“I Am Looking For Someone Who Dares To Be Totally Naked”

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blason_27x30_violet ANNA HALPRIN & ANNE COLLOD: "PARADES AND CHANGES, REPLAYS" AT TANZQUARTIER WIEN (1)

By Michikazu Matsune


1.

On a spring day, I was asked if I would be interested in joining a performance piece. It was the re-make of a performance by the now 88 year-old American choreographer Anna Halprin whose name I had only heard or read in a dance history book or so. The original work titled “Parades & Changes” was performed from 1965 to 1967 by a group of people led by Halprin in twelve venues and variations. The re-make project was directed by Anne Collod from France, whom I had not known before, and who did a thorough research on Halprin's work, also spending time with Halprin herself over the last few years. The re-make piece was named “parades & changes, replays (2008)”. A variation of this re-make project would be staged at TQW (Tanzquartier Vienna) this coming Autumn, and one of the curators and dramaturges of the house asked me if I would like to participate in it as a guest performer. With a smile on her face, she said: “I am looking for someone who dares to be totally naked. So I thought of you.” It took me a few moments before I could react. There is a pXXXs hanging down between my legs, and it is not especially of the sort that could be proudly presented to an audience. I nicely smiled back at her and said: “Let me think about it for a few days ... and meanwhile maybe you can send me the concept sheets.”

The next day I received a mail from her assistant, which started with “Dear Michi,” and ended with “... I assume you've heard that there will be scenes with nudity on stage. Best wishes ...” He warned me.

Attached to the mail was the all-together-eighteen-sheets-but-thank-heaven-it-is-written-in-arial-size-twelve-and-not-smaller concept by Anne Collod. I looked through it, didn't read it carefully, went over it a few times. One sentence caught my attention: it read “for twenty years the performance was forbidden in the United States, censored because of nudity”.

I agreed to do it because (one of the strongest reasons) the rehearsals were to take only three days. Three days rehearsal and two nights of shows. I wouldn't waste too much time even if the piece did not work for me. And I would be paid - not much, but okay. It might even be fun to join the group as one of the six performers. Yet one reason why I hesitated a lot and sometimes regretted my decision to join was the attached photograph. It just looked so uninteresting, say bad, seemingly not my cup of tea, with naked performers throwing big sheets of papers around for a reason I couldn't see ...

2.

“parades & changes, replays” was performed on October 13th & 14th at TQW.

3.

Now, right after finishing the two nights of shows two days ago, I note down some elements out of many which had been important for this work, at least in my own process of joining it.

Scandal:
“‘Parades & Changes’ provoked significant scandal because the dancers in the piece fully disrobe and redress, three different times. Halprin says the piece is about the process of undressing, finding your place in space.” Spark's Education Guide

One reason why the work became a scandal maybe was that besides Halprin herself and two other adult performers, it was performed by eight teenagers, including Halprin's own two daughters.

Teenagers stripping on stage. Even today this has the potential for scandal. Yet just to make sure: Halprin never said that it was stripping, that's me saying it; she said it was a “process of undressing” and a “ceremony of trust”.

Split Identity:
Whose work are we seeing now? The split authorship / identity of the work lies somewhere between, or over, the two creators Halprin and Collod. My thoughts are on a constant trip between two different times and contexts around Halprin in the 1960's and Collod in 2008. We see Collod's work in front of us and we're thinking of Halprin, and of the circumstances she must have been in. We see what we see in front of us as Halprin's work and know that it is not really true either. Moreover, both Haprin and Collod see their work as collective, a collaboration with the participants.

Moonwalk:
In 1965 (the year “Parades & Changes” was first performed) Cosmonaut Aleksei Leonov from the USSR became the first person to take a step (?) in space, leaving his spacecraft for 12 minutes. Only four years later, in 1969, Neil Armstrong of the United States' NASA Apollo project took the first step (!) on the moon.

Go-go:
Go-go-Dance originated in the early 60's in NYC when women began to get up on tables and dance the twist in clubs. In 1964 Carol Doda started topless Go-go-Dance, after having had her breasts enlarged with silicone, in San Francisco where Halprin was and still is living. 1965 also was the year that the USA sent their first soldiers to South Vietnam; so far they had only been indirectly involved in the war. 3,500 American soldiers arrived in Vietnam, getting deep into jungle and mud combat scenes.

U.S. soldiers had their R&R (Rest and Relaxation) in Thailand. There were many strip and Go-go-Clubs there to entertain the soldiers in their free time. (The war ended in 1975 but the business has remained until today for its international customers.)

Downtown:
The musician Morton Subotnick made the sound for both the work of Halprin in 1965 and that of Halprin/Collod in 2008. He sampled Petula Clark's “Downtown”, an international hit song from 1964 (!) and the singer's best-known song. To my surprise, I found this clip on Youtube, a clear cause for the “Dressing/Undressing”-part. Hey, what we thought was the original Halprin was a re-make of this performance!

And please check the painting behind her of, apparently, Manhattan NYC. The building in the middle must be the Empire State Building, the tallest building of the time. Probably the one on the left is Chrysler Building. And of course The World Trade Center is not there, these are the years before the Twin Towers were built at the beginning of 70's.

“when you're alone and life is making you lonely
you can always go downtown ...
you can forget all your troubles ... so go downtown.
things'II be great when you're downtown. don't wait a minute ...
everything's waiting for you in downtown. downtown, downtown, com'on ... downtown.”

Barbarella:
“Barbarella” is a 1968 science-fiction film directed by Roger Vadim and based on the 1962 French Barbarella comics by Jean-Claude Forest. It is famous for its erotic sequence during the opening credits in which Barbarella, played by Jane Fonda, undresses in zero gravity.

The slow-motion undressing in Halprin/Collod's dance piece makes me think of this zero gravity striptease. It is very soft and soundless, seemingly happening in the world of soundlessness.

Re-make (for the discussion of definition at the artist's talk):
Re-enact. Re-play. Re-do. Re-develop. Re-use. Re-create. Re-move. Re-cognise. Re-touch. Re-turn. Re-gain. Re-main. Re-set. Re-cover.

Intelligent Light:
Obviously, Collod's re-make piece is equipped with higher stage technology, which Halprin's original piece could not have. The light designer Mykko Hynninen uses modern lighting equipment called “Intelligent Lights”, also nicknamed “Moving Lights”. These spotlights move like cannons of warships ... They were developed in the early 80's and used mainly in rock concerts, you know, the strong spotlights moving unbelievably fast like some kind of insects, beaming out various colours in quick change.

Universal:
Wow, Anna Halprin is 88 and has her own website! Is it only me surprised about this fact?

In the section “about”, I found a text written by her husband Laurence Halprin who is a landscape architect that starts with “Anna and I have been married for 65 years”.

"Our work has been interwoven all that time. (...) More and more her dance has developed as myths and rituals in which the focus is on issues of everyday life; psychological, or physical, and community as well as personal. In this sense she has reverted to the early meaning of dance in human society, joyful and healing as well as tragic, and based on the most primitive needs of the human condition. These dances are universal."

Yeah!!!!!

Explain:
I could not find out how the work became “forbidden” yet. I mean “officially forbidden” like she had to sign that she would neither be nor make anyone else be naked on stage, or something like that. A performer colleague from the project told me that policemen came to stop the performance when Halprin and her people performed it in NYC in the mid 60's. I imagine that the policemen became rather confused when they entered the theatre and saw a group of people taking off their clothes and putting them on again a few times in very slow motion. “E..e ... Excuse me, hh, can you please explain w..what is going on here?”   

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Here are some related images:

01_anne_halprin
Anna Halprin, 2006.
 

02_paperdance
“Paper Dance” from Parades and Changes, Replays.
03_aleksey_leonov
Cosmonaut Aleksey Leonov.

04_neil_armstrong
Neil Armstrong in a pre-Gemini spacesuit.


05_barbarella
Barbarella played by Jane Fonda.


06_condorclub
The sign at “the Condor” club in San Francisco where Carol Doda started strip go-go dance.
07_gogo_bangkok
Go-go-Dancers in Bangkok's Nana Plaza entertainment area.
08_empirestate
The Empire State Building. The world's tallest building from 1931 to 1972.
09_intelligentlight
Intelligent light, MAC500 by MARTIN.

10_uss_iowa
US Navy warship USS Iowa "The Big Stick" firing.

10a_petula_clark
Petula Clark in the 1960's.


11_breastsnotbombs
A group of protesters marching in Washington, D.C. 2005.
12_taipei_infashion
Taipei In Style Fashion Show 2008.

13_gayparade
San Francisco Gay Parade 2006. New candidates for California governor?
14_buffard_company
Alain Buffard and his dance company on stage.

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Thanks
To Anne Collod and the team - Alain Buffard, Cécile Proust, DD Dorvillier, Krõõt Juurak, Mykko Hynninen, Nuno Bizarro. Also to Jule, Nicolas and Philip. To Martina Hochmuth who asked me to join the project, and the TQW team, especially Alex who helped me to unlock the door. And of course to Anna Halprin!

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Michikazu Matsune

Born in Kobe. Lives in Vienna. He works as an artist, choreographer and performer.

 

(18.10.2008)