Dance performance - Lewis et Lucie, Une 茅vocation po茅tique de la marginalit茅, de la solitude et des petites cassures de la vie.
The Centre for Human Rights & Legal Pluralism 2014-2015 Disability and Human Rights Law seminar series presents Lewis et Lucie, Une 茅vocation po茅tique de la marginalit茅, de la solitude et des petites cassures de la vie, a live dance performance with dancers and choreographers Daniel Firth and Jane Mappin.
The dance
A man sits alone on a park bench,聽 talking to passersby, hoping for a moment of society. Speaking in stilted phrases, he offers fragments of his personal history, impressions, and obsessions. He embodies his words in movement, dancing with the damaged grace of those who live out of the mainstream. The outline of his story emerges 鈥 a small, sad story, repeated every day on park benches the world over, of an existence that never quite took full shape. Lewis et Lucie is a poetic evocation of marginality, solitude, and the tiny, crushing burdens of the past.
Daniel Firth 鈥 dancer
Daniel Firth is a dancer known for his great artistic sensibility. He is trained in classical ballet, modern dance, gymnastics, and continued his modern dance training in 1990 with LADMMI in Montreal. In 1993, he joined Montr茅al Danse, where he performed roles created by more than fifteen internationally renowned choreographers. Daniel has also worked for William Douglas, Estelle Clareton, Chantal Caron, and many independent choreographers, and has performed in Canada, the United States, South America, and many European countries. He has been involved in an array of related artistic projects, such as Une 芒me immortelle with director Bernard H茅bert, and L鈥檋omme de verre, directed by Raymond St-Jean. More recently, Daniel completed his training in massotherapy, which he currently pursues in parallel to his dance career. After five years in the Lower St-Lawrence region, where he managed his own dance company and created his own works, Daniel has returned to Montreal where he now works with Jane Mappin in the duo 鈥淟ewis and Lucie鈥.聽 Their recent work on the dance trilogy Je marche 脿 c么t茅 de moi has allowed him to re-envision his career.
Jane Mappin - dancer and choreographer
For the past thirty years, Jane has worked actively as interpreter, choreographer and teacher. As creator, she is interested in the relationship between dance and other forms of artistic expression. Her choreographic work has been shown across Canada, South America and Europe. After working for five years at Le Groupe de la Place Royale, in Ottawa, Jane became an independent choreographer in her native Montreal, in 1989. In 1999, in the context of a master鈥檚 degree in creation, Jane choreographed Les anges monstrueux (1999).聽 Jane has collaborated with visual artists (Mikihiro Nishumatsu, John Heward, Jean Gervais, and with the work of William Perehudoff) and filmmakers (L茅a Pool and Pepita Ferrari). In 2003, Jane presented Cinq voix, cinq visages, an interdisciplinary work involving five dancers, five seven-year old girls, video and two singers. She has since collaborated twice with cellist Erich Kory, and photographer Michael Slobodian. Jane danced for Charmaine Leblanc in Quarantaine (2004) and Terminus (2012), a co-production of Dansecit茅). In 2013, Jane created L鈥 with interpreter Daniel Firth. Their collaboration continues with Je marche 脿 c么t茅 de moi, a trilogy treating the delicate subject of mental illness. Jane has taught and choreographed at L鈥櫭塩ole sup茅rieure de ballet du qu茅bec since 2007.
Interpr猫tes聽: Daniel Firth, Jane Mappin
Chor茅graphie聽: Jane Mappin en collaboration avec Daniel Firth
Conseill猫re聽脿 la dramaturgie: Marie Brassard
Musique聽: Erich Kory
Voix sur la trame sonore聽: Sophie Faucher
Texte聽: un extrait de 芦聽Accompagnement聽禄 de Saint Deny-Garneau
"Fort belle chor茅graphie, d鈥檜ne grande intensit茅 et d鈥檜ne terrible v茅rit茅. Tr猫s exigeante pour le remarquable danseur qu鈥檈st Daniel Firth subtilement second茅 par la chor茅graphe et danseuse Jane Mappin. Une musique qui danse elle aussi, tout comme le texte de Saint-Denys Garneau habilement d茅coup茅, rythm茅, au point d鈥檈n devenir lui aussi musique."
- Jean Chapdelaine Gagnon, Quartier des spectacles | 16 septembre 2013