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Performance Research A Journal of the Performing Arts ISSN: 1352-8165 (Print) 1469-9990 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rprs20 A Phantom in Contemporary European Choreography: What is Beckett doing to us dancemakers? Can we do something to him in return? or, a series of realizations, three instances and an afterthought Efrosini Protopapa To cite this article: Efrosini Protopapa (2007) A Phantom in Contemporary European Choreography: What is Beckett doing to us dance-makers? Can we do something to him in return? or, a series of realizations, three instances and an afterthought, Performance Research, 12:1, 20-34, DOI: 10.1080/13528160701398008 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/13528160701398008 Published online: 16 Feb 2011. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 1025 View related articles Citing articles: 1 View citing articles Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=rprs20 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 20 A Phantom in Contemporary European Choreography What is Beckett doing to us dance-makers? Can we do something to him in return? or, a series of realizations, three instances and an afterthought e f r o s i n i p r oto pa pa a series of realizations: from m.a. to ph.d., still holding on to beckett + 1 Such works have been performed by Lapsus Corpi, a London-based performance group directed by Efrosini Protopapa. For more information, visit <www.lapsuscorpi.org> 2 Quad was first transmitted in Germany by Süddeutscher Rundfunk in 1982 under the title Quadrat 1+2 and consequently by BBC 2 on 16 December 1982. It was first published by Faber and Faber, London, in 1984 (Beckett 1984: 290). 3 The translation was based on the text published by Faber and Faber (1984) and was for the Athens-based streettheatre group of Titina Halmatzi in November 2000. F titles her Masters dissertation Waiting for Audi-Audi: In Dialogue with Samuel Beckett (Protopapa 2003). As part of this project, she choreographs a performance through which she claims to have been able to investigate ‘the methodologies that Beckett employs as a theatre playwright in order to negotiate his main thematic ideas and form his structural principles’ (5). The choreographed work – entitled Waiting for Audi-Audi (2003–2004) – does not feature much dance, in the sense of that which she has been taught in dance technique classes, but it does include stillness, repetition of singular movements until exhaustion, games with everyday habituallyused objects, and a clownish hat-exchange scene. F also maintains that she has placed the work that she created ‘in dialogue with Samuel Beckett’ in the context of the performance event itself. It features two clownish figures in an act of waiting for the moment of performance, thought of here as the moment when the performer confronts the audience – hence the nickname ‘Audi-Audi’. Later on, she embarks on a Ph.D. project, whose aim is described in terms of constructing ‘something like a “dance-philosophy”, which is meant here as an exploration – in dance terms and through performance practice – of issues of fact and the real, representation and meaning’ (Protopapa 2004: 5). In truth, the reason she ever undertook the project was because she believed that it would enable her to create more choreographic work informed by her reflections on Beckett’s theatre. Regardless of the direction this research will take, she remains a Beckett enthusiast and creates three more choreographic works – is this with reference to and influenced by Beckett’s plays? Yes, that’s a possible way to think of them. Those are titled QUADish-ish (2005–2006), Umm . . . I . . . and uh . . . (2005–2006) and wish + qish (2006) respectively.1 The first is a reworking and development of F’s older work QUADish (2002), which in turn was created in response to her experience of translating Beckett’s play for television Quad 2 from English to Greek.3 Both QUADish and QUADish-ish take place on a stage with fluorescent tape used to mark out four-sided shapes and their diagonals. Groups of performers exercise all sorts of ‘walks’ – that is, ways of proceeding in space on the lines – to conduct their individual journeys in the marked space. For QUADish, F seems to have composed a rigid system of geometrical possibilities. As the work progresses and the possibilities get exhausted, she creates QUADish-ish, where she Pe rf o rm a n c e R e s e a r c h 1 2 ( 1 ) , p p . 2 0 – 3 4 © Ta y l o r & F ra n c i s L td 2 0 0 7 D O I : 1 0 . 1 0 8 0 / 1 3 5 2 8 1 6 0 7 01 3 9 8 0 0 8 + 20 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 21 A Phantom in Choreography adopts the principle of adding new performers on stage – always by multiplying the number of the existing performers on stage times two – so that the system constantly adjusts and is recreated in order for the performers to have new spatial rules by which to proceed in an everchanging stage-situation. For F, then, the work suggests the possibility of an endless multiplying process – towards infinity perhaps?4 Somehow, this echoes Beckett for her much more than the visual effect of the four-sided shapes on the floor. F feels she is getting closer to what appears as the structural processes in Beckett – the Beckett method, could she say? – and wonders whether and how she can move from specific plays by Beckett, images and words, to something underlying the whole of his theatre; something to do with Beckett’s ways of theatre. In Umm . . . I . . . and uh . . . , a solo performer wearing a t-shirt which says ‘performer’ moves to the sound of three recorded monologues. These are monologues of people whom F asked to narrate a memory they did not remember well. What the choreographer was aiming for here were those moments of hesitation, ambiguity and uncertainty in one’s speaking, when it becomes full of ‘thinking hums’ or ‘remembering sounds’, such as ‘umm’, ‘uh’ and ‘er’. The solo then explores similar notions in movement, as the performer also executes tasks of having to remember, think and decide her actions on stage, both in response to what she is hearing and in relation to what she has been doing previously in rehearsal and in the immediately preceding moments of the piece. F understands how Umm . . . I . . . and uh . . . could be compared to Not I 5 and Krapp’s Last Tape,6 mainly as regards the ways in which operations of memory and structures of thought are revealed through language. And, indeed, she believes that there is something of her Beckettian obsession in Umm . . . I . . . and uh . . . . However, this time the work is not a response to her reading of any specific play by Beckett. Therefore, she decides that, contrary to + 21 the cases of Waiting for Audi-Audi and QUADishish, neither the title of the work nor the programme notes distributed for the work’s performance needs to make a direct reference to any of Beckett’s plays. F decides that Umm . . . I . . . and uh . . . is an independent work, which could be viewed as exploring physically – through the human body and its movement (and stillness) – qualities and processes which Beckett’s ‘characters’ often explore in language (and silence). The last of the three abovementioned works by F – called wish + qish – features two main parts. 4 Or, as critic Donald Hutera wrote in his review of QUADish-ish, it could also be seen as a staged situation that makes possible ‘[a]ll sorts of metaphorical readings about repeated historical patterns and new social orders’ (Hutera 2005). One is a reduced version of QUADish-ish – hence qish – as her preoccupation with infinite multiplying processes remains. The other part of wish + qish is composed by a number of short diverse scenes. These almost autonomous small performances, one could say, have been created through a process of creating movement scores based on answers gathered from a public who was asked ‘What would you like to see on stage?’ The scenes are then presented next to the remaining version of QUADish-ish, as performances someone could have wished for – in September 1972, and its first performance in Britain was at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in January 1973 (Beckett 1984: 214). 5 Not I was written in English in spring 1972 and was first published by Faber and Faber, London, in 1973. It was first performed at the Forum Theater of the Lincoln Center, New York, 6 Krapp’s Last Tape was written in English in early 1958. It was first published in Evergreen Review in summer 1958 and was first performed in October 1958 at the Royal Court Theatre, London (Beckett 1984: 54). • Above: Susanna Recchia in Lapsus Corpi’s Waiting for Audi-Audi. Choreographed by: Efrosini Protopapa. Photo by: Christian Kipp. 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 22 F therefore wonders whether it would be more appropriate to conclude that Beckett’s theatre is present in her choreographic practice (and her thinking about her practice) in an undefined yet unquestionable way. What follows is her attempt to write on three instances that came about in her work and life as a young choreographer-researcher over the last couple of years. Such instances concern occasions when F found links between other choreographers’ works and Beckett’s theatre, as well as occasions when she heard or read the choreographers themselves mentioning Beckett’s influence on their practice. These occasions will be discussed particularly in relation to Beckett-related points raised by Alain Badiou, Gilles Deleuze, Jonathan Rée and Steven Connor, which F finds correlate to issues that emerge from and within the encounters between contemporary European choreographers and Beckett. Subsequently, it might become easier for F to understand why and how Beckett ‘appears’ in her own choreography, and, if not, this in itself will be a new idea worth considering. Protopapa hence wish – in proposing an alternative to the ultimate but exhausted (and exhaustive) performance of QUADish-ish. F realizes that in this piece she might have thematized her desire finally to be able to escape from Beckett, or perhaps even from her tendency to relate and discuss her work in relation to Beckett. Is this an impossible task? Although it has never been a case of making adaptations of Beckett’s plays by translating them into dance terms, nor even a case of extracting textual, + instance 1 • Anastasia Tsonou and Susanna Recchia in Lapsus Corpi’s Waiting for Audi-Audi. Choreographed by: Efrosini Protopapa. Photo by: Christian Kipp. scenic or movement elements from his theatrical works and recomposing them into a new performance outcome, F realizes that one can indeed detect elements of what she would call ‘his theatre thinking’ in her overall choreographic thinking. She would propose, then, that her obsession with Beckett be understood as an imagined relation with the playwright on the level of methodology: through reflections on means and modes of composing the theatrical, through a testing of the limits of words, images and actions on stage, through an understanding of the ways in which the theatrical operates in performance. But this again seems vague and unspecific. Vera Mantero: When Thinking Replaces Talking – or, Does it not? In Ploebst’s recent book on new choreography, Portuguese choreographer Vera Mantero states: I’m not a dancer, I don’t want to be a dancer, I want to do whatever I feel like doing, I want to do whatever is necessary to do. It’s not obvious to me to make dances in terms of theatrical, composed dance. . . . I don’t make dances. I make performances. (quoted in Ploebst 2001: 54). Ploebst presents Mantero as an artist who has translated many of her questions concerning her art-form into choreography. Such questions include: What does dance say? What can I say with dance? What am I saying when I’m dancing? (42–3). Her relationship to her training background as a dancer, of ballet in particular, 22 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 23 A Phantom in Choreography is also given much attention, as Mantero claims that she has turned to everything that was forbidden in ballet, such as ‘touching the lights and curtains and breathing a little on the stage, being a little normal, looking at and touching things’ (38). Mantero becomes the choreographer who ‘left dance in the dust’, since ‘dance vocabulary seemed simply too poor’ to express ‘that side of the inner being’ that she wants to explore, as a dance-maker who is interested in the letting go of things and emptiness, in a certain lassitude, or the idea of falling into nothingness (40). It is important here briefly to contextualize Mantero within a current movement in European dance7 whose main concerns and characteristics have been pinpointed by Lepecki as a reduction of ‘theatrics’, of expansiveness, of the spectacular and of the unessential, which brings these choreographers’ work formally closer to performance art (1999a: 129–30), a critique of representation and an interrogation of choreography’s ‘political ontology’, as Lepecki calls it (2006: 45), often through the performance of still-acts rather than continuous movement, so that what is enabled is a rethinking of action and mobility within dance (2006: 15) as well as the shattering of (dance) techniques and the privileging of the dancer as co-author (1999b). On one level, then, Mantero’s rejection of the strict framework of theatrical dance, her open critique of ballet technique as one that does not allow normal actions on stage, her questions about dance’s capacity to convey meaning, as well as her interest in reduction and the less, could be understood within and through the context of this recent European dance movement. There is one more claim, however, that Mantero makes in Ploebst (2001: 43), which has not yet received much attention and by which I am also quite intrigued. This is the choreographer’s direct reference to Samuel Beckett as the one in whose work ‘thinking’ replaces ‘talking’. Once again, just the appearance of Beckett’s name here could easily be connected with many + 23 of Mantero’s earlier claims, on the basis of Beckett being seen as having renewed theatrical practice by rejecting complex plots and thoroughly outlined characters, instead counterproposing minimalist compositions of images, movements and words on stage, in order to express the deeper condition of the human being (to take the existentialist view). I would like particularly to focus, though, on the specific idea of the replacement of talking with thinking, as for Mantero herself, it is the ‘thinker’ Beckett to whom she relates, being, she claims, a ‘thinker’ herself (Ploebst 2001: 49). It is through her reference to Beckett in terms of ‘thinking’ and ‘talking’ that we might perhaps start understanding Mantero’s question ‘What am I saying when I’m dancing?’. In Beckett, Mantero finds the perfect example of how art becomes ‘thinking’, ‘reading the world’ (Ploebst 2001: 49–52). Her own ‘thinking’, as she describes it, concerns the fact that ‘currently we live on a very flat existential level’ (52). Mantero acknowledges that ‘[w]e are set on forgoing many experiences, relations and possibilities of being’ (49). For her, it is to this problem that Beckett provides the answer, by opening up possible processes of reading the world, registering experiences, and thinking about and reflecting on our being. Already, here, Badiou’s clear-cut definition of how Beckett philosophizes provides a key to what Mantero might mean by a resistance to the forgoing of experiences; Badiou notices that Beckett registers truths, rather than producing them: ‘[n]o longer to produce unheard-of impurities, but to wallow in the apparent purity of the concept. To philosophize, in short’ (cited in Power and Toscano 2003: xxviii). Might this throw some light on Mantero’s definition of a ‘thinking’ which replaces ‘talking’? What is the relationship that emerges between the terms ‘talking’, ‘thinking’ and ‘dancing’, in the choreographer’s attempt to register truths, to resist the forgoing of experiences? It feels as if ‘thinking’ does not 7 Other choreographers who are considered part of such movement are Jérôme Bel, Jonathan Burrows, Boris Charmatz, La Ribot, Thomas Lehmen, Xavier Le Roy and Meg Stuart, among others. As Lepecki (2006: 45) clarifies however, although the particular European movement in dance has been gaining shape, visibility and force since the mid-1990s, it does not constitute an organized movement; neither does it have a proper name. Writers who have focused on the abovementioned choreographers and who discuss the issues such works raise about choreography today include Ramsay Burt, Bojana Cvejic, Pirkko Husemann, André Lepecki, Joroen Peeters, Helmut Ploebst, Gerald Siegmund and Dorothea von Hantelmann. + 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) + 14:35 Page 24 exactly replace ‘talking’ or ‘dancing’, but perhaps we are dealing here with a kind of talking or dancing that remains, even – or precisely at the moment – when talking and dancing seem to have been made redundant. Therefore, and if one is to keep talking, could it also be suggested that it is more a matter of the thinking ‘cracking through’ the talking or being allowed to ‘emerge in’ the dancing? Is this when dancing starts saying? What kind of dancing do we have then? It is this latter set of questions that Mantero’s thinking brings up for me, and that allows me to connect her to Beckett. What is more, in exploring such questions I would suggest that the choreographer does not hint at a rejection of talking (and moving) altogether, but quite the opposite: towards a new consideration of the ways in which choreography might use – as well as overuse and abuse – language (and movement). This becomes clearer in a text that critic, dramaturge and writer Jeroen Peeters wrote when asked to join a research project Mantero led under the title ‘Thought, Poetry and the Body in Action’ as part of ImPulsTanz in Vienna 2002. Peeters was invited to join as an observer and consequently produced a text that traces several exercises and includes some of his remarks and thoughts on the collaborations and processes he witnessed. To begin with, Peeters introduces the way in which language is involved in Mantero’s process by explaining that she works through a series of tasks which accumulate into complex procedures, in order to lead both body and mind into ‘a state of ignorance, discomfort and doubt, of allowance, discovery and surprise, not to be perceived as “natural” or preceding language. . . . [L]anguage was even a main tool . . . to enter different states’ (Peeters 2002). In particular, Peeters describes exercises of automatic writing and outlines a few main strategies that seem to be at the core of Mantero’s approach. These include: the principle of horizontality, which allows for the juxtaposition of words, so that hierarchy is erased and ordinary meaning is often prevented from emerging clearly; the principle of superposition, which emerges out of thinking about two different things at once and merging them into a single image; connecting thinking and writing in a self-reflexive moment of writing about writing itself; arriving at mere nonsense, as when haunted by a brain that runs fast, incessantly producing meaning; allowing nothing to happen, accepting that free writing can remain disappointing, banal, and can reveal nothing unexpected. Such strategies have indeed already been detected as key principles of Beckett’s novels and his characters’ monologues. Isn’t it in Beckett that the one who speaks, who never ceases to speak, at the same time asks ‘who’s speaking’? Isn’t it Beckett who seems to be haunted by games with language and long internal monologues (whether these reveal the influence of Joyce or not)? Isn’t it Beckett’s characters who are not sure whether they have started to mean something? Just as Beckett aims at destroying language ‘by excess and saturation’, ‘through the violence inflicted on words’, in order to obtain silence (Badiou 2003: 54), so Mantero approaches ‘thinking’ through forced excessive talking rather than the rejection of talking altogether. Protopapa • Anastasia Tsonou in Lapsus Corpi’s QUADish-ish. Choreographed by: Efrosini Protopapa. Photo by: Christian Kipp. 13/6/07 + 24 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 25 A Phantom in Choreography As Power and Toscano explain, Beckett himself expresses his ‘attempt to think through and beyond the limitations imposed by the linguistic set-up’, ‘to attain something other than language’ (2003: xxviii) in his much discussed letter to Axel Kaun in 1937: more and more my own language appears to me like a veil that must be torn apart in order to get at the things (or the Nothingness) behind it. . . . [L]anguage is most efficiently used when it is most efficiently misused. As we cannot eliminate language all at once, we should at least leave nothing undone that might contribute to its falling into disrepute. (Beckett cited in Power and Toscano 2003: xxviii–ix) Eventually though, Mantero choreographs movement rather than words. The question arises, then, whether Beckett’s thoughts on language could shed some light on the way Mantero deals not only with words but also with movement. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, it is those same strategies described by Peeters (2002) that seem to determine the choreographer’s passage from language to movement too, as if a third layer is now added to the already multilayered process of automatic writing. ‘Untwining’ (as Peeters calls it), detachment, disconnection between words and gestures, articulating body and mind separately and tracing the imbalance that occurs; these are the principles that form the state Mantero seeks. This is again a process of excess and saturation. Full of words, so to speak, the dancer is required to move, staying active within two (or more) universes at the same time (as Peeters puts it). But this then becomes the way in which Mantero seeks to tear apart the veil of movement in order to get at her desired emptiness; the way she surpasses the limits of the dance set-up to attain something other than dance – ‘that side of the inner being’ she aims for; the way in which she attempts to make dance fall into disrepute. And this is perhaps how Mantero becomes a ‘thinker’, thereby + 25 communicating, as she claims, with Beckett – Beckett also as ‘thinker’. instance 2 Maguy Marin: Through Exhaustion/Taking Flight in Arithmetic8 In the publicity material for French choreographer Maguy Marin’s Umwelt, which was presented as part of the Dance Umbrella Festival 2005 at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, I read the following: ‘Influenced by the work of playwright Samuel Beckett, Maguy Marin has created a work in which the audience is compelled to critique its own reflection’. The work is presented as an ‘exquisite and often humorous hour-long cycle of inherent activity’, ‘a hypnotic and colourful rear-window view of Marin’s sense of the human condition’ (Unknown author, Dance Umbrella website). In the post-show discussion I raise my arm and ask Marin where exactly Beckett’s influence is to be traced in Umwelt. She pauses, sighs, shrugs her shoulders and says: ‘Well, in general, it’s always inspired by Beckett!’ (Marin 2005). The choreographer then refers to Deleuze’s text on Beckett’s television play Quad, and speaks of her interest in the idea of exhaustion. She explains her choreographic methodology of taking one theme or gesture and playing with variation in order to make a performance, linking it to Beckett, who, she says, ‘takes few words and makes them into a lot of words’ 8 ‘We took flight in arithmetic. What mental calculations bent double hand in hand!’ (Beckett 1965, quoted in Gontarski 1995: 188). • Eri Papacharalambous, Neil Paris, Susanna Recchia, Elena Prapidi, Pano Masti, Alex Beech, Priska Lüthi and Anastasia Tsonou in Lapsus Corpi’s QUADish-ish. Choreographed by: Efrosini Protopapa. Photo by: Christian Kipp. 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 26 • Susanna Recchia in Lapsus Corpi’s Umm . . . I . . . and uh . . . . Choreographed by: Efrosini Protopapa. Photo by: Christian Kipp. order not to die (as do Hamm and Clov in Endgame); secondly, as the exhaustion of possibilities in the strictly mathematical sense of working out all the possible combinations of a restricted number of elements through systems and patterns (as with Beckett’s Molloy, who lists all the possible combinations of the kinds of food he has available to eat). It is therefore worth looking both at these aspects of Beckett’s work, in order to further understand how he appears in Marin’s work, and at what this enables Marin to achieve in her choreography. To begin with, Marin admits her desire to explore the embodied physicality that is sometimes displayed by Beckett’s characters, by which she means not only the look of the body which appears on stage in Beckett’s theatre or is described in his prose but also the repertory of movement, the bodily behaviour which such body becomes engaged in. Marin explains that this interest emerges from the fact that she trained in dance where ‘there is a prevailing vision of the body, which has to be beautiful and young’ (cited in Ricoux 2006: 13). Beckett appeals to her because his bodies are shackled and thus appear ‘more human than dancers’ bodies’, which do not interest her anymore (13). It is true that in Beckett there are innumerable instances of ‘the blind, the lame, the paralytic, the helpless and the impotent’, as Badiou observes, ‘and, in the end, those bodies . . . are reduced, little by little, to a head, a mouth, a skull with two holes’ (Badiou 2003: 45). Their incompleteness and insufficiency is what Marin points to as their first and foremost human characteristics – characteristics that she clearly differentiates from dancers’ bodily proficiency and flawlessness, which makes the latter drearily inhuman. Badiou’s further comment on Beckett’s theatre, which ‘swarms with libidinous blind figures, with impotent old men relentlessly following their passions, with battered but triumphant maid-slaves, with imbecilic youths, with crippled megalomaniacs’ (Badiou 2003: 75), provides a base from which to understand how the Beckettian (‘more human’) shackled body, might (or should) also be considered comic; how it produces humour and furthermore expresses the ‘ human condition’ (also a characteristic of Marin’s work). The philosopher argues that ‘[t]he handicap is not a pathetic metaphor for the human condition’; ‘this carnivalesque heritage’ is ‘neither a symbol nor a metaphysics in disguise, and even less a derision, but rather a powerful love for human obstinacy, for tireless desire, for humanity reduced to its stubbornness and malice’, for ‘anonymous figures of human toil which the comedy renders at once interchangeable and irreplaceable’ (75). Badiou proposes that through such bodies Beckett ‘enables us to grasp that anyone is the equal of anyone else’ (75). He thus points to Vladimir’s exalted tirade in Waiting for Godot: ‘It is not every day that we are needed. . . . Others would Protopapa (2005). This still does not provide me with sufficient explanation either of why Umwelt was advertised in this way or of why, for Marin, ‘it’s always inspired by Beckett’. A few months later, though, I read an interview where Maguy Marin gives an interview to Estelle Ricoux, which is published in Dance Theatre Journal (2006), in which she expands on what interests her in Beckett. Here, the idea of exhaustion emerges doubly: firstly, as physical exhaustion, through restricted bodies which mostly appear in pairs and are complementary so that they have an obligation to live together in + 26 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 27 A Phantom in Choreography meet the case equally well, if not better. . . . But at this place, at this moment of time, all mankind is us, whether we like it or not’ (Beckett 1956: 71–2). In order to portray ‘all mankind’, Beckett first suspends the subjectivity of his characters, reducing them to what Badiou considers their indestructible functions, their bare determinants and primordial constituents (Power and Toscano, 2003: xviii–ix, xxii). Marin seems to be seeking something similar; she says she aims at ‘a sort of anonymity’ – something she describes as ‘more human and more extensive than the identification of one of the performers or of one specific person’ (cited in Ricoux 2006: 13). In Umwelt she stages bodies coming onstage backwards, in order to make the audience identify with them not as individuals but rather as bodies. Additionally, she choreographs the whole work as an endless act of walking, something she sees as very basic in her work but which comes across as rich in effect – complex and simple at the same time, the action that is ‘at the origin of everything’ (13). Umwelt can hereby be considered a work in which movement is reduced to the elemental function of walking, while specific individuals become universal humans. In this sense, Marin’s Beckett is the one who deals with ‘all mankind’ via bodies whose repertories of action are restricted to primordial functions, ‘their bare determinants’. Moving on from the exhaustion of the physical body to the mathematical exhaustion of combinatorial possibilities, Umwelt’s choreography is (as Marin admits) entirely generated by a system that reproduces Beckett’s processes of exhaustion, his exploration of possibilities without intention or aim. Umwelt is based on polyrhythmic patterns that are combined using mathematical permutations of multiplication and repetition (14). Despite the madness and obsession that lie at the centre of such processes, Marin admits that she finds pleasure in applying combinatorial procedures to her own work and that now more than ever + 27 she is able to relate to the plays of Beckett, which employ such procedures. While at the heart of Umwelt there lies the methodology of potential exhaustion, Marin nevertheless explains that the process of working through possibilities never actually seems to exhaust them; rather, for her it opens up new possibilities, without ever marking them out, or resolving them. This echoes Marin’s reading of Deleuze’s The Exhausted (1993), where the philosopher differentiates between tiredness and exhaustion, between realizing and possibilizing. Deleuze wonders whether one must be exhausted to give oneself over to the combinatorial, or whether it is the combinatorial that leads us to exhaustion, or whether it is even the two together, the combinatorial and the exhaustion, that exhaust us (152), but Steven Connor makes a remark that summarizes how I see such process working in Umwelt: Exhaustion appears to be the rim, or the horizon of exertion, to belong to the far edge of things: but it is in fact implicit in its beginnings. Exhaustion is closer to vitality than might appear, since the sign of vigour is that it desires the consummation of exhaustion. Strength consists in the power and the will to be drained to the invigorating extreme of exhaustion. ‘Nothing like breathing your last to put new life in you’, as somebody says in Beckett. (2004: 54) This is how Marin perceives exhaustion; as implicit in beginnings, an opening out of possibilities. What fascinates her in Beckett’s exhaustion is how it affirms a notion of the present, which the choreographer herself characterizes as ‘Spinozean’; she searches for the keys that are available to humans in order for them to be ‘at the maximum potential of present life’ (Marin 2006). Following Deleuze’s proposition, then, I consider Marin’s combinatorial procedures, too, not as realizing the possible but rather as giving the possible ‘a reality that is proper to it, a reality that is, + 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 28 Protopapa • Priska Lüthi, Pano Masti, Elena Prapidi, Neil Paris, Eri Papacharalambous, Susanna Recchia, Alex Beech and Anastasia Tsonou in Lapsus Corpi’s wish + qish. Choreographed by: Efrosini Protopapa. Photo by: Christian Kipp. •Neil Paris, Priska Lüthi, Alex Beech, Pano Masti, Eri Papacharalambous, Elena Prapidi, Susanna Recchia, Efrosini Protopapa and Anastasia Tsonou in rehearsal for Lapsus Corpi’s wish + qish. Choreographed by: Efrosini Protopapa. Photo by: Christian Kipp. precisely, exhaustible’, so that, as Deleuze puts it, in exhaustion one remains active, even if for nothing (1993: 153). Marin holds on to the system of exhausting possibilities, in order for Umwelt to keep going, until the thread that has been unwinding between two spools during the performance finally becomes entirely unwound: ‘The piece is not resolved. It just has to stop eventually’ (Marin, cited in Ricoux 2006: 14). The choice of a specific structural principle is what defines the end. It follows that the choreographer herself has only to choose and refine the structure, to organize energy, to understand how the sequence of images must happen while keeping to the structural principle. The link with Beckett is clearly distinguishable here: the methodical treatment of elements, which pushes logic to its extreme, becomes the tool for formal innovation. Echoing Beckett’s statement, ‘[t]o find a form that accommodates the mess, that is the task of the artist now’ (cited in Fletcher 2003: 67), the choreographer concedes: ‘It’s a big mess to make a creation. We try to put order but eventually it’s always a big fight between mess and order’ (Marin 2006). Finally, Marin, like Mantero, describes herself as always having worked on the fringe of dance. Even if dance is fundamental to her because she trained in dance, she feels the need to go beyond it. Here she draws one last parallel between herself and Beckett; just as in his late career Beckett hardly used words at all in his plays, so Marin wonders whether, as her work matures, she still needs movement (or what we call dance) as the driving force in her work. ‘Probably so’, Marin concludes, ‘but I don’t really care whether there is dance or not. I don’t care about what it is made of’ (cited in Ricoux 2006: 16). I am now able to envisage an environment – umwelt, in German – where Marin meets Beckett. It incorporates and explores mathematical formulae and processes of exhaustion, structure and chaos, physical 28 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 29 A Phantom in Choreography weakness and humour, insufficiency and humanity, walking and dance. instance 3 Jérôme Bel: Towards redefining theatre/when dance and theatre collapse into one A few months after reading Maguy Marin’s interview, I find myself in Dublin. This is after the Beckett Centenary Festival, and the city is full of posters of Beckett’s face and placards with lines from his plays and prose. The playwright’s name comes up in a public interview with French choreographer Jérôme Bel at the Project Arts Centre, as part of the International Dance Festival of Ireland 2006, where Bel is invited to present his work Pichet Klunchun and Myself (2005), a commission by Tang Fu Kuen for the Bangkok Fringe Festival. Despite the interviewer’s comment that ‘well, we are a bit over Beckett here nowadays’, Bel insists on clarifying what attracts him in Beckett: it is the fact that Beckett’s plays ‘show us the limit of theatre’ and therefore provide us with a redefinition of theatre; as the choreographer explains, ‘when Krapp is listening to the tape, it is no longer theatre; this makes you understand what theatre is’ (Bel 2006). Bel then goes on to describe theatre as a setting in which ‘people sit in the darkness with their mouths shut, while other people are in the light speaking’ (2006). Or, as Etchells writes of Bel’s performance The Show Must Go On, ‘theatre is a frame (game) constructed so that people can look at other people’ (Etchells 2004: 198)–a contract, as Etchells has claimed on other occasions, between you-the spectator and me-the performer.9 ‘It is important that I do what I do in theatre’, Bel claims (2006). He speaks about the relationships, the history, the habits and the tradition of Western theatre. In fact, he describes his Rite of Spring as an exercise after Pina Bausch and Maurice Bejart, ‘to connect to dance history’, ‘to connect to a main score of modernity’. Bel also clarifies – similarly to Mantero and Marin – that he is now interested + 29 in the idea of stopping the dance, although ‘of course you need to know how to dance in order to able to do this’ (2006). Hence, while he admits that ‘you are defined by the context’, he is now interested not in dance but in a few artists; in ideas, not in the medium. In the end, what Bel sees as pure choreography is the instruction to be ‘eating a banana with your right hand’; he then wonders, ‘What is performance?’, and once again replies, ‘For me, it is clear in Beckett’ (2006). The choreographer’s preoccupation with the theatrical apparatus is what seems to lead him to a definition of theatre via Krapp’s listening to the tape, or eating his banana; via an act which in Bel’s terms ceases to be theatre. On the one hand, one could argue that ‘Bel’s work continually shifts between boundaries of dance, live art and performance and transcends definition and labelling’ (Ploebst 2001), so that he redefines theatre by working across art forms. But on the other, his comments on Beckett show how what he explores is in the end theatre and all the operations that take place within it. As Lepecki notes, ‘[i]t is given in cybernetics that every system, in order to operate smoothly, necessitates a functional degree of amnesia’ (2000). In the same way, then, that Lepecki realizes that ‘to write on the work of Jérôme Bel is to suddenly awake from this amnesia of habit’ (2000), so perhaps do audiences wake up from the amnesia of their habits as spectators of the theatrical when confronted with work that transcends the boundaries of theatre but within the theatrical setting itself. The way in which Bel achieves this awakening, or the undoing of the theatrical setting, is perhaps what links his work to the scene of Krapp listening to his tapes or eating his banana. Reading Etchells’s lines on The Show Must Go On, one could also think of Beckett: [P]eriods of boredom, waiting and anticipation are the constituent economy. . . . Bel plays a double game with the watcher, who, faced with more and more less – nothingness, voids, + 9 At a post-show discussion after the performance of Bloody Mess at Riverside Studios, November 2005, for example. 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 30 10 + For more info, visit <http://www.mobileacade my-warsaw.com/englisch/ 2006/start.html> But what exactly does the audience face? What is this ‘more and more less’, and how does it resemble Krapp eating his banana? I attempt to make this link through Siegmund’s discussion of the theatricality of the bodies in Bel’s works. Starting from the premise that ‘a body on stage cannot help but be inscribed in the symbolic’, Siegmund argues that the body in Bel is situated at the crossroads between the eighteenth-century authentic or natural body and the avant-garde ‘real’ body (2003: 84–7). The first he names authentic because of its ability ‘to imitate the correct gestures, postures and facial expressions to validate the actor’s speech’, and by the latter he means the body that fell ‘out of character’, so that ‘[t]he subordination of the actor under his or her role was turned upside down’ (Siegmund 2003: 86). In Bel, then, as Siegmund explains, bodies do not perform a character – this links them to the bodies of the avant-garde – but indeed they do operate from within the framework of traditional eighteenthcentury theatrical representation. Here, bodies ‘appear to be truthful not because they are naturally presented or do not act at all (everything is on the contrary perfectly staged and rehearsed), but because they are untheatrical bodies’, so that ‘[d]ance and theatre fall into one’ (Siegmund 2003: 87). The specificity of the theatre described here is what is at stake for Bel in Krapp’s Last Tape. As Bel sees it, Krapp is not extracted from the traditional representational theatrical setting, but appears within it. Still, he engages with what Bel describes as ‘pure mechanic and precise action without any expression or emotion’ (Bel 2006), action that is performed ‘out of character’ and does not presuppose the ‘subordination of the actor under his role’ in Siegmund’s terms (see above). It is precisely this kind of reduction of theatrics in Beckett, this less, which for Bel ‘challenges the question of why theatre is so live and therefore underlines its very liveliness’ (Bel 2006) – its very ‘more’. Arguably, Bel’s performers do not appear on stage in the same manner as Krapp. Krapp is bound to those precisely staged actions that Bel describes, but he is still the character of a play, much closer to the notion of a ‘role’ than the people one sees on stage in The show must go on. Even so, Bel goes back to Beckett in order to redefine the theatrical framework within which he places his own work. What he seems to be seeking in Beckett is the precise choreographed action, the body that commits to real action from within the representational setting, the minimal of action that allows for the maximal of theatre. Protopapa doubling, blankness, redundancy, the banal, the obvious, the everyday – begins to find more and more more. (Etchells 2004: 199) afterthought: an encounter and the emergence of the phantom F is now in Warsaw, Poland, taking part in the Mobile Academy 2006,10 where she meets Xavier Le Roy, a choreographer whom she has been linking to Beckett in a much more arbitrary way than those above; neither Le Roy himself, nor those writing about his work, ever mention Beckett or attempt to suggest connections between Le Roy’s work and Beckett. F asks Le Roy to bring to Warsaw the score for three performers that she performed and saw others performing in a workshop he led at Greenwich Dance Agency, as part of the London International Summer School 2004. F seemed to remember this as something quite ‘Beckettian’. Le Roy brings the score to Warsaw, and F searches in it for Beckett. At first, what strike her are the names that are given to the three performers: Pim, Pam and Boom. ‘For sure the names are very Beckett’, Le Roy tells her (2006). She emails a friend urgently to provide her with all the names of Beckett’s characters which resemble Pim, Pam and Boom. The friend replies: + Yellow (1934, published in More Pricks Than Kicks) features Bim and Bom, apparently the name of Russian clowns of the 1920s. There is a 30 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) -~ko..}(_ A Phantom in Choreography :O('t ( <? 13/6/07 <eo.) 14:35 -ft.e. roilo ( m(r. · 1er\o '• Page 31 U'Jtrc ~'V'- c{x:rkt / ‘Thomas “Bim” Clinch’ in Murphy (1936) who has relatives called Bom and Bum. Pim is a character in How It Is (1960). The three parts are ‘before Pim with Pim after Pim’. There is also a very minor character called ‘Mrs Penny-a-hoist Pim’ in Watt (1948). The list of characters in What Where (1983) reads ‘Bam, Bem, Bim, Bom, Voice of Bam (V)’. Can’t find a Pam or Boom, I’m afraid.11 (Mansell 2006). + The reference is there, but there is no exact correspondence between the score’s characters and those of Beckett. F keeps reading the score. There seems to be a systematic way in which Pim, Pam and Boom’s actions and words are structured in Le Roy’s score, combining the set of variables in the situation and exhausting the possibilities. For a moment F recalls her experience of watching Come & Go, as part of the Beckett Centenary Festival 2006 at the Barbican Centre. Here it was Flo, Vi and Ru exploring three-ness and its mathematical possibilities in a precisely choreographed manner. Le Roy’s score, however, soon moves beyond that; as she reads, F realizes that what is at stake in this score is not so much the precision with which it is to be realized but rather the way it has been written and is therefore read and acted out in performance. The score creates misunderstandings and 31 /v'I Vrucr, or,s ( I' nu • A score for three people by Xavier Le Roy (page 1). \in]_kt;,, co.{w,/ . confusions by requiring the performer/interpreter to exchange the score with co-performers, to flip the page from one side to the other, to skip some parts and repeat others, to choose and combine elements from a set of variables, and to determine one’s action in relation to what the other performers are doing. Somehow, Le Roy’s score is ‘very Beckett’ in what it produces. But it is also in a way not Beckett at all; the territory in which Le Roy seeks to place his performers is one of intricacy and real uncertainty rather than that of determined and accurate choreographed actions. F finds a moment to speak to Le Roy about his work in general and the score in particular. She asks him directly whether his work is influenced by Beckett. Le Roy’s response is no surprise. His first words are: ‘Beckett is everywhere’ (Le Roy 2006). He admits that he has read Beckett and that the influence can perhaps be traced, but that he began this reading only after people remarked ‘this is so Beckett!’ when seeing the his early work Narcisse Flip (1997), where Le Roy explores the possibilities of the moving body as if it is under scrutiny in a laboratory situation. Therefore, the choreographer suggests that his work might have been the same had he not read Beckett at 11 With due acknowledgement to C.J. Ackerley and S.E. Gontarski (2004) The Grove Companion to Samuel Beckett: A Reader’s Guide to His Works, Life and Thought. + 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 32 Protopapa • A score for three people by Xavier Le Roy (page 2). _rrr """ iL. o.,.""~"sd +k [o..il- ~er"-'--{,,,,) y~ J" o,J t~Aex +kn + Ooc .t ~ recF, r« <,,c- a,,,J. ,l.u,,,,.. tL- \1,... .\lr -rl1t-1J" '-/OU all. Finally, he tells F: ‘Well, maybe in terms of this exhaustion of possibilities. . . . I’m really interested in that. Because Beckett loved mathematics and I also know mathematics; so it’s quite simple, maybe it’s only about that’ (2006). While lingering on her quest for Beckett in contemporary European choreography – on the statements she has collected from choreographers, her reading on Beckett and her thoughts on the links between such materials – the encounter with Le Roy provides F with a new view. She realizes that her enterprise will always seem justified but is also in some ways always bound to fail. Beckett’s presence in contemporary European choreography needs rethinking. It is there, but is not exactly a matter of traceable, undistinguishable influence – often not even a matter of reference. F needs to find new terms with which to speak about her topic. At this stage, two approaches to Beckett echo in F’s mind. The first belongs to Badiou (2003), + and the second is that proposed recently by Jonathan Rée (2006). For Badiou, ‘it is only by confronting the characteristic operations or procedures defining Beckett’s work that we can really come to terms with the singularity and force of Beckett’s contribution to thought’ (Power and Toscano 2003: xviii). If anything, it seems that all choreographers point at the ‘thorough and unapologetic operation of formalisation’ which is in order in Beckett’s work, ‘the relentlessness and precision that mark its fundamental moves’, his concern with method above all (xviii). But, secondly, what is at stake here is that this method is actualized in theatre. What Beckett offers is a ‘philosophy of theatre’ as described by Jonathan Rée. Addressing the question of whether Beckett’s writing after the Second World War reveals an existentialist view of the human condition or expresses the broader narrative of Nietzsche’s loss of God or a loss of the centre of meaning, the philosopher shrewdly pointed out that it is 32 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 33 A Phantom in Choreography necessary to understand that Beckett’s plays are not his opinions in writing, but ‘words to be spoken from actors towards audiences’ (Rée 2006). The originality of Beckett’s theatre is to be found not in any philosophical themes that he explores – existentialist or other – but in the way he thematizes philosophical questions and gives them new form. This form, F wants to insist, belongs to theatre in particular. As Rée suggests, Beckett rehearses the logic of the ‘dramatic voice’ – not the lyrical or the philosophical voice, for example – and it is this voice that determines the operations and procedures in his plays. Beckett appears in contemporary European choreography precisely at this crossroads: where formalization and method, pure structural and mathematical principles, meet the theatrical reality of people on stage being watched by other people in the auditorium. It is in this space that thinking is allowed to emerge through words and silence, actions and stillness, where reality is possibilized rather than possibilities being realized, and where the spectator is offered more and more more through more and more less. And this is as clear as it gets. Indeed, Beckett is everywhere. Trying to pin down his presence with examples and references now seems an amusing yet impossible task. In Warsaw, F hears Hannah Hurtzig, director of the Mobile Academy 2006, trying to define the presence of phantoms, ghosts and spectres in her speech welcoming the participants. This kind of presence is defined as one that has not yet appeared but that at the same time cannot cease appearing: ‘not living, not dead, not yet born or incapable of dying, neither present nor absent – they [ghosts, avatars, phantoms, the undead, zombies] put reality on hold and rob it of matter and provability’ (Hurtzig and Hochleichter 2006: Mobile Academy website). F has finally found a way to define Beckett’s presence in contemporary European choreography, as well as in her own work: as a + 33 ghost, a phantom, a spectre, who has not yet appeared, in concrete and distinguishable terms, but at the same time cannot cease appearing, in the words and thoughts of choreographers. As for F’s attempt to explore such presence, ‘Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better’ (Beckett 1983: 101). acknowledgements Thanks to Anna Pakes for encouraging me to submit an article for this issue and to Joe Kelleher, Catherine Laws and Thomas Mansell for their help and fruitful comments on drafts of this writing. references Ackerley, Chris and Gontarski, S. E. (2004) The Grove Companion to Samuel Beckett: A Reader’s Guide to His Works, Life and Thought, New York: Grove Press. Badiou, Alain (2003) On Beckett, ed. and trans. A. Toscano and N. Power, Manchester: Cinamen Press. Beckett, Samuel (1956) Waiting for Godot, London: Faber and Faber. Beckett, Samuel (1995 [1965]) ‘Enough’, in S. E. Gontarski (ed.) The Complete Short Prose 1929–1989, New York: Grove Press, pp. 186–92. Beckett, Samuel (1983) ‘Worstward Ho’, in Nohow On: Company, Ill Seen Ill Said, Worstward Ho, London: John Calder, pp. 101–28. Beckett, Samuel (1984) Collected Shorter Plays, London: Faber and Faber. Bel, Jérôme (2006) Pre-show public interview at the Projects Arts Space, Dublin, April (my notes). Connor, Steven (2004) ‘Chronic Fatigue’, Performance Research 9(4): 54–8. Deleuze, Gilles (1997) [1993] ‘The Exhausted’, in Essays critical and clinical, trans. D. W. Smith and M.A. Greco, London: Verso, pp. 152–74. Etchells, Tim (2004) ‘More and More Clever Watching More and More Stupid’, in Adrian Heathfield (ed.) Live: Art and Performance, London: Tate Publishing. Fletcher, John (2003) About Beckett: The Playwright and the Work, London: Faber and Faber. Hurtzig, Hannah and Hochleichter, Carolin (2006) Welcome, 9 October, <http://www.mobileacademywarsaw.com/englisch/2006/welcome.html> + 020-034 rPRS1201-Protopapa (KM) 13/6/07 14:35 Page 34 Unknown author (2005), Dance Umbrella: About Us: Website Archive: France Moves: La Compagnie Maguy Marin, 26 May 2006, <http://www.danceumbrella.co. uk/archive.html> Protopapa Hutera, Donald (2005) Resolution! Review: Life is Too Short. . . ? Parallels QUADish-ish, 6 February, <http: //www.theplace.org.uk/discuss.resolution.reviews. popup.php?review_id=130> Lepecki, André (1999a) ‘Skin, Body and Presence in Contemporary European Choreography’, The Drama Review 43(4): 129–40. Lepecki, André (1999b) ‘Crystallisation: Unmaking American Dance by Tradition’, 18 May 2005, <http: //www.sarma.be/text.asp?id=868> Lepecki, André (2000) ‘Wake Up Call: Citation and the Unmaking of Amnesia in The Last Performance’, 18 May 2005, <http://www.sarma.be/text.asp?id=869> Lepecki, André (2006) Exhausting Dance: Performance and the Politics of Movement, New York and London: Routledge. Le Roy, Xavier (2006) Conversation with the author, Warsaw, August (my notes). Mansell, Thomas (2006) Email correspondence with the author. Marin, Maguy (2005) Post-show talk at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, October (my notes). + Peeters, Jeroen (2002) Places of Allowance: Untwining Mind and Body in Writing, Gestures and Speech, 2 October, <http://www.sarma.be/text.asp?id=257> + Ploebst, Helmut (2001) No Wind No Word: New Choreography in the Society of the Spectacle: 9 Portraits, München: Kieser. Power, Nina and Toscano, Alberto (2003) ‘“Think, Pig!” An Introduction to Badiou’s Beckett’, in Alain Badiou On Beckett, ed. and trans. A. Toscano and N. Power, Manchester: Cinamen Press, pp. ix–xxxvi. Protopapa, Efrosini (2003) ‘Waiting for Audi-Audi’: In Dialogue with Samuel Beckett, unpublished M.A. dissertation, London: LABAN, City University. Protopapa, Efrosini (2004) Application to Register for a Higher Degree by Research (unpublished), London: Roehampton University. Rée, Jonathan (2006) ‘Beckett Post War’, panel discussion in the Beckett Centenary Festival 2006, Barbican Centre, London, March (my notes). Ricoux, Estelle (2006) ‘Airstream: Estelle Ricoux talks to Maguy Marin about her recent visit to London with Umwelt’, Dance Theatre Journal 21(3): 12–16. Siegmund, Gerald (2003) ‘Strategies of Avoidance: Dance in the Age of the Mass Culture of the Body’, Performance Research 8(2): 82–90. 34