UNITED KINGDOM: CONTEMPORARY CHOREOGRAPHER LEA ANDERSON'S DANCE COMPANIES PERFORM BERLIN CABARET INSPIRED SHOW "SMITHEREENS"
Record ID:
389111
UNITED KINGDOM: CONTEMPORARY CHOREOGRAPHER LEA ANDERSON'S DANCE COMPANIES PERFORM BERLIN CABARET INSPIRED SHOW "SMITHEREENS"
- Title: UNITED KINGDOM: CONTEMPORARY CHOREOGRAPHER LEA ANDERSON'S DANCE COMPANIES PERFORM BERLIN CABARET INSPIRED SHOW "SMITHEREENS"
- Date: 13th April 2000
- Summary: LONDON, UK (MARCH 13, 2000) (REUTERS)(DISTORTED DURING PERFORMANCE PICTURES ON PURPOSE FOR EFFECT) (PERFORMANCE CLEARANCES) VARIOUS SHOTS OF SMITHEREENS BEING PERFORMED
- Embargoed: 28th April 2000 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Entertainment
- Reuters ID: LVA6E4GYXNXPB78Z1XJHMJS1NXFA
- Story Text: Contemporary choreographer Lea Anderson's two
companies, the all-female Cholmondeleys and the all-male
Featherstonehaughs have teamed up to perform in London in a
Berlin cabaret inspired show entitled Smithereens.
The Cholmondeleys (pronounced Chumleys) and The
Featherstonehaughs (pron.Fanshaws) are well known for their
quirky, innovative style, courtesy of choreographer Lea
Anderson.Their current show premiered in London last autumn
and now the two companies, who usually perform separately, are
back to perform Smithereens again.To a musical accompaniment
by The Victims of Death, the dancers present a dazzling array
of bizarre images, which, as dancer Rem Lee explains, come
from a wide range of sources,
"The starting point was cabaret from the 1930's.It
draws on Dadaist images, surrealist images, so obviously it
draws on a lot of fine art and a lot of performance art from
that period, but also Lea has got a very eclectic source for
all of these things, she loves anything visual really so that
can come from film, from photographs of models in magazines
like Vogue, anything that's got a strong figurative design
element to it.Whether it's costume, or the shape of the body,
she'll take all of these sources and she's put them onto our
bodies."
Anderson's interest in all things visual goes right back
to her days as an art student at the renowned St.Martins
School of Art.After finding the constraints of her chosen
medium too restrictive, she nurtured her interest in
performing art by going to the Laban Centre to train as a
choreographer.
On leaving college, she formed the Cholmondeleys and
many of the company's early works were performed cabaret
style, sharing the bill with stand up comedians, or performing
between bands, in crowded pub venues.And it is back to
cabaret she has returned for Smithereens, " The idea of
cutting and pasting images from many many different sources is
fundamental to this show, but she tries to do it all with a
homage to that period, and to that decadence and the
over-the-topness of that period, all the travesty and the
darkness of the times, she alludes to a lot of that as well,
with the music and the lighting is very dark."
The design of Smithereens plays a vital part in the
carnival of the grotesque that the dancers create.The
costumes were the work of Shakespeare in Love designer Sandy
Powell and allow a blurring of gender with masks, false
breasts, and wigs.The performers form endless, faceless
chorus lines, transform into temperamental ballroom dancers,
disjointed ballerinas, manic lounge lizards, distraught
four-armed divas to name just a few of the images that fly
around the stage - the whirlwind of dark scenes that bombard
the audience make for uneasy, but interesting viewing. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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