry Malandain is also open-minded towards the works of his contemporaries, as evidenced by the numerous aesthetically different choreographers he supports through the Centre Chorégraphique National in the framework of the Accueil Studio or Le Temps d'Aimer festival in Biarritz, for which he works as artistic director.

Le Sacre du printemps

Choreography : Martin Harriague

Choreography assistance : Françoise Dubuc, Nuria López Cortés

Set design : Martin Harriague

Original music : Igor Stravinski

Lights : François Menou, Martin Harriague

Costumes : Mieke Kockelkorn, Véronique Murat, Charlotte Margnoux

Settings : Frédéric Vadé

Production / Coproduction of the choreographic work : Donostia Kultura - Victoria Eugenia Antzokia -Donostia / San Sebastián (Espagne) – Ballet T, Chaillot-Théâtre national de la Danse – Paris, Théâtre des Salins, Scène nationale – Martigues, Le Cratère – Scène nationale Alès, Opéra de Reims, La Rampe – Scène conventionnée Echirolles, Opéra de Saint Etienne, CCN Malandain Ballet Biarritz

Production / Coproduction of the video work : Maison de la Danse de Lyon - Fabien Plasson, 2023

Duration : 35'

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