In the weeks before
the Festival, we’ve been featuring several GCDF dance artists here on the blog.
These amazing pieces give us an intimate, behind-the-scenes glimpse into the
artistry, process, and experiences these talented dancers and choreographers from
across the country are bringing to this year’s Guelph Contemporary Dance
Festival http://www.guelphcontemporarydancefestival.com/festival.php. We encourage you to not just read their
amazing stories, but to ask questions or engage in conversation about dance in
our comments section below. Get ready to
Power Up!
Yvonne
Ng, artistic director of Toronto’s tiger princess dance projects tells us what
influenced her when developing and then remounting Cypress, which presents at our On the Stage, Stage B on Saturday, June 2, at 8pm.
Yvonne: The
choreographic foundation of Cypress
probably began in studio about fifteen years ago. I was choreographing a
solo work with Susan Lee and, once I had built the bare bones of it on Susan
(and I promise there was no evil twinkle in my eye, no matter what she says), I
asked her to re-run the solo but switch the axis from vertical
(standing up) to horizontal. That piece was eventually named Blue Jade and, with the addition of a
12-foot long dress designed and constructed by Catherine Thompson and sound by
Ted Onyszczak, we had some success with it, performing it a couple of
times in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver.
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Cypress remounted. Photo by Brianna Lombardo. |
That got me
thinking about constriction and how it can be used as a tool to progress a choreographic phrase
from one state into another. For some reason I was also reading about the
current therapeutic treatment for stroke victims suffering
from partial paralysis, and that is to constrain their fully functioning arm so
that the brain rewires itself to recover functional use of the paralyzed
arm.
So in creating Cypress in 2002, I worked with a few dancers—Susan
Lee, Justine Chambers, Alison Cummings and Karen Bennedsen. To further experiment,
I used two techniques: flipping the axis and constricting their movements.
What I ended up with (also because of the contribution of these dancers) was
a subtle work of choreography that is actually much harder to perform than the
audience is ever aware of. Usually only
performers understand that moving fast is easy and moving slowly requires
precise muscle control and stamina.
For the
presentation in 2002, I invited Juliet Palmer to compose a score and she
developed a haunting duet for clarinet and double bass performed by Peter
Pavlovsky and Robert Stevenson. The
worked premiered with Susan Lee, Justine Chamber and Susanne Chui performing
the work exquisitely. Following the premiere, Paula Citron, Dance Critic
for the Globe and Mail planted a seed—what would the work be like if it was
interpreted by three men instead of three women?
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Cypress remounted. Photo by Brianna Lombardo. |
In hindsight, I
worked with women because I started with Susan on the earlier piece Blue Jade and grew the cast from there.
I never had a particular intention regarding gender or body type.
However, with Paula's suggestion I started to think...
I had always
wanted to take up Paula's idea of recasting the work, but raising money for a
remount for anything other than a super-successful piece is really really
difficult. Then one presenter showed
interested in it in Montreal, even though it’s an “old” work, and from there I
received other invitations in Guelph and Toronto, and with those we were up and
running.
The process of
re-setting the choreography on these three remarkable men—Louis Laberge-Côté,
Brendan Wyatt and Hiroshi Miyamoto—was a truly fantastic journey for which I am
grateful. Not just through the memory lane experience, but also through being
able to revisit ideas and vocabulary after so many years. It has been all at
once fun, strange, embarrassing, enlightening and fulfilling.
|
Cypress remounted. Photo by Brianna Lombardo. |
The work has
changed, of course, due to the differences in the physicality of the men versus
the women. The fact that they are men influences their interpretation of the
movement vocabulary and concepts. Thank you, Paula.
One of the
decisions that I had to make was for the costumes. In the end, for the men, I went with simple
pants and shirts in neutral tones to reinforce the
initial premise of the work: the longevity of friendship.
Yvonne Ng founded tiger princess dance
projects (tpdp) in 1995. tpdp creates and preserves dance works with a unique
Canadian perspective reflecting Yvonne’s personal and artistic vision, which
involves experimentation and collaboration with a spectrum of artistic
disciplines. Since 1995, tpdp has commissioned, produced and presented
thirty-three works. These works have been shown across Canada, in Ireland,
Germany, Australia and Singapore, receiving critical and commercial acclaim.
Four of the works have garnered eight Dora Mavor Moore Award nominations for
performance and choreography.