The Ballet du Capitole de Toulouse will be at Eurythmie this Sunday
On Sunday, the Toulouse Capitole ballet will perform at Eurythmie. Choreographer Kader Belarbi has brought together choreographic pieces for chamber music including Faun (e) by Englishman David Dawson and two of his creations Salles des pas perdus and À nos Amours.
Sunday, a dance performance performed by the dancers of the Ballet du Capitole de Toulouse, consisting of several choreographic pieces will be presented at Eurythmie.
Faun (e) by Englishman David Dawson will be proposed by the choreographer of the troupe, Kader Belarbi. “We offered the public two versions of this piece, details the former principal dancer of the Paris Opera ballet. The same choreography will be presented, one in a female version, the other in a male version. It’s the same dance. but interpreted by dancers. It is very interesting because the feelings, the emotions which this gives are different according to the interpreters “, assures Kader Belarbi.
The other two pieces offered to the public are works created by the choreographer from Toulouse. The Hall of Lost causes is a camera, of four characters dragging their suitcases and their memories. As if out of time, three women and a man meet and travel in their memory. At last, To our Loves, gives the “vision of a couple translated by three couples at three different ages”, specifies the artist.
Give access to the ballet
By coming to perform again in Montauban, the Capitole ballet wants to give access to this art to all types of audiences. “It is a mission that I have given myself”, recognizes Kader Belarbi, delighted to find the Montalbanese public. “It’s important that ballet can be demystified,” he emphasizes.
Used to performing in other venues throughout the region, the dancers to discover have the Eurythmy room only on the day of the performance. “We do not have much unknown, relativizes the choreographer, because we rehearsed in a space which reproduced the size of the stage in Montauban”, he reveals. “We are used to adapting.”
Scheduled to last about 1h45, the show does not provide for any engagement to avoid the mixing of the public due to sanitary conditions.