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A Dance Festival Making Movement Democratic | A Dance Festival Making Movement Democratic |
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Couples lindy-hopped at midnight on a public square. Students applauded a jookin-influenced duo in a university courtyard. Teenagers tried out hip-hop, Thai boxing and hula hooping at public classes in a shopping center. Thousands attended a vogueing master class and ball. And all over town, people streamed in and out of theaters offering work by some of contemporary dance’s biggest names. | Couples lindy-hopped at midnight on a public square. Students applauded a jookin-influenced duo in a university courtyard. Teenagers tried out hip-hop, Thai boxing and hula hooping at public classes in a shopping center. Thousands attended a vogueing master class and ball. And all over town, people streamed in and out of theaters offering work by some of contemporary dance’s biggest names. |
It was the 20th edition of the Lyon Dance Biennial, which opened on Sept. 9 and runs through Sept. 30. One of the world’s largest and most important dance festivals, the Biennial was back to its frantic self after a slowed-down Covid edition in 2021. Journalists sped between shows, packing in as many performances as possible. Dance-world figures sipped post-show wine, gossiped and analyzed shows (“Gloriously dull,” “Thank god it won’t fit in my space”). And dance lovers, with a notably younger-skewed demographic, filled theaters all over the city. | It was the 20th edition of the Lyon Dance Biennial, which opened on Sept. 9 and runs through Sept. 30. One of the world’s largest and most important dance festivals, the Biennial was back to its frantic self after a slowed-down Covid edition in 2021. Journalists sped between shows, packing in as many performances as possible. Dance-world figures sipped post-show wine, gossiped and analyzed shows (“Gloriously dull,” “Thank god it won’t fit in my space”). And dance lovers, with a notably younger-skewed demographic, filled theaters all over the city. |
Since its inception in 1984, the Biennial has espoused a democratic, participatory approach. Each edition opens with a huge parade, which this year involved 3,500 participants and was watched by a crowd of 150,000 people. | Since its inception in 1984, the Biennial has espoused a democratic, participatory approach. Each edition opens with a huge parade, which this year involved 3,500 participants and was watched by a crowd of 150,000 people. |
But this edition, led by a new director, Tiago Guedes, seemed even more focused on outreach, diversity and participation. “It’s important to open the doors over these three weeks,” Guedes said over a coffee last week. “To break the idea that dance is an elitist discipline.” | But this edition, led by a new director, Tiago Guedes, seemed even more focused on outreach, diversity and participation. “It’s important to open the doors over these three weeks,” Guedes said over a coffee last week. “To break the idea that dance is an elitist discipline.” |
This mission has a lot of currency in French dance right now. You might call it the “La Horde effect” — the desire to emulate the pop-culture friendly collective that runs the Ballet de Marseille, and who draw huge crowds of young people to their performances through a combination of diverse dancers, work with pop stars and an inclusive, social media-savvy approach. | This mission has a lot of currency in French dance right now. You might call it the “La Horde effect” — the desire to emulate the pop-culture friendly collective that runs the Ballet de Marseille, and who draw huge crowds of young people to their performances through a combination of diverse dancers, work with pop stars and an inclusive, social media-savvy approach. |
Along with figures like Mehdi Kerkouche, who runs the National Choreographic Center in Créteil, just outside Paris, La Horde exemplifies a new generation of choreographers who embrace social objectives and elide the differences between commercial and concert dance. (Kerkouche has danced with the singer Christine and the Queens, whose choreographer Marion Motin has just created a work for the Paris Opera Ballet.) | Along with figures like Mehdi Kerkouche, who runs the National Choreographic Center in Créteil, just outside Paris, La Horde exemplifies a new generation of choreographers who embrace social objectives and elide the differences between commercial and concert dance. (Kerkouche has danced with the singer Christine and the Queens, whose choreographer Marion Motin has just created a work for the Paris Opera Ballet.) |