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A
Passion for the Dance:
Choreographer
Francis Patrelle
By Leda Meredith
Published April 2001 |
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| Photo
Credit: Eduardo Patino |
There are few choreographers I know
of that are as generous and loyal to their
dancers as Francis Patrelle, or who care
as much about making sure that each dancer
is shown at their best. Dance is a verb,
not a noun, and without the dancers up on
that stage the choreography does not exist.
Francis Patrelle's work is an ongoing celebration
of the people who bring this art form to
life.
He is also a storyteller who has survived,
and thrived, during an era when the trend
in dance was toward the abstract and impersonal.
In doing so, he has carried forward a legacy
inherited from his Juilliard teachers, Anthony
Tudor and Jose Limon. Francis Patrelle's
ballets speak to audiences who want their
hearts to be moved as well as their intellects.
Q: What do you require in order to create
your best work?
FP: To create my best work, first of all
I need a tension-free rehearsal room. Not
that everybody has to be happy and go-lucky,
but we all have to be there for the same
reason, and, hopefully, to leave our egos
behind. That includes mine. We all have
to be working towards the same purpose.
This business is so physically hard, why
do we need to beat up on each other?
Thirty-something years later, still choreographing,
I still love dancers. I love the process.
And I hope to be doing it till the day I
die. I am happiest in the rehearsal room.
I am happiest creating. The audience, though,
does not need to know the process. A quick
and juicy and fun-filled rehearsal process
may not give a better performance than a
hard, pulled out, difficult rehearsal process.
As long as there is the final result, the
audience doesn't care. But when I'm creating,
I enjoy the giggling and the laughing --
even when I'm doing death. Sometimes when
you're doing heavy drama and life struggles,
approaching it through humor in the rehearsal
room is the only way of going about it.
Q: Is there a "Patrelle Dancer"?
FP: Yes, I think there are dancers that
I feel very comfortable working with. Martha
Hill, the founding director of the Juilliard
Dance Department, used to say, "The
American Dancer is one that could have pointe
work ready to enter into American Ballet
Theater, and then do a back fall at the
same time." That would define a Patrelle
Dancer. I love exquisite pointe work; I
love beautiful, articulated, defined legs
and positions; and I then I want you to
be able to lose all of that and bend on
the stage and bring sweeping and luxurious
movement. I also need and require a sense
of maturity and of life in a dancer.
Q: When you are preparing to choreograph
a new ballet, do your mental images include
the dancers whom you know you will be working
with?
FP: Of course. There are two basic ways
I choreograph a ballet: eighty percent of
the time it has been that I have a particular
dancer or dancers in mind, and I am working
to create vehicles for them. Their personal
motif: their lines, their musicality are
all in that first ballet. The second way
is that I have a story that I'm needing
to tell, and then I go and find the dancer
that in my mind defines, or helps define,
that story. That's slightly harder, and
ultimately more rewarding.
Q: What is your choreographic process
in a situation when it isn't possible to
be familiar with your cast ahead of time?
FP: When that has happened, especially
when I am working with a lot of the youth
companies that I've been working with recently,
I must know the music as well as
I know my own name. I must know exactly
what I want to say in the ballet. I usually
try to write out cards, scene by scene,
of where I want to go, even down to floor
patterns, without a single step in my mind.
The steps have to come from the dancers,
because I've always enjoyed and had this
need to make dancers look as best as they
can. I never superimpose my motifs on somebody
who can't do them. So if I know exactly
what I want to say, and I know the music
backwards and forwards so that I can play
with it, that's the way that I go into a
rehearsal with dancers that I'm unaccustomed
to working with. That is singularly the
hardest situation to go into.
Q: How does the original cast of one
of your ballets influence the choreography
for you and for future generations who will
perform the ballet?
FP: They actually define the roles. Let's
take my ballet of Romeo and Juliet. We
have now done the ballet five or six times.
The roles have changed, the production itself
has gotten more mature -- I was young when
I created that -- but the structure and
the basic theme steps have always stayed
the same. And the original dancers' moves
and motifs follow the production all the
way through, even if it has changed over
the years.
Q: How do you approach recasting a ballet
that has already been premiered?
FP: In two ways. The first, to make everybody's
life a little easier, is to cast similar
body types, similar musicality, similar
levels of maturity. And then, every once
in a while, there is someone who is so stunning,
so energetic, so right for something, that
even though they may be completely different
that I don't mind going into the studio
and changing the role to make it for them.
Joni Petre-Scholz could not be more different
as Lady Macbeth from Leda Meredith, the
creator of the role. Both are unbelievably
valid, both are wonderful Lady Macbeths,
and both have been an absolute joy to work
with. But I did have to go in and help mold
the steps to fit Joni's body, which is a
different body type. But what I was looking
for in that particular case was the drama,
not the body type. The drama - because if
you can't tell the story there is no Macbeth.
It's as simple as that.
When asked if he had any additional
comments, Francis Patrelle responded:
I would also like to say that I personally
over the years have tried desperately, whether
it's in class or on stage or in interviews,
not to talk badly about any other choreographer's
work. Every time you create, whether it's
a ballet, a painting, a song, you're putting
your heart and soul into it. Nobody goes
about the business trying to do the worst
job they know how. Every time they do it
they try to create a bit of genius. So we
don't need to be beating up on each other.
I go to see everybody and everything, and
when I enter the theatre, I say to myself,
"This has been created by my best friend"
(even when I don't know the creator). It
makes everything more enjoyable.
Leda can also be found
at ledameredith.net
About the
writer:
Leda Meredith's
biography deserves to be reprinted in full.
the-vu proudly welcomes her exceptional
talent to our pages.
| As a performer,
Leda Meredith's career spans contemporary
dance, classical ballet, and theatre.
Her performances have taken her to twenty-five
countries on four continents. She has
been a principal dancer with American
Ballet Theatre II, Edward Villella,
Manhattan Ballet, Dances Patrelle, and
others. She was a company member of
Jennifer Muller/The Works for over seven
years, and originated numerous roles
in the repertory. She returned as Artistic
Associate Director for the company's
25th anniversary season in 1999-2000. |
 |
| Her
piece Lullabye Lane, premiered
as part of Jennifer Muller/The Works
25th anniversary season at the Joyce
Theater in New York. With original music
by composer James Sasser, Lullabye
Lane marked their seventh collaboration.
They recently completed the full evening
work Small Talk At The Volcano.
In Spring 2000 she co-created a cabaret
style piece entitled All About Angels
and Eggs, with Michael Jahoda and
Maria Naidu at Dansatelier in Rotterdam.
Other choreographic credits include
works for Malaparte Theatre Company,
the Gene Frankel Theatre in New York,
Dixon Place, Peridance International,
the Hatch Saturday Series, First Fridays
at Five, and the Arts on the Hudson
Festival. |
| She
is a returning guest instructor for
the Henny Jurriens Stichting in Amsterdam,
Western Washington University; and Dance
Loft in Rorschach, Switzerland. Leda
is currently on faculty with Ballet
Academy East. She has taught as part
of the 1996 Iles de Danse in France,
and for the Artist's Trusts International
Course in England. In December, 1999
she was guest instructor for Carolyn
Carlsons Atelier de Paris. Other
dance programs she has taught for include
the California State University at Los
Angeles, and Brigham Young University
in Hawaii. |
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