This title is a unique insight into a current choreographers devising and training processes, from an unusually immediate and intimate perspective. It fits well into our recent publishing not only on dance and choreography (Burrows, Forsythe, Contemporary Choreography), but also on physical theatre (Frantic Assembly), and bucks a trend by examining a dance practitioner adopting theatrical techniques, as opposed to the other way around. It is a collaborative approach to reflecting on a world-renowned practitioners work and process, which combines the contributions not only of an academic and practitioner, but also the artist herself.
The authors examine Vardimons working processes and those of her company with regard to the development of specific productions. This keeps the focus on the techniques, strategies and creative activities necessitated by each project without attempting to concoct a prescriptive and presumptuous blueprint. They cover the following main concerns:
- Questioning the social, political and psychological content of Vardimons work
- How a balance is sustained between accessibility of content and complexity of concepts
- The inherent messiness of an editing process that inevitably leaves many valuable pieces of performance material behind
- The initial triggers that lead to research, expansion, and eventually to the performance itself
- Drawing on text to enhance and shape a piece of dance work
- The contribution of a companys different voices and viewpoints to the development of a production
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ix | |
Acknowledgements |
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xiii | |
Introduction |
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1 | (10) |
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4 | (2) |
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6 | (1) |
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7 | (1) |
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8 | (3) |
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1 Early years in Israel and first performances in the UK |
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11 | (29) |
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Performances: Therapist (1997), Madame Made (1998), Tete (1999), LureLureLure (2000), Ticklish (2001) |
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12 | (5) |
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17 | (4) |
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21 | (2) |
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The Kibbutz Contemporary Dance Company (KCDC) |
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23 | (4) |
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Starting a company -- Zbang |
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27 | (3) |
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Early days of the Jasmin Vardimon Company |
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30 | (6) |
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36 | (4) |
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40 | (18) |
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Performances: Lullaby (2003) |
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Seeding -- Lullaby (2003) |
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44 | (3) |
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47 | (4) |
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51 | (5) |
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56 | (2) |
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58 | (35) |
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Performances: PARK (2005) |
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Preparing the ground: languages, communication and cross-pollination |
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59 | (5) |
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64 | (3) |
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Insider/outsider -- points of view |
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67 | (3) |
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Nurturing growth and pruning |
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70 | (5) |
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75 | (3) |
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Rehearsal as a process of research |
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78 | (2) |
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Re-growth -- PARK revival 2014 |
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80 | (1) |
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Support structures and training |
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81 | (3) |
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Working in unison/with unison |
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84 | (2) |
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Power: the individual and the group |
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86 | (2) |
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Fluid inter-action: hitmasroot with designs and materials |
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88 | (5) |
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4 Textured voices: Text and texture |
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93 | (19) |
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Performances: Justitia (2007) |
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95 | (8) |
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103 | (2) |
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Hidden texts, working with text -- the performers' stories |
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105 | (7) |
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5 Covering layers and pruning |
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112 | (24) |
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Performances: Yesterday (2008) |
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Music and other audio layers |
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113 | (2) |
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115 | (8) |
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Film, projection, live feed camera and animation |
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123 | (10) |
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133 | (1) |
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134 | (2) |
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136 | (37) |
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Performances: 7734 (2010) |
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136 | (3) |
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139 | (2) |
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141 | (3) |
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Performing politics -- planting and weeding |
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144 | (4) |
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148 | (5) |
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153 | (4) |
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157 | (4) |
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Conclusion: Re-seeding -- new directions in education, training and performances |
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161 | (12) |
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Performances: Freedom (2012), MAZE (2015) |
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Appendix A Chronology of Jasmin Vardimon's works and awards |
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173 | (3) |
Appendix B Performance credits for works made for Zbang and Jasmin Vardimon Company |
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176 | (7) |
Bibliography |
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183 | |
Libby Worth is Senior Lecturer in Drama and Theatre at Royal Holloway, University of London. She has published widely on Anna Halprin (Routledge Performance Practitioners , Routledge 2004), Caryl Churchill, Jenny Kemp and Ninette de Valois. As a movement practitioner trained in the Feldenkrais Method® she focuses on research into performer training, site-based performance and dance improvisation. She is co-editor of the journal Theatre, Dance and Performance Training.
Jasmin Vardimon is Artistic Director of the Jasmin Vardimon Company, an Associate Artist and Sadler's Wells and Visiting Professor at Wolverhampton University. She also developed 'Physical Theatre for Dancers and Actors' (2009-2017) at Royal Holloway, University of London, where she received an honorary doctorate in 2014. She has been the recipient of the Jerwood Choreography Award (2000), and her most high profile works include Lullaby (2003), PARK (2005), Justitia (2007), Yesterday (2008) and 7734 (2010).