Jean Paul Gaultier again arrives in Berlin to creatively head Falling In Love musical show at Friedrichstadt-Palast Berlin.
Here is a sneak peek from the show.
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Jean Paul Gaultier again arrives in Berlin to creatively head Falling In Love musical show at Friedrichstadt-Palast Berlin.
Here is a sneak peek from the show.
Black and Paper interview with THE ONE Grand Show Star, Valerie Inertie.
Hailing from Quebec, Canada, Valerie is a combination of physical grace and athleticism with a passion for physical expression she has developed during her long career of dance and acrobatics. She has lived in Berlin since 2013. An admitted adrenaline sports enthusiast, she has been doing acrobatics since the age of 3. As a Cyr Wheel Artist she has performed around the world to critical acclaim.
How did you become involve in THE ONE Grand Show?
I was in the Christmas Show 3 years ago at the Friedrichstadt-Palast. I had a good connection with the director, who said I had a strong presence, and he asked me if I would like to get involve in a show he was planning which was The One Grand Show.
How do you feel about wearing the Gaultier Costumes?
They are fantastic! It is an honor to wear them. As an acrobat the challenge is the movements in the costumes. Gaultier asked for my input. We developed a hook-clip quick released.
This is a very physical show for you.
Yes. I had a lot of input for my role, to make it work for me. I have choreography, and aerial performances. I fly on a high speed wench, then an aerial hoop, and the Cyr Wheel. As a dancer the period of movement is longer but as an acrobat the period of movement is shorter but more intense.
The physical staging is woven into the storyline.
Absolutely! There is an artistic link between everything; the dancing and acrobatics. They are a part of narrative not a side story.
What are your future plans?
For 2019, after the run of THE ONE Grand Show I am developing a Cyr Wheel Act then in Switzerland I will take part in the 100th anniversary of circus.
Valerie Inertie can be seen in THE ONE Grand Show in Berlin at the Friedrichstadt-Palast.
Images by Vladimir Sichov.
THE ONE Grand Show
French fashion designer Jean Paul Gaultier has arrived in Berlin collaborating with the Friedrichstadt-Palast for the stage show The ONE Grand Show. Opening October 6, the 11 million euros spectacular show features performers from 26 nations with 500 costumes on the world’s largest stage. Director and writer Roland Welke is the creative force behind “THE ONE Grand Show” employing streams of images in the form of slow motion effects, cross fades, and multi-dimension effects. The show is nothing if not ambitious on all levels from staging to the physical movements and acrobatics of the performers.
Starring German Eurovision Song Contest representative Roman Lob as the young party guest and Brigette Oelke from the musical “We Will Rock You” in the role of the theatre manager THE ONE Grand Show is packed with tunes from Kate Victoria and Gregor Meyle.
I sat for a preview press performance of THE ONE Grand Show in Berlin. The costumes were classic Gaultier albeit a little toned down, with eye catching looks filled with, counter culture sexuality mixed with plaid men’s kilts, conical bras, Breton stripes, panel, nude toned body suits, and iconic corsets. A perfect combination of dancers and Gaultier, the former understood the fluidity and fun of the creations by the Parisian couturier without being dominated by them, not an easy feat but they pulled off.
I admit it. I wanted to see the costumes from Mr. Gaultier and they did disappoint. Androgyny, a wide color palette all infused the stage like a field of butterflies. I would not say the looks were provocative for 2016 but titillating for mainstream audiences, pure eye candy delight. There are so many signature looks it is a bit difficult to include them all but the ones that stood out were: Red conned dress with red hairstyles, the nude tones on the male dancers, colored splashed suit, and of course the feathered outfits. If you are a John Paul Gaultier fan you will not be disappointed.
THE ONE Grand Show is currently at the Friedrichstadt-Palast in Berlin.
Images by Vladimir Sichov.
Denny Berry is the Production Dance Supervisor/Associate Choreographer of the worldwide production of Phantom. She appeared in the original production of the Broadway show as well has been involved in 14 Phantom productions worldwide. Denny is an Assistant Professor, Head of the Musical Theater Program at the University of Utah.
What was it like being part of the original Broadway production of the show?
I think we all knew the show was special. It had had a spectacular reception in London and the Broadway production was to have the same three West End actors recreating their roles, Michael Crawford, Sarah Brightman and Steve Barton. So there was tremendous excitement about being part of something that we knew was being talked about a great deal. But, no one could know at that time that THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA was going to break the kinds of records it has come to break. I think most of us thought it was ‘just’ another show. A great show to be sure and we were all excited to be part of it…but no one had any idea that it would have the kind of life and reception it has come to have. It is a wonder even now…hardly believable. I think we all pinch ourselves for the lucky accident to have been touched by this marvelous material spun into gold by the creators and all the magnificent opportunities that have come out of our association with the creators of this great show and the thousands who have become family because of it.
In addition to New York, what is the process of working on PHANTOM productions around the world, both as they debut and as they’re maintained?
Practically speaking, I believe the process is that a local producer will approach our producers (Cameron Mackintosh and The Really Useful Group) and request the rights. Once those hoops have been jumped through, the associate team is nominated and begins the task of organizing the pre-production set up, casting and rehearsal process. Once the show opens the team then is entrusted with the loving care that ensures the show maintains its opening night standards. What a great privilege I have had to travel the world working on this magnificent material… for 28 years!
Do you have specific/favorite memory or anecdote about working on the show?
There are too many to mention. Most have to do with moments that happen in the Kantine or in rehearsal. On the Hamburg revival a few years ago, I worked with John Keuther , whom I first met while working on a co-production of Street Scene at the Houston Grand Opera and Theater Des Westens (Berlin), directed by Francesca Zambello . I introduced John to the “PHANTOM Phamily” and he went on to play in the Swiss Basel production (where he met his wife, who ended up playing Meg), several U.S. Tours , ended up in the Broadway production for many years and we brought him out of hiding again to do the Hamburg production! What a lifetime of wonderful people and paths that have crossed time and again in the course of this production. A gift for those of us who have worked on this marvelous material for 28 years! Childrenhave been born and indeed new generations of our “PHANTOM “Phamily” have been woven tightly together.
Having worked with the show over so many years, are there still any surprises this many years on?
Absolutely! Every single show is unique. Each cast has their own dynamic and their own energy. Every actor who has recreated every role has had a different path to his or her discovery of that role. They each have different strengths and weaknesses. We use those particular details to help them each become the character they need to discover. Every opportunity to help a new actor on that path is different. To be able to recreate the same show to the audience’s eye by getting all these different actors and casts in different languages, in different lands, with different sensibilities is the biggest surprise.
Is it ever intimidating working on such a high profile production?
No, never. At the beginning of this journey, as I have said, it was a show like any other…it was big enough to earn a production in Vienna, and then in Japan and then in Los Angeles and on and on. We, I, had the great privilege to go on and on and grow with this great show. The show didn’t start out where it is now…it grew to be what it has become. For those of us who were there at the start it has become the work of a lifetime. It has become part of who we are, how we breathe and what we love. It is like an appendage or our offspring.
What type of communication language is achieved with movement?
That is a much bigger question than THE PHANOTM OF THE OPERA can answer. Movement is THE language when words cannot express ideas or feelings either because the ideas do not bear articulation or because the language is not something that is shared. We can feel hope, happiness, love, longing, fear and fantasy physically through movement. It embodies the entirety of the feeling. Some folks feel only music can do that, but I feel the physicality that comes through the music and brings it to life – for me at least.
Can you dissect a particular dance segment of the musical?
I can dissect every dance segment of this musical as well as all the staging.
To take the “Degas” Dance sequence in the Rehearsal room that takes place during the dressing room scene:
The girls leave the backstage and wander through the theater on their way to the Dance studio…Once there, Madame Giry shows them a combination (during Meg’s “Where in the world…” lyrics) and they rehearse it (during the String Quartet). Mme. Giry then corrects the girls.
The DSL girl needs to practice her tendue croise port des bras and lengthen her wrist. The DSR girl is working on her 5th position,
When Mme. Giry hears two girls upstage talking, she admonishes them.
Mme. Giry returns so the downstage right girl to examine her 4 count Develop a la Second .
Downstage left needs to lift her chin in a 4 count Penche she is practicing.
Mme. Giry then turns to the second girl stage right to help her with an ecarte develope for 2 counts and 2 counts on to the second girl stage left to get her leg a bit higher in the back develop croise she is working on. The final 4 counts of that phrase has all 4 girls working on their developes together. When Mme. Giry walks downstage through the developes in 2 counts, they all turn around to practice a Penche for 8 counts. Mme. Giry interrupts the penche with her cane to admonish the ballet dancers not to forget about their backs and they chase into tendue/port des bras/backbend to explore their backs.
And this covers only the first section of what has become known as “Degas”!
The detail in choreographer Gillian Lynne’s movement is well-known. And those of us who must pass it on, never, ever forget the beats and the meanings of every count.
Why do you think theatergoers continue to see PHANTOM?
I think, like all good theater, it touches the public. There is so much in the show on so many different levels that one can take from it no matter how involved, how deep one would like to go.
The show is set in a time that never looks dated. If the show is well maintained, the set and props and costumes do not age, certainly the story does not. It is timeless. The show is a spectacular event. Even after 28 years its mechanical elements still do not appear dated. Some shows that have come after PHANTOM may be even more spectacular, but thanks to designer Maria Björnson and director Hal Prince, the show still has integrity and class.
But, spectacle is not the only draw to this work. Andrew Lloyd Webber’s melodies are musical phrases that stick. One leaves the theater (or after hearing the CD) with them in your head…impossible to shake.
The story off a young girl setting out to fulfill her dreams made possible by the Svengali figure who seems to possess her until her lover can retrieve her from the abyss….and then the ultimate rejection of the devoted Svengali by the girl which crushes him. Who has not suffered rejection? Who does not understand desperately wanting something we can never have? It is timeless and terribly human. Audiences are still applauding the Act II opening staircase and weeping for the Phantom crying into Christine’s discarded wedding veil.
What kind of training is necessary for your dancers and how do you suggest they stay in shape while in the show?
The dancers in THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA are classical ballet dancers. Most of our dancers come from well-known ballet companies. The show requires a classical training and that must be maintained daily to continue to be able to perform as the show demands.
And finally, how many times have you seen the film The Red Shoes, and does it mean something to you?
The Red Shoes…..I can’t count the number of times I have seen the movie. And while the film is intriguing and fun and informative, The Red Shoes that is closer to my heart is the Broadway version, directed by Stanley Donen, choreographed by Lar Lubovitch, in which my husband, Steve Barton (who had just come off a stint of playing the role of The Phantom), played the impresario Lermontov, and Hugh Panaro (who went on to have one of the longest runs of playing the role of The Phantom) plays the young lover. It was an amazing experience for everyone involved in that project and remains dear to my heart.