Pina Bausch’s signature moves—the episodic structure, the full-frontal confessions, the absurd and gorgeously cinematic mise-en-scènes—have become so ubiquitous that the original should have grown obsolete. But a decade and a half since her death, the German choreographer is as popular as ever, with her Wuppertal troupe still packing houses on a never-ending tour. How to account for her staying power? Bausch knew how to put on a show. For the 1982 Nelken (Carnations), the curtain rises on a stage blanketed in 8,000 carnations. An Amazon in only underpants and an accordion strapped to her chest marches over the flowers. Men scatter like bunnies as Alsatian hounds look on. A fellow renders a lush Caetano Veloso cover of “The Man I Love” in earnest sign language. By night’s end the players have confessed their secrets, trampled the flowers, and moved us. —Apollinaire Scherr
The Arts Intel Report
Nelken
Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch perform Nelken.
When
Feb 14–22, 2024
Where
Etc
Photo courtesy of Tanztheater Wuppertal & Pina Bausch