"Dance, dance, otherwise we are lost."
Pina Bausch
Watching Wim Wenders' hauntingly
poignant and unique film about the choreographic genius of Pina
Bausch, I was reminded that when I was younger I didn’t want to run away
and join the circus; I wanted to join Tanztheater Wuppertal, the
internationally acclaimed German dance troupe that Bausch directed
from 1973 until her untimely death in 2009.
I saw her extraordinary dancers, culled
from all corners of the globe, for the first time in 1984 during a
rare visit of the troupe to Toronto. The piece was The Rite of
Spring, and the stage was covered with spoil (dirt, peat and
other detritus) that turned to mud soon after the dancers started
marking it with the sweat of their extraordinary effort. Together
with the approximately 2,000 spectators who thronged to the theatre
that night, drawn by Bausch’s reputation as an award-winning dance
artist, I watched spellbound from the edge of my seat, eyes wide
open, a lump in my throat.
Pina Bausch |
Bausch had taken over Tanztheater
Wuppertal after training as a dancer with the legendary Kurt Jooss in
her native Germany and also at New York’s Julliard School.
Immediately, she began to single-handedly reinvent modern dance,
reworking it as an emotionally potent art form using a unique and
highly innovative combination of gesture, movement, speech and
dramatic music. She has many imitators today, including an entire new
school of European contemporary dance. But when she first broke onto
the scene in the mid-1970s, the dance world had rarely seen anything
like it. She was Isadora Duncan, Sergei Diaghilev’s Les Ballets
Russes and George Balanchine rolled up into one – a choreographic
maverick. I remember at one performance at the Brooklyn Academy of
Music bumping into Mikhail Baryshnikov in the lobby on the way to my
seat. If you had any interest in dance, you were in the audience when
Tanztheater Wuppertal came to town.
Wenders was also a huge fan, and in
Pina he presents four of the works that Bausch routinely
toured around the world: The Rite of Spring (1975), Kontakthof
(1978/2000/2008); Café Muller (1978) and Vollmond
(2006). She had personally selected them for the film which was meant
to be a collaboration; but Bausch died two days before rehearsals for
the film were to begin in Germany, temporarily halting production and
forcing Wenders to rethink his project as more tribute than
documentary. This he achieves through a uniquely cinematic recreation
of the dances inter-spliced with solos newly performed by her
dancers, and rare archival footage of Bausch in performance and in
the studio working.
Wenders revives her spirit by making
the dances feel fully alive, thanks in large part to his use of a 3-D
technology which effectively incorporates the spatial dimension
usually missing from other dance films. This, in large part, is what
makes this film as trailblazing as its subject matter. The viewer
can practically feel the three-inches of peat through which the
dancers slog in performing The Rite of Spring, a work about the
sacrifice of individualism to the tyranny of the group. It
experiences vicariously the vertigo felt by blinded dancers in the
cluttered room that is Café Muller, a work about longing and
loneliness, and the shower of water soaking the dancers in Vollmond,
a work about the search for love – a classic Bauschian theme.
Watching these polyphonic pieces again
on the big screen, I am reminded that her work was as thrilling as
anything that might be experienced under the Big Top: her dancers
perform without inhibition, throwing themselves with abandon, doing
high kicks in high heels and tight sexy dresses corseting them to the
knees. In the theatre they used to leap from the stage to mingle with
the audience, effectively smashing all walls separating art from
reality. In the film, the 3-D format essentially accomplishes
something of the same thing – drawing the spectator deeply inside
the illusion, eradicating barriers, making it feel as real as one of
Bausch’s shows.
As a result of the emotional intensity
of their performances, in the film, as they did on stage, the dancers
appear as ferocious as a cage full of lions. These polyglot dancers
who come in all shapes, sizes, races, gender and ages rip through
pretence; they roar with laughter and spit tears. They frighten with
visions of their own vulnerability and uplift with breathtaking
scenes of theatrical beauty that tame the beast within. They come
across strongly as individuals whose quirks of personality helped
shape choreography whose message was always, and in various ways, the
pursuit of love.
Bausch, it was widely known, would ask
her dancers questions, and they would answer her, not in words, but
in movement; she would then harness that raw energy and phrasing,
creating polyphonic works that were the human condition as presented
through dance. In making this 103-minute film, Wenders adopts a
similar method: asking the dancers questions which this time they
answer as solo dances created for them by their mentor. These
dramatic solos are crafted often from everyday gestures, the source
of their humanity and emotional power. For the film, the dancers
recreate them, but in a variety of different settings – from the
desolate landscape of the Bergisches Land, and the lushness of a
park, to a busy intersection, and the spare interior of an industrial
building. Besides providing for arresting moments of cinematic dance
freed from the confines of the stage, the underlying idea of these
vignettes is to show how Bausch’s spirit lives on in her dancers,
following them wherever they go.
But as much as a dance film Pina
is, it is also uniquely what might be called a memory film. The
dancers don’t just dance for him, they share with Wenders their
memories of Bausch as they knew her behind-the-scenes, watching them
with an incorruptible eye for beauty. Wenders trains the camera on
their immobile faces, allowing their words to swirl around them as a
voice over. It is an ingenious use of cinematic technique to
communicate the essence of dance as a non-verbal yet emotionally
conversant art form. The voice overs are in a variety of languages,
representing a cross-section of nationalities that typically have
made up Tanztheater Wuppertal in the 36 years that Bausch was at the
helm – everything from Slovenian and French to Korean and
Portuguese, all with English subtitles. They address the creative
process and the uniqueness of the theatrical presentation. But, just
as in a dance, it’s their bodies that do most of the talking.
Even when sitting still in a chair, out
of costume, looking like the people they are when not on the stage,
they radiate the emotional power that lies below the surface of their
physical selves. The viewer hears their words, but it is the profound
sadness in their eyes, the vacancy of their facial expression, that
most commands attention. The feeling is of a tribe lost in the
wilderness without a leader to see them home. It is a portrait of
dance company in mourning.
This is how Wenders most effectively
expresses the greatness of Pina Bausch: through the yawning vacuum
she has left behind.
– Deirdre
Kelly is
a journalist (The
Globe and Mail)
and internationally recognized dance critic. She is also the author
of the national best-selling memoir, Paris
Times Eight (Greystone
Books/Douglas & McIntyre). Visit her website for more
information, http://www.deirdrekelly.com.
Great to see Deirdre Kelly writing about dance again!
ReplyDeleteWow, sounds amazing! Is the film currently playing? In Vancouver? (she asked hopefully...)
ReplyDeleteAnswer: Yes it is, and I finally saw it yesterday and was absolutely blown away by the power and beauty of what I saw. I'm trying to find words to express my feelings, and I'm finding them all inadequate. An extraordinary experience. Thanks for alerting me to a film I otherwise might not have thought to go and see!
ReplyDelete