Rambert Dance Company - Judgment of Paris/Momenta/A Steel Garden/Constant Speed
Work:: Rambert Dance Company (S887)
Britain's biggest and most exciting touring dance company who often tour two programmes at a time. Dancing to a mixture of musical styles they provide enormously watchable evenings.
Production:: Judgment of Paris/Momenta/A Steel Garden/Constant Speed (T1632641594)
Set to extracts from Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera, Antony Tudor's
Judgment of Paris is a sardonic take on the classical myth. In this black comedy, the three women are no longer goddesses but tired, tawdry floozies competing for the attentions of a drunken client in a seedy night-club. This little Tudor gem was first performed by Rambert in 1940 and has been revived on several occasions since. Momenta by Rambert dancer/choreographer Mikaela Polley was created for the Rambert Workshop Season in January 2005.
Momenta is an ensemble work for ten dancers and is performed to an original score of the same name by Patrick Nunn. The piece accelerates in physical and musical power culminating in a frenetic final movement. Christopher Bruce CBE returns to Rambert for the first time since his retirement as Artistic Director in November 2002.
A Steel Garden brings together Bruce and composer David C. Heath, whose composition Dawn of a New Age was the starting point for the collaboration, and which was extended and developed as the dance evolved. Bruce’s choreographic career began with Rambert in 1969 and he has gone on to become one of Britain’s most important and well-known choreographers.
Constant Speed, Baldwin’s first choreographic work as Artistic Director for Rambert, has been widely acclaimed for its novel and charming approach to physics. Commissioned by the Institute of Physics,
Constant Speed has been inspired by three of Einstein’s key 1905 theories. The result is 19 of Rambert’s dancers whizzing around the stage like hyperactive molecules, in a joyous and athletic frenzy of movement. Performed to sparkling waltzes by Franz Lehár, this ingenious and witty piece succeeds in making physics intriguing and fun
Listing:: L0845553731
Current production:Work
Judgment of Paris/Momenta/A Steel Garden/Constant Speed
Set to extracts from Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera, Antony Tudor's
Judgment of Paris is a sardonic take on the classical myth. In this black comedy, the three women are no longer goddesses but tired, tawdry floozies competing for the attentions of a drunken client in a seedy night-club. This little Tudor gem was first performed by Rambert in 1940 and has been revived on several occasions since. Momenta by Rambert dancer/choreographer Mikaela Polley was created for the Rambert Workshop Season in January 2005.
Momenta is an ensemble work for ten dancers and is performed to an original score of the same name by Patrick Nunn. The piece accelerates in physical and musical power culminating in a frenetic final movement. Christopher Bruce CBE returns to Rambert for the first time since his retirement as Artistic Director in November 2002.
A Steel Garden brings together Bruce and composer David C. Heath, whose composition Dawn of a New Age was the starting point for the collaboration, and which was extended and developed as the dance evolved. Bruce’s choreographic career began with Rambert in 1969 and he has gone on to become one of Britain’s most important and well-known choreographers.
Constant Speed, Baldwin’s first choreographic work as Artistic Director for Rambert, has been widely acclaimed for its novel and charming approach to physics. Commissioned by the Institute of Physics,
Constant Speed has been inspired by three of Einstein’s key 1905 theories. The result is 19 of Rambert’s dancers whizzing around the stage like hyperactive molecules, in a joyous and athletic frenzy of movement. Performed to sparkling waltzes by Franz Lehár, this ingenious and witty piece succeeds in making physics intriguing and fun