tv Kick off Deutsche Welle October 18, 2022 4:30am-5:01am CEST
4:30 am
society taxes the right to loving taxes and the obligation to pay them both inherent in the sovereignty of relation states and their citizens. but what happens when the power of taxation is undermined? you pay won't pay taxation and politics starts october 21st on d w 3 . 0, diversity for me is at the heart of what we've done for dances.
4:31 am
make me feel like i want to put theater on tire with . it's june 20 2130 degrees in the shade. i've come to to meet someone. he's always in motion. internationally acclaimed. choreographer. both ash cash done. he's currently working at the theater house, shipped out in germany as artist in residence. i go to his dance company. i catch
4:32 am
him on a quick break between last as an artist, he is difficult to pin down. i want to know more about his princess. how does he begin? what is his 1st steps in creating a choreography? starting a dance business like sitting on the street. with can afford it a globally uncomfortable. yeah. you have to find am yeah. am starting of done space is, is complicated and kill taken and i would normally try to start with what's happening now in my life. whatever comes up to my head, anything, anything, it's a bit like it starts like therapy and i see what keeps me busy. and then i kind of do the same with the world around me with a dancer as i try to fill. what's the energy in the room and what bothers us or
4:33 am
interest us? i'm a korean 1st, so i, i'm the chef in the kitchen. i lead the su sheriffs and you know, we get the material in the, the tomatoes they, you know, are they onions? and it's all, it's great to when it's good products, we always say for a good meal, you need good product. but i appreciate the time. i'm kind of like leading the, the kitchen. but for this thing to happen for don supposed to happen, you need the great product to live great dancers, you need the great kitchen unit, great equipment, and i recognize i can just do it on my own justice. work also towards the world winning major rewards. he's a star among contemporary choreography as his pieces and known for being willing to consist of emotion brimming with energy. i will have a fantasy about to what's the energy of the music without insurance of the music.
4:34 am
you have a strong feeling of it. and once you start writing it down or telling it to someone it's, it's disappearing, it's up and the same, i will have the feeling of the music or the atmosphere of it. and i will start recording the music. and then the work starts and i will experiment and experiment and experiment until the, until i find something that is like the, the heart of the thing. it's an incredibly subjective experience. dance and it's every moment the to watch. it is different. i can fall in love with something, and then really me sit and try to get the dancers to get there again. and maybe they never will because i can't feel it. power percussion action checks that took them lessons such an early age, studied music, played for a long time in a rock band to this day, his productions are driven by strong with him. when suddenly everything is collapsing and a lot of times i think this is when the groove is coming in,
4:35 am
when the re them is where i just go like, let's just rides this wave and not think too much. and, you know, part of the work and ambition of the work is to take people on a journey where they lose their thoughts, they lose their minds. of course we tell the audience kind of where we are, we, the audience gets a sense of the, the atmosphere, the delays or the, the emotion that we are kind of dealing with am, i hope is that it becomes a poetic experience. i disappear into it like a dream. one of his most successful pieces is it features typical shesta moments motif cease developed and uses again and again. every note, jeremy likes the law, the cloud and the flower clown. then we're really heavy on. it's must, you can really get into a concert. i'm for said. yeah, she really talks about being smoky. like having the
4:36 am
idea. yeah. now you are as smoke or you are a balloon or it's a lot will be much a nation. so all the time we, we constantly, much in things is not your finger needs to be here or your leg needs to be. there is sola, the much nation. the movement is quite juicy. if that word makes sense, like there's a lot of texture and strong and viscosity as if for dancing through honey i and it kind of morse through the bodies of the body kind of is constantly changing and morphing and going out. and it's a, it's a way to find space in the body that maybe we haven't found before. in stuttgart, whole session chesta is working with the renowned gaultier dance company. he is known and respected at courtiers company for
4:37 am
a long time. it's an honor to be guess, choreographer here. so when i re came with the idea to talk more like just acknowledging the relationship close, we have one ready m, which is a very fruitful one, you know, and i love the company. i love the spirit of the company and there is a san, so for working really hard, you know, kind of for a lot of investments from the dancers, from everybody in the same time the atmosphere is very light. it's very friendly, very casual in the casualness. so for a company in atmosphere, you can find something quite human actually, and this is what interests me about dance. so i don't like when it's too late. can you known that it has all the facade and the glamour. and now that interested in that carefully happening just underneath yourself, i wanted to quickly pull fresh chesta has already had work staged in stuttgart.
4:38 am
he's been math at 3 years as artist in residence. his 1st production with the goatee dance company is a re interpretation of swan lake. by the time rehearsals are over, barely anything will remain of the classic. the world famous ballet is given the typical shape, the treatment. the idea for the adaptation came from the dance company director who wanted the original ballet to spock, something entirely unique. but when every kid spoke about it in the beginning, i was a bit like law sworn leg. but exactly that is what's interesting for me. the conflict, the, me for the story, the, the culture around the, to the culture around what, you know, ballets and beauties. and that just makes me feel like i want to break everything. you know, it makes me feel like i want to put the theater on fire contemporary dominance as an act that blues away the old to make way for the new radicalism is
4:39 am
part of who, who fish. chester is deeply in tune with the tight geist he promotes different ideas of beauty. diversity for me, is it the heart of what contemporary dances? the world of ballot comes from a very particular culture, from a culture of high society, a royal court and song. so it, it carries a very racist, i tell you that hearts you know, and we are descendants of classical bother we came from there. we are like the ugly sister. the point of contemporary dance is that it diversify the perspective of how we look at things. and it is essential for contemporary dance to be diverse and it is what makes it interesting and it is what makes it to reach and truthful and honest and revealing. we want to feel and believe that contemporary john says,
4:40 am
very open the truth. these contemporary dance is still sort of owned by the middle class, you know, and it's owned by a very white audience in order to open the doors and to you know, to, to make contemporary dance available for everybody. not only as an art form to watch, but to participate. a lot has to be done. the doors have to be swine in a wide open. since 2002. chester has lived in london and has frequently sold a house. major of them used their job program, but he also takes his work to the city smallest ages and works with up and coming down says he wants to attend conventions on their head, to open doors and do away with elite ism and exclusion for him. that's true, freedom of act ah.
4:41 am
working among the dances in stuttgart, our international performance, they at my and his clear vision, his calmness and accuracy. checks that doesn't think much of strict grills all the perfectionism of classical ballet. it's very clear of what he wants and her she's not stricken away. no, you did wrong or no. this is not nice, but he finds a way to guide us into these. but at the same time he, he has the patients that we get it in the body. something i find with her precious kind of a light heartedness in the studio. and that allows us all to explore and
4:42 am
to try different things without judging ourselves too much. while at the same time, having very serious physicality. so there's a lot of challenge. also, advice, gantski knows exactly what he wants from us, but he also gives us the freedom to find it ourselves. so, but for fin with your little how pretty, how. and then, despite the relaxed atmosphere at rehearsals, nothing escaped his gaze. mm. chased as p since often reflect his own background in modern israeli dance about emma, but i've always been passionate about this really style of dance. who fishes from israel is about lives in london. his movement style and the music, he uses feature a lot of heavy and loud beats. heavy bass that goes right to your stomach bow. you
4:43 am
sit there and think wow homes. because it's fast paced and energetically funds 20 minutes of a for you, with the style could fit in anywhere good or bad. personal changed. i was born in jerusalem in 1975. he learned piano was a child, and later studied ballet and modern dance. at the age of 18, he moved to tel aviv, where he was drafted into military service for 30 long months. it was a formative and borderline traumatic time for him. i certainly tried to forget my military service. it was very unpleasant experience just just as an individual and, and you know, growing up in a country that is in attempting really badly, but attempting to be a democracy. and then you go into the army, which is a must. and then there are very different rules that they, it's like a universe inside a universe and that was really difficult mentally for me to,
4:44 am
to accept even before finishing his military service, kinda had already become a member of the renowned back chiva dance company is teaching it was all had naveen and legend of contemporary dance and offend, which really the association had a big impact on shasta. it's very strong, you know, in my identity or in my, i mean it's my history and you know, our history shapes us, you know, and, and my growing up in israel and the college traumas this sort of like overly politically obsessed environment that israelis is certainly a kind of marked me and working with ohio than working with my chevy, which is obviously such a strong language such as a stronger choreographer. so it's, it's my family morton
4:45 am
is rainy, dance with its powerful syntax, if movement, past shaped companies, world wide, pulsating p. say sweet audience is away and all say with a society in which they were created. i think there is a level of her directness that's what comes to mind. that's can have a positive size and pretty, pretty difficult sized top sites. tough love and toughness. ruth? so yeah, that directness i think is, is the kind of the strength of the ease readily and dance. you get the truth in the face. dance often becomes political of the whole fashion stack. his pieces are insane. provocative of emotion,
4:46 am
passion for. yeah. and also aggression. just like in towns clowns. her clowns is a it started like an experiment and it's a very simple and show where the performers are. obviously there to entertain the crowd. with. and they use whatever means available to them to entertain the crowd. it easily dancing and tap dancing, fake tap, dancing, and theatrical killings. so it starts with some killings that are kind of like amusing. but it never stops. the theatrical killings become more and more
4:47 am
choreographed and more and more, you know, come from mass. busy mass killings that are got crow graphically happening. so i think that the work is very starts entertaining and with a smile and can become quite satisfyingly. i think, disturbing news. crisis conflict. whoa, whoa, fetched as work reacts to political events, to the mood of the time. as a debt of the united states. 201620. 17. for example, saw terrorist attacks carried out my islamic militants around the world. chester responded with the peace grand finale.
4:48 am
grunting. only a war cuz that that kind of responded to the energy, the apocalyptic energy in our world. there was a feeling that everything is collapsing, everything is coming to an end. it's like all the structures that we know. everything that we trust is like falling apart the world from being the solid place that we can trust became. we don't know what we can trust in death is everywhere. looking at everything collapsing and how does it feel? how does, for, from the inside what, what's the experience of people inside? this is 8 case in the contrast could hardly be greater between the calm, polite atmosphere, if rehearsals and harsh controlled chaos of chest,
4:49 am
his work on stage. but he also sees the rehearsal studio as a place to create genuine physical experiences. something that plays an important role in his work is the dark, and it's stage dancers who's in a state of the tv, yes, rapture, as if hypnotized. the darkness gives us a space like a surreal space against like a dream world. so the darkness helps focus the elements, you know, focused energy. you know, we start getting into some sort of a trans think
4:50 am
we speak about the works that have the darkness. that's the power for me. sometimes you can say there is a power in revealing the room. there is a power in saying, we are here now experiencing this. and it's like in our 1000 people watching a few people, bringing the spirit up and you say, this is where we are now. like having these 2 sides of the rainbow of the arch is what makes you feel all their world that exist between so that you know, the really kill article peasy quick. you know, i love it when it gets complicated. repetitive to and then you have the kind of the silence and the moments that gives you very little. i love l o positions. i just, i love kind of arguing with myself again and again. whole fresh, shasta seeks out animalistic movements in his dances echoes, if the primal we are an animal in my hand and we are just as somehow
4:51 am
have the ability to speak. that's kind of amazing and the ability to plan, i enjoy exploring the body and the movement of the body to, to the complexity of it. so when you explore the complexity and the full ability of your color, you're in discover animalistic size. full shasta, the animalistic wet presents direct and continuous energy, pure physicality and unrestrained power thing. there is an openness, there is there. i don't know how to explain it. there is like the, the breath of oxygen sort of that is very inspiring. are almost like translucent, transparent, energy after
4:52 am
just 4 weeks of rehearsal, i meet whole fish. shasta, again on the day of the dress rehearsal. i'm back at the t. r to house shoot. got home if the go to a dance company. the mood is highly focused. clutch relaxed at last shakes, does re interpretation of swan lake, is coming to the stage. he's renamed the piece swan cake. it's less about the profound and more about the pleasure of nonsense when he composed the music, him, as for most of his choreography, you know, okay, so he's having a last consultation with the companies director and i go to head you're hearing there are still a few details to be ironed out to like, how will the curtain cold be done and what seemed to pull soundtrack like confetti cannon or their feathers from the ceiling. others from the
4:53 am
tar and feather around it and then and then down. ah, yeah, that is so like, surprising, the audience. yeah. so basically, yeah, like how it starts and this one lake is an unrecognizable version of tchaikovsky classic there's no white swan to be seen that dom says orange color, full casual gear. instead of fairy tale bliss. this pole instead of themes, their purity and beauty, a crazy true phyllis, the stage instead of melodrama. best light hearted chaos. it's more like a wild party. lasting late into the night. for the dance is many times and feels
4:54 am
like it. it's falling down the steps. and it goes another layer and another layer, there is no rules in a way to the piece it's, it's kind of exists in a bit of a cabaret like worlds, you know. but, but that allows for everything to happen. and, and maybe it's that sense of freedom that it just, it just wants to, it just wants to explode and do what it once may be a bit childish. ah, swan can't maybe not a whole fashion, chest and masterpiece that will be talked about forever. but definitely something that needs you wanting more and the performance is certainly demanding for the dances as exhaustion relief. when it's over for the choreographer himself, it's
4:55 am
a chance with critical reflection. my feeling is there, what can i fix and what can i make better them? so yeah, good moments about him and you know, i can see the things where it feels itself and where it really works nicer places where maybe we can make it better and i'm not just sitting and enjoying it. so it was very intense. but it's funny because very intense work. in the same time. stuttgart is very quiet, but there's a sweet memory with this, which memorial annoyed. so it's, it was a healthy working hard. and then for me it's very important that that in series, creative and open and playful. and yeah, this is a how i want to spend my life. oh, fresh as productions are full of emotional and physical power like the rest of his life. thereabout motion and intensity.
4:56 am
4:57 am
4:58 am
and joining forces with local people to facile species extinction campsite. in 30 minutes on d w. these pictures are shaking up the artwork using a built in certificate of ownership called an n, f t. n, a c. t's make a digital work of art unique and therefore valuable. but what is really behind this new technology? how in f t r, changing the game in 75 minutes on d, w a. hello guys. this is the 77 percent. the platform for africa. you beat issues and share ideas. you know, on this channel, we are not afraid to talk to young people clearly have the solution. good future
4:59 am
77 percent. every weekend on d. w is the end of the pandemic in site. we show what it could look like will return to normal and we visit those who are finding it difficult to success in our weekly coping. 19 special every thursday con d w. sometimes a seed is all you need to allow big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning packs like global ideas. we will show you how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world
5:00 am
and how we can all make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing. download it now for free. ah, ah ah, this is detailed news live from brooklyn, new devastation in the center of keith, at least for di, what an apartment building is reduced to rubble. the city's mayor calls it a terror attack by russia. ukraine blames iranian made drones and president a lot of mirrors. the land says the strikes are continuing also on the program.
30 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on