Un-2-Men-Show
2005 - Director : Centre national de la danse, Réalisation
Choreographer(s) : Lebrun, Thomas (France) Foofwa d'Imobilité (Switzerland)
Present in collection(s): Centre national de la danse , CN D - Spectacles et performances
Video producer : Centre national de la danse
Integral video available at CND de Pantin
Un-2-Men-Show
2005 - Director : Centre national de la danse, Réalisation
Choreographer(s) : Lebrun, Thomas (France) Foofwa d'Imobilité (Switzerland)
Present in collection(s): Centre national de la danse , CN D - Spectacles et performances
Video producer : Centre national de la danse
Integral video available at CND de Pantin
Un-2-Men-Show
Following an initial collaboration for “The Show” in 2001, Foofwa d'Imobilité and Thomas Lebrun created “Un-twomen-show”. This was their response to a commission from Lille 2004/Capitale Culturelle, a show with the general theme of the Tango. The two choreographers decided to produce a “show documentary” capable of setting up a dialogue between the video and the proposed stage design. They obviously wanted to make reference to the history of the Argentinian tango, but they were also interested in how it has been used in the history of dance, particularly contemporary. They chose to quote from, even to parody, artists who have used the tango in their work: Jean-Claude Gallotta, Oscar Araïz, Merce Cunningham, Dominique Bagouet, Daniel Larrieu, Hans Van Manen… It was an opportunity to play with the identities of the genres and to borrow this couple dance to deconstruct the social roles of women and men. This show is an engaged show. But the engagement is with pleasure. The tremendous presence of the two performers transforms the pastiche into a series of iconoclastic presentations which they call “théorires” in French (a portmanteau of “theories” and “laugh”).
Laughter is a lucid force.
From tango lessons à la Mademoiselle Yvonne to the butchers' tango by Boris Vian (in chanson de geste style), from a Geisha duet to an American review, the choreographers grab hold of clichés to offer us an alternative reading. Derision keeps seriousness at bay and opens the way for the deformation of codes and forms. The Argentinean writer Jose-Luis Borges recalls the tango he saw “danced against the golden background of dusk by people capable of a quite other dance, that of the knife”. But here, the knife is this theatrical blade, which stabs to the heart of falsehood's power. Foofwa d'Imobilité and Thomas Lebrun take a “social dance”, appropriate it and transform it as they will. The dancers draw on their respective territories to mutually influence each other and their complementary natures create shifts. In this final part of the show, one is dressed in white, the other in black: the pairing of yin and yang. Their connivance is generous and draws us into a dressing-up game where the mask is an art of surfaces, an art of living, a joyful obstruction to oversimplifications around the issue of identity. Their precision in movement is astounding in contrast to the casualness they flaunt. Excess is combined with the art of detail, popular practice calls upon cultural capital; a cabaret performance gives an account of an enquiry into contemporary art. Everything happens as if, finally, it is the possibility of playing itself that is at stake.
Geisha Fontaine
Further information
Digital resource by the Médiathèque du Centre national de la danse
http://mediatheque.cnd.fr/spip.php?page=mediatheque-numerique-ressource&id=PHO00003980
Updating: March 2010
Lebrun, Thomas
Thomas Lebrun has danced for Bernard Glandier, Daniel Larrieu, Christine Bastin, Christine Jouve and Pascal Montrouge, and founded the Illico company in 1998, after composing the solo “Cache Ta Joie!“. Based in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region of France, he was first of all an associated artist at Vivat, Armentières (2003-2005) before taking on a similar role in 2006 at Danse à Lille CDC (Centre for Choreographic Development). “On prendra bien le temps d'y être”, “(La) Trêves” “Les Soirées What You Want?”, “Switch”, “Itinéraire d'un danseur grassouillet” and now “La Constellation Consternée” are all works that are also aesthetic worlds which are explored, allying demanding and precise dance with an assertive theatricality.
Thomas Lebrun has also composed a number of pieces in collaboration, notably with the Swiss choreographer Foofwa d'Imobilité (“Le Show” / “Un Twomen Show”) and the French choreographer Cécile Loyer (Que tál!), and makes training and teaching a priority. She teaches at the CND (National Dance Centre) in Pantin and Lyon, Ménagerie de Verre, La Rochelle Conservatoire, Balletéatro de Porto, etc.
He has also choreographed for foreign companies, such as the Liaonning National Ballet in China, Grupo Tapias in Brazil (a solo and, in 2009, a quintet for the Year of France in Brazil) and for Loreta Juodkaité, the Lithuanian dancer
in the 2009 edition of the New Baltic Dance Festival in Vilnius et for FranceDanse Vilnius managed by CulturesFrance (Vilnius, European cultural capital 2009).
In 2012, Thomas Lebrun becomes the new artistic director for the Centre chorégraphique national de Tours.
Further information
Last update : May 2011
Foofwa d'Imobilité
Dancer, performer, choreographer, dance educator & artistic director of the Neopost Foofwa Company.
Foofwa occupies a pivotal position between tradition and innovation in the choreographic field. Dancer at the Stuttgart Ballet and then at the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, choreographer since 1998. Since 2000 with his company Neopost Foofwa, he has been studying the relationship between dance and sport and invented the “Dancerun”, a hybrid activity between running and dancing over several kilometers (2003). He also studies the relationship between audience and choreographic work in The Making of Spectacles (2008) and Quai du Sujet (2007); the digital body in Media Vice Versa (2002), Avatar dance series, Second Live series (videos) and BodyToys (2007); the historicity of the dancing body in Descendance (2000), Le Show (2001), MIMESIX (2005), Benjamin de Bouillis (2005), Musings (2009), Pina Jackson in Mercemoriam (2009), and Histoires Condansées (2011). He has been commissioned by the Nederlands Dans Theater II, the Ballet de Berne, the Ballet Junior de Genève, in 2010 by the SACD and the Festival d’Avignon with Au Contraire, in 2012 by the Théâtre de la Fenice. He has been supported annually by the Geneva and Swiss public authorities since 2002, received the Leenaards Foundation grant in 1999 and the prize of the prestigious Foundation for Contemporary Arts in New York in 2009. He won, among others, the Lausanne Prize in 1987, the Bessie Award of New York in 1995 “in recognition of outstanding creative achievement; for the innovation, speed and clarity of dance that galvanized a remarkable Cunningham company”, the Swiss Prize for Dance and Choreography in 2006 because “Foofwa occupies a pivotal position between tradition and the avant-garde” and the Swiss Dance Prize category “outstanding dancer” in 2013: “Foofwa d’Imobilité challenges us and breaks with convention. His artistic radicalism is based on the exceptional technical ability he has repeatedly demonstrated in Switzerland and abroad. His works often go against contemporary minimalism.” They are rather “surmodern”, in the sense of Marc Augé, because they are linked to the overabundance of information in our contemporary societies. His most recent pieces or performances focus on a practice of “being-here-present” that allows the works to be permeable to unpredictability, spontaneity and authenticity. Between 2015 and 2018, he led in close collaboration with Jonathan O’Hear the Utile/Inutile project, a vast undertaking centered on creation, pedagogy, mediation, historiography and choreographic succession: /Utile: Redonner Corps (2015), /Inutile: Don Austerity (2015-16), In/Utile: Incorporate (2017) & /Unitile (2018). Since 2018, he has been experimenting with his company a new way of creating & touring with the GLocal project (18-present) in order to produce and disseminate his works based on ethical and social values. The Dancewalk, with its multiple artistic collaborators and partner structures, is its flagship production.
Source and more information
Centre national de la danse, Réalisation
Since 2001, the National Center for Dance (CND) has been making recordings of its shows and educational programming and has created resources from these filmed performances (interviews, danced conferences, meetings with artists, demonstrations, major lessons, symposia specialized, thematic arrangements, etc.).
Un-twomen-show
Artistic direction / Conception : Thomas Lebrun et Foofwa d'Imobilité
Choreography : Thomas Lebrun et Foofwa d'Imobilité - D'après les chorégraphies et les témoignages de Hans Van Manen, Dominique Bagouet, Merce Cunningham, Jean-Claude Gallotta, Daniel Larrieu, Mark Tompkins, Oscar Azaïz, Alain Buffard
Interpretation : Thomas Lebrun et Foofwa d'Imobilité
Text : Foofwa d'Imobilité en collaboration avec Thomas Lebrun
Additionnal music : Mme Butterfly-Puccini, Rosendo-Orquesta Greco, Azabache-Paul Beron, El Chucho-Orquesta, Tipica Portera, Mme Yvonne-Carlos Gardel, Cité tango-Astor Piazzolla, La Argentina-Julia Miguenez , Les joyeux bouchers-Boris Vian, Ana d'Omerka-Lili Boniche
Video conception : Prise de vue pour Mademoiselle Yvonne Angèle Micaux - Vidéo Foofwa d'Imobilité en collaboration avec Thomas Lebrun
Lights : Jean-Marc Serre
Costumes : Thomas Lebrun avec la participation d'Angèle Micaux - Conception des perruques Elisabeth Delesalle
Duration : 63 minutes
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