National Circus School productions tap into performers’ acting abilities
MONTREAL, QUE.: MAY 22,
2013--Graduating students from the The National Circus School rehearse their
year-end show, La Vie en Swing, at La Tohu in Montreal on Wednesday May 22, 2013.
Photograph by: Allen McInnis , The Gazette
By Kathryn Greenaway, THE GAZETTE
May 23, 2013
MONTREAL - Very different
types of celebrations act as dramatic catalysts for the National Circus
School’s two-part annual
run at Tohu.
Two productions alternate nights, beginning with Alain
Francoeur’s wedding tale Pour le meilleur et pour le pire, on May 28.
Sharon Moore’s Second World
War dance-hall drama La vie en swing debuts May 29.
The creations feature the graduates of the internationally
renowned school.
These are students at the top of their game, who have spent
years distilling their particular circus skills into a sensational act that
will then be used to audition on the international circus circuit.
These acts are woven into each creator’s narrative.
Francoeur has been working with circus artists for 15 years,
but began his career in dance (Brouhaha Danse) and dance-theatre (Carbone 14)
before adding circus to his body of work (Cirque Éloize, Cirque Alphonse). And
so he brings a particular dance-circus esthetic to his story about a wedding
party.
“The relationships you witness at a wedding offer all sorts
of opportunities to tell stories,” Francoeur said. “There are a multitude of
personalities. People break up, fall in love. But it’s not a linear story. It’s
more a series of tableaus with all the artists onstage all the time.”
The music is plucked from the playbooks of the 1970s, 1980s
and 1990s.
Seat boogies are a real possibility.
Read more:
http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/National+Circus+School+productions+into+performers+acting+abilities/8425373/story.html#ixzz2UCoEtdYF