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Ringmistress of Cirque du Soleil.


CANADIAN CHOREOGRAPHER DEBRA DEBRA Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa Research Association of America  BROWN BRINGS ORDER AND FANTASY TO MONTREAL'S ACROBATIC SPECTACULAR, CIRQUE DU SOLEIL Cirque du Soleil (French for "Circus of the Sun") is an entertainment empire based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada and founded in Baie-Saint-Paul in 1984 by two former street performers, Guy Laliberté and Daniel Gauthier. .

Choreographer Debra Brown can claim that more people have seen live performances of her work than have seen that of most better-known choreographers. Brown has worked on every production of the acclaimed Montreal-based Cirque du Soleil since joining the globe-trotting troupe in 1987. Although most of the performers she works with are formally trained as acrobats rather than as dancers (she prefers to call them simply "movers"), the Cirque is almost certainly one of the world's most widely seen touring theatrical productions that feature dance. As many as 2,500,000 people may see its ninth production, Quidam (pronounced "key-dahm"), during its current North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 tour.

The rapidly growing Cirque du Soleil entertainment empire might be described as "Ballets Russes Ballets Russes: see Diaghilev, Sergei Pavlovich.
Ballets Russes

Ballet company founded in Paris in 1909 by Sergey Diaghilev. Considered the source of modern ballet, the company employed the most outstanding creative talent of the period.
 for the end of the century." Its innovative combination of New Age-inspired theatricality, avant-garde set design and costuming, intricate lighting effects, live instrumental and vocal music, award-winning choreography, and spectacular physical display must astonish a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 and enchant audiences in much the same way that Diaghilev's company did at the beginning of the century. Cirque can be said to have truly invented the medium of acrobatic dance-theater.

Other individuals create the themes of the various productions and select the assortment of acts, but Brown is responsible for choreographing the awesome physical feats that are the heart of Cirque's appeal. Currently three different shows are being presented on two continents, and by the end of 1998 six productions will be shown on three continents. Each Cirque performance bears Brown's touch in every handstand, somersault, swing, twirl, and gesture.

Brown was born in Brantford, Ontario Coordinates:

Brantford is a city located on the Grand River in southwestern Ontario, Canada. This single-tier municipality was once part of Brant County.
 (near Toronto). Drawn by a compulsion to spring about on her strong legs, she began studying gymnastics at age nine, eventually becoming Brantford city Brantford City was a federal electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that was represented in the Canadian House of Commons from 1925 to 1949. . This riding was created in 1924 from parts of Brantford riding.  champion and one of the top university-level competitors in Ontario. Her attraction to dance began at an equally tender age. She says that as a young child she choreographed dances to perform for her classmates Classmates can refer to either:
  • Classmates.com, a social networking website.
  • Classmates (film), a 2006 Malayalam blockbuster directed by Lal Jose, starring Prithviraj, Jayasurya, Indragith, Sunil, Jagathy, Kavya Madhavan, Balachandra Menon, ...
 or at small neighborhood parades. In high school she choreographed the floor exercise routines of virtually all her fellow gymnasts. (Fortuitously, floor exercise and vault were her favorite events.)

Brown's formal dance education began in earnest with Donna Peterson at the University of Western Ontario Western is one of Canada's leading universities, ranked #1 in the Globe and Mail University Report Card 2005 for overall quality of education.[2] It ranked #3 among medical-doctoral level universities according to Maclean's Magazine 2005 University Rankings.  in 1973, where she was competing as a gymnast, and continued at York University York University, at North York, Ont., Canada; nondenominational; coeducational; founded 1959 as an affiliate of the Univ. of Toronto, became independent 1965.  in 1976, where she majored in dance. There she studied Cunningham technique with Sandra Neels, Graham technique with Norrey Drummond, and ballet with Earl Kraul, Grant Strate Grant Strate (born December 7 1927) is a Canadian dancer, choreographer, and academic.

Born in Cardston, Alberta, he was an original member of the National Ballet of Canada and was a soloist, choreographer and teacher with the Company.
, and other teachers from National Ballet of Canada National Ballet of Canada, the leading Canadian ballet company. Based in Toronto, it was founded (1951) by Celia Franca (1921–2007) and modeled on Sadler's Wells (now the Royal Ballet).  in Toronto. Brown remains grateful to Neels and Drummond for spending extra time helping her body shift from gymnastics to dance.

After receiving a Bachelor of Fine Arts The Bachelor of Fine Arts, usually abbreviated BFA, is the standard undergraduate degree for students seeking a professional education in the visual or performing arts. Also named in some countries the Bachelor of Creative Arts or BCA.  degree from York in 1978, she moved to Vancouver, where she choreographed, continued her ballet studies with Chiat Goh, and performed with independent groups, such as Experimental Dance and Music. In 1978 she also began an eight-year association with Vancouver's Flicka Gymnastics Club, spending twenty-five hours a week developing a unique blend of dance and gymnastics with a group of eight- to ten-year-old girls. The Flicka group gained international recognition in the world of competitive gymnastics, particularly after two of its members represented Canada at the 1984 Olympics. They also presented innovative performances of expressive gymnastics in an artistic context--good preparation for Brown's current metier.

In 1985 some of Brown's friends suggested that she see the fledgling Cirque du Soleil, which had been founded in Montreal the previous year by an itinerant group of misfit mis·fit  
n.
1. Something of the wrong size or shape for its purpose.

2. One who is unable to adjust to one's environment or circumstances or is considered to be disturbingly different from others.
 street performers and stilt stilt, common name for some members of the family Recurvirostridae, shore birds including the avocet. Stilts, as their name implies, have the longest legs of any bird except the flamingo.  walkers. When Cirque came to Vancouver for Expo '86 and the Children's Festival, Brown, in classic storybook sto·ry·book  
n.
A book containing a collection of stories, usually for children.

adj.
Occurring in or resembling the style or content of a storybook: storybook characters; a storybook romance.
 fashion, literally sneaked under the big top at intermission to watch. Sensing a kinship with the Cirque and its approach to movement, and having learned from a chance meeting with veteran clown Michel Dallaire that the troupe was planning to add a choreographer to its creative team, Brown ventured backstage the next day to announce her availability as a choreographer. Dallaire later mentioned Brown to Guy Caron, Cirque's artistic director at the time. Andre Simard, the Canadian men's national gymnastics coach, who was familiar with Brown's work, vouched for her. Previously, Cirque productions had been put together by a director using contributions from various associates, but Brown's strong background in competitive gymnastics, combined with her proven talent for innovative dance-gymnastics, made her a natural choice to be put in complete charge. Caron hired her to choreograph its 1987 production, Le Cirque Le Cirque is a famed French restaurant in Manhattan owned and operated by Sirio Maccioni. Currently at One Beacon Court (151 East 58th Street), it is a 16000 square foot restaurant designed by interior designer Adam Tihany, architect Costas Kondylis.  Reinvente.

New Cirque productions are now born from brainstorming among the creative team of directors Franco Dragone and Gilles Ste-Croix, set designer Michel Crete, costume designer Dominique Lemieux, and lighting designer Luc Lafortune. They decide on the theme or concept of the show, the casting of acrobats, the choice of apparatus, and the set and costume designs.

Dragone, who has been with Cirque since 1985, gives Brown tremendous freedom in her work once these decisions are made. On two occasions he simply gave her a word or phrase to guide her as she worked with the artists. For Quidam, it was simplicity. For the dance sequences in Mystere, Cirque's permanent Las Vegas Las Vegas (läs vā`gəs), city (1990 pop. 258,295), seat of Clark co., S Nev.; inc. 1911. It is the largest city in Nevada and the center of one of the fastest-growing urban areas in the United States.  production, it was birds mating. Brown feels that her only requirement is "to come up with images that provoke. My only restrictions, really, are my own creative limitations and the constraints imposed by the set environment."

She begins working with the performers within the first month of their arrival for a nine-month training period. As always, she is driven by the search for new, expressive, yet simple movements that are uniquely provocative on traditional acrobatic apparatus. An almost Buddhist surrender to the immediate present is at the heart of her method. She works collaboratively and spontaneously, "relying on the artists' talents, creativity, and personal qualities" for inspiration during rehearsals. She places special emphasis on drawing out their individual creativity, since they must live with their roles for from three to six years.

Quoting singer Loreena McKennitt Loreena McKennitt, C.M. (born February 17, 1957) is a Canadian singer, composer, harpist and pianist most famous for writing, recording and performing world music with New Age, Celtic and Middle Eastern themes. , she says that the creative impulse is "a visit--a thing of grace, not commanded or owned so much as awaited, prepared for. A thing, also, of mystery." Brown adds, "During the creative process, with the direction becoming clearer along the way, the work reveals itself. If you listen, keep your eyes open, and trust your intuition, creation is all about trust."

The title of the Cirque's currently touring production, Quidam, means "nobody" in Latin; in French the word suggests a nameless passerby, a solitary figure on the street, a person coming and going in our anonymous society. Director Dragone says the show is a tribute to the joys and sufferings of everyday people, a casting of light on our frailties and anguish in the face of the new millennium that is fast approaching. There is as much lament and melancholy as gaiety Gaiety
See also Cheerfulness, Joviality, Joy.



Gallantry (See CHIVALRY.)

butterfly orchis

symbol of gaiety.
 and irreverence in the live musical accompaniment. Unlike previous Cirque productions that were thronged with such allegorical figures as angels, devils, and birds, Quidam features tramps, trollops, and strapping laborers. Their ragged outfits suggest both the wear and tear that acrobats' bodies must endure and the suffering of the anonymous everyday person, the quidam in each of us.

Brown, who cared for her mother during a drawn-out terminal illness, has been no stranger to such suffering. Moreover, during the development of Quidam, Dragone asked all the performers to pretend that they were in great pain and facing the choice of whether to live or die. Choosing imaginatively to live, be felt, would lead the artists to experience life more fully and passionately, and to "be much more sensitive to the fluttering of butterfly wings, to a kiss that you see in the street, to the sound of the wind, to noise and music."

Although Quidam's story line is abstract, its music and imagery create a thematic unity that evokes the tension between happiness and sorrow; between the infinite possibilities of the dream-world and the too-frequent dreariness of everyday life, between the left-brained Western conscious mind and the right-brained creative, intuitive imagination. The show suggests, in a rather Eastern-philosophical style, that these tensions can be resolved by unearthing what is repressed--a caged red balloon is released at the beginning of the show--and by bravely plunging into the dreamy unknown of the subconscious with the open-minded innocence of a child.

The protagonist of Quidam is a young girl--double cast with Emily Duncan-Brown and Audrey Brisson-Jutras, daughter of composer Benoit Jutras--who flees her parents' bland, mundane, closed-in existence. Her journey is a distinctly psychedelic stream-of-consciousness affair, replete with lightning strikes
  • For the weather phenomonea, see lightning
  • For the 1982 Aerosmith single, see "Lightning Strikes (Aerosmith song)"
  • For the 1986 Ozzy Osbourne song, see The Ultimate Sin
, physical danger, mysticism, joy, death, and awesome superhuman su·per·hu·man  
adj.
1. Above or beyond the human; preternatural or supernatural.

2. Beyond ordinary or normal human ability, power, or experience: "soldiers driven mad by superhuman misery" 
 feats that test the skills of Cirque's astonishing a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 performers. The young girl returns to her parents at the show's end with enough vision and faith to heal their pained, alienated reality.

"Just be in the moment," Brown says, when asked about the message of Quidam. "Take it in as a gift to the soul, a gift for the eyes. I love it when audiences walk out of the show feeling transformed by what they've just seen. I say, yes, we have done our job when we have lifted their spirits during the performance."

Seemingly driven to reinvent art forms, Brown has choreographed for pop artists such as Celine Dion Céline Marie Claudette Dion OC, OQ, (born March 30, 1968) is a Canadian singer and occasional songwriter and actress.[1][2][3] Born to a large, impoverished family in Charlemagne, Québec, Dion became a teen star in the French-speaking world after , rhythmic gymnasts such as Lori Fung Lori Fung Methorst, CM, OBC (馮黎明 born February 21, 1963 in Vancouver, British Columbia) is a Canadian gymnastics coach and retired rhythmic gymnast.  (who won a gold medal gold medal

traditional first prize. [Western Cult: Misc.]

See : Prize
 at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games), and Apogee, a touring fifty-minute exploration of the bed of the trampoline trampoline

Resilient sheet or web (often of nylon) supported by springs in a metal frame and used as a springboard and landing area in tumbling. Trampolining is an individual sport of acrobatic movements performed after rebounding into the air from the trampoline.
 as a dance floor, using three to four musicians and three to five performers. She was the choreographer for the Metropolitan Opera's 1991 world premiere of John Corigliano's The Ghosts of Versailles. At the Chicago Lyric Opera, she choreographed a twenty-three-minute "bungee ballet" for the Rhine maidens in its 1992 Das Rheingold and had acrobatic spear-wielding valkyries bouncing across the stage on a row of trampolines in its 1993 Die Walkure. She is already at work on 1998 Cirque productions for Las Vegas and Disney World in Florida.

Although Canadian arts granting foundations have usually turned down her applications because they didn't consider her work "dance," Brown was honored last November with the Fosse Award for most innovative choreography. Performing at the awards ceremony in Las Vegas was a group of four contortionists with whom Brown has worked for the past eight years. Her widely known "quidripedal choreography" with these contortionists--in which all four limbs are exploited as means of locomotion--won her the first-ever Soviet Press Award for most outstanding choreographer at the 1990 World Circus Festival in Paris.

As childlike in her enthusiasm for her life and work as Quidam would have us all become, Brown hopes to continue working with Cirque "for as long as we're growing together, and for as long as they're still interested in working with me." (She also humorously notes her ambition to continue drinking fresh juices, a passion.) She is grateful to Cirque for "a lot of wonderful experiences that I've had and will, hopefully, continue to have." She would love to choreograph for dance companies, and resolves to schedule her career counter to the usual order, "starting as a choreographer and finishing as a performer. The standing joke is that one day I'm going to perform again." Constantly buoyed by Cirque's insistence on the power of dream, we should not be at all surprised if that comes to pass.

RELATED ARTICLE: The "Ultimate Foolishness" of Karl Baumann

The dance technique of some of the acrobats in Quidam can be a bit rough around the edges, and the interludes of pure dance are mostly comic. The notable exception is Austrian-born Karl Baumann, who plays Fritz, a scampering sprite of a sidekick to the lanky, cranky crank·y 1  
adj. crank·i·er, crank·i·est
1. Having a bad disposition; peevish.

2. Having eccentric ways; odd.

3.
 Ringmaster of the American juggler juggler

Entertainer who keeps several plates, knives, balls, or other objects in the air at once by tossing and catching them. The art of juggling has been practiced since antiquity.
 John Gilkey. Baumann's impish imp·ish  
adj.
Of or befitting an imp; mischievous.



impish·ly adv.

imp
, fairy-like character exudes the spirit of commedia dell'arte and the red-and-blue target design on his chest (echoed several times in the show) emphasizes his role as the circus heart of the production. The numerous prickly spikes attached to his costume recall the suffering of St. Sebastian, but Baumann's Fritz remains lighthearted and gaily gai·ly also gay·ly  
adv.
1. In a joyful, cheerful, or happy manner; merrily.

2. With bright colors or trimmings; showily: gaily dressed in ribbons and flounces.
 acrobatic.

Born thirty-six years ago in Salzburg, Baumann received the sort of eclectic education (engineering and classical guitar, as well as ballet and modern dance at Juilliard) that makes him a natural for Cirque. His dancing credits include work with Moses Pendleton, appearances at BAM's Next Wave Festival, and tenures with the Berlin Opera, the Munich State Opera, and Momix. He was a principal dancer and choreographer for Momix from 1989 to 1993, the year he joined Cirque. Recalling the audition, he says, "Debbie and I connected right away. We spoke the same language." He was eventually cast as a dancing lizard in Mystere and imbued the role with such personality that Dragone decided to make him a main character in Quidam Baumann seems to have run away to the circus for good and may never return to the world of concert dance. He likes the excitement and experimental nature of Cirque and enjoys the movement possibilities opened up by apparatus not commonly found on concert dance stages.

In Quidam he spends time hanging and spinning on high ropes in an act known as "Spanish Webs," where his dancerly dan·cer·ly  
adj.
Having or displaying the movements, skills, or knowledge of a dancer or the dance: "impressionistic doodles, symphonic splashes and dancerly flourishes" Los Angeles Times.
 polish is particularly oustanding. "Being around acrobats," he says, "you can't avoid learning acrobatics acrobatics

Art of jumping, tumbling, and balancing. The art is of ancient origin; acrobats performed leaps, somersaults, and vaults at Egyptian and Greek events. Acrobatic feats were featured in the commedia dell'arte theatre in Europe and in jingxi (“Peking
." In spite of the directors' initial skepticism, Baumann diligently practiced the rope work over the course of an entire year and eventually won the opportunity to take part in the act. "It would be good training for any dancer to spend a little time upside down," he says. "Dancers may not realize that there can be a place for them in a show like this." Baumann confides that Brown challenges him to "go all the way" with his improvisational creativity, that her vitality and enthusiasm have a way of possessing those she works with.

During her journey, the young girl in Quidam meets characters hovering "on the border between life and ultimate foolishness." Gilkey's Ringmaster and Baumann's Fritz have stepped across that border and entered what Baumann calls "the live Fellini movie" that is Cirque. For the duration of the enchanting two-and-a-half-hour journey, the audience can't resist following them. "The whole world is yearning for more spirit and fantasy," Baumann says. "We bring the audience into that dimension."

Daniel Gesmer is founder of Seismic Skate Systems, Inc., headquartered is Boulder, Colorado.
COPYRIGHT 1998 Dance Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:includes related article on dancer Karl Baumann; choreographer Debra Brown
Author:Gesmer, Daniel
Publication:Dance Magazine
Date:Jul 1, 1998
Words:2396
Previous Article:Mahler, Bernstein, Neumeier. (John Neumeier and the Hamburg Ballet)(Cover Story)
Next Article:A new company that makes the past come alive. (American Repertory Dance Company)



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