|

6:00 PM

Dancing Dreams (Tanzträume)

Film screening|Teenagers perform "Kontakthof" by Pina Bausch

  • Egomio Cultural Centre, Nicosia

  • Language German with English subtitles
  • Price Free admission. Registrations necessary

A still from the film where teenagers are dancing, the boys are wearing dark suits and the girls are wearing colourful dresses. Ursula Kaufmann

A still from the film where teenagers are dancing, the boys are wearing dark suits and the girls are wearing colourful dresses. Ursula Kaufmann

The Egomio Cultural Centre is organizing monthly dance film evenings for parents, children and teenagers over 12 years old. In April the Egomio Cultural Centre in collaboration with the Goethe-Institut Cyprus will be showing the film "Dancing Dreams" (Tanzträume) by Anne Linsel and Rainer Hoffmann. Everyone is welcome to the film screening, and to meet and chat before or after the film in the foyer of the cultural centre.

In the 1970s Pina Bausch became an important figure of the international dance scene with her development of dance theatre. She is considered as one of the most significant choreographers of her time. Between 1974 and 2009 she was the director of the Tanztheater Wuppertal.

The piece "Kontakthof" bears the unmistakeable signature of Pina Bausch: It deals with forms of human contact, encounters between the sexes, and the search for love and tenderness, with all its attendant anxieties, yearnings and doubts. It is a dance about feelings, which always pose a big challenge – particularly for young people.

Teenagers from more than eleven schools in Wuppertal went on an emotional journey that lasted almost a year. Every Saturday, fourty students aged between fourteen and eighteen years of age took part in rehearsals that were led by Bausch-dancers Jo-Ann Endicott and Bénédicte Billiet and intensely supervised by Pina Bausch herself.

Anne Linsel's and Rainer Hoffmann's film accompanies the rehearsal process that reaches its culmination at the opening night's performance. We watch the teenagers making their first, clumsy attempts to transform the themes of the dance performance into motion choreography and develop their own, individual ways of using their bodies to express themselves. They soon find themselves embroiled in a process which will lead them to experience enormous personal growth. The physical encounters – at times gentle and shy, but at others aggressive – unleash emotions among these teenagers that many of them experience on stage for the first time in their lives.

Again and again, Pina Bausch encouraged the young dancers "to be themselves". But just beyond the movements of these young people, their fears, their feelings and their desires – in short, their personal 'dancing dreams' – become apparent. By the end of this process each one of them has not only grown up, they have also become more self-confident, independent individuals who are, moreover, able to counter prejudice with scepticism. With an unusual closeness we get to know these young protagonists in different ways, so the film portrays an entire generation.

Pina Bausch died on 30 June, 2009. TANZTRÄUME preserves her image on film for the last time; it also contains the last on-camera interview with this world-famous dancer and choreographer. The film was shown at the Berlinale in 2010.

Duration: 92 minutes

Director: Anne Linsel
Screenplay: Anne Linsel
Camera: Rainer Hoffmann
Editing: Mike Schlömer, Volker Gehrke
Producer: Anahita Nazemi, Gerd Haag
Co-producer: Anne Linsel
Sound: Uwe Dresch, Thomas Keller, Tobias Linsel, Paul Oberle, Tim Dohnke
Sound-Design: Uwe Dresch