Creations
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Iari Davies
Ataraxia (2025)
Choreography: George Céspedes
On tour
Ataraxia (2025)
Choreography: George Céspedes
Choreography assistance: Aymara Rodrigues
Music: Original soundtrack by George Céspedes; Count to Six and Die (The Vacuum of Infinite Space Encompassing) by Marilyn Manson and John Lowery, The Golden Age of Grotesque by Brian Warner and Tim Skold, both performed by Marilyn Manson; Candil de Nieve by Raúl Torres, performed by Pablo Milanés.
Costume: Marco Lima
Lighting: André Boll
*Attention: This performance contains a scene with strobe effects that may affect photosensitive viewers.Ataraxia is a Greek-origin word that means the absence of disturbance. In Stoicism, it is a central concept that suggests pain does not stem from change but from resistance to it. The goal is to achieve a state of unwavering serenity, in which the mind remains balanced in the face of adversity. This dynamic between control and surrender forms the foundation of George Céspedes’ new creation for São Paulo Companhia de Dança, which shares the same name.
This is Céspedes’ first work for a Brazilian company. Recognized for his distinctive style—combining dance with geometric and mathematical elements—the choreographer, one of the leading figures in global contemporary dance, creates large shapes on stage through the synchronized movement of groups of dancers, adding dynamic and emotional contrasts to the narrative.
The lighting accentuates the precision of the movements and enhances the atmosphere, amplifying the emotional impact. Meanwhile, the costumes, inspired by streetwear, engage with contemporary aesthetics, offering freedom of movement and individual expression while contributing to the work’s urban and vibrant essence.
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Charles Lima
dos SANTOS (2024)
Choreography: Alex Soares
On tour
dos SANTOS (2024)
Choreography: Alex Soares
Musics: Matais de Incêndios, anonymous, performed by Vox Brasiliensis and Ricardo Kanji; Partita for 8 Voices, No.4 Passacaglia, Caroline Shaw, performed by Brad Wells and Roomful of Teeth; Final Parade, Felix Rösch; Obstacle Course, Christophe Zurfluh
Costume: Cassiano Grandi
Lighting: Wagner Freire
Premiere: 2024 | Sesc Guarulhos, Guarulhos – SPdos SANTOS, the first work by Alex Soares for the São Paulo Dance Company, is inspired by a song from Colonial Brazil called “Matais de Incêndio”, a simple and joyful tune associated with religious festivities, whose author is unknown and dates back to around 1700. According to the choreographer, “the work references one of the most popular religiously inspired surnames in Brazil.” dos SANTOS moves, intersects, and questions identities that have, over time, helped shape our rich and diverse culture.
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Iari Davies
Autorretrato (2024)
Choreography: Leilane Teles
On tour
Autorretrato (2024)
Choreography: Leilane Teles
Musics: Grupo Krahó, by Indios Krahó, performed by Marlui Miranda; Pasha Dume Pae, by Amazon Ensemble; Canto da Liberdade, by Akaiê Sramana, performed by Akaiê Sramana; Tchori Tchori feat. Uakti, by Marlui Miranda and Índios Jaboti de Rondônia, performed by Marlui Miranda, Rodolfo Stroeter, Uakti; Mae Inini (The Power of the Earth), by Amazon Ensemble; Tamburim, by Josy.Anne; Kworo Kango, by Canto Kaiapó, performed by Berimbaobab Brasil.
Music Production: Fernando Leite
Lighting: Gabriele Souza
Costume: André von Schimonsky
Costume assistant: Wellington Araújo
Props designer: Satie Inafuku
Consultants for Indigenous Affairs: Cristiane Takuá and Carlos Papá Mirim Poty
Duration: 19 minutes
Preview: 2024 | Teatro Municipal Manoel Lyra, Santa Bárbara D’Oeste – SPAutorretrato is the second creation by choreographer Leilane Teles for the São Paulo Dance Company. The choreography reflects on Brazilian identity and our ancestral influences, inspired by works from the collection of painter Candido Portinari. The soundtrack and costumes complement the narrative, which included indigenous consultancy by Cristiane Takuá and Carlos Papá.
To learn more about Candido Portinari’s works, visit: https://www.portinari.org.br/
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Iari Davies
Yoin (2024)
Choreography: Jomar Mesquita
On tour
Yoin (2024)
Choreography: Jomar Mesquita
Choreography assistant: Rúbia Frutuoso
Musics: Poema Saudades, by Arnaldo Antunes; Assum Preto, by Luiz Gonzaga and Humberto Teixeira (performer: Jorge Du Peixe); Fim de Festa, by Itamar Assumpção (performers: Naná Vasconcelos and Itamar Assumpção); Carinhoso, by João de Barro and Pixinguinha (performer: Elza Soares); Como 2 e 2, by Caetano Veloso (performers: Arnaldo Antunes and Vitor Araújo); Samba da Benção, by Baden Powell and Vinícius de Moraes (performer: Maria Bethânia); Avisa, by Tato (performer: Cida Moreira); Juízo Final, by Elcio Soares; Nelson Cavaquinho (performer: Arnaldo Antunes); Manhã de Carnaval, by Luís Bonfa and Antônio Maria (performers: Jean Pascal Quiles, Louis Quiles, and Nelly Decamp); voices of the dancers in the cast.
Costume: Agustina Comas
Lighting: André Boll
Premiere: 2024 | Teatro Sérgio Cardoso | São Paulo – SPWhat is the sensation that remains after the stimulus has ceased? The smallest and most subtle, the painful or long-lasting. The sound of the seesaw, the smell of grandmother’s coffee, touches, the images that seem to linger or persist. Those we would like to keep in a display case, in a reliquary. And how do we transform when such stimuli cease to be real but persist in our inner display case… Yoin.
In revisiting the references used to create the work Mamihlapinatapai – the first creation by Jomar Mesquita for Sao Paulo Dance Company – the choreographer encountered another connotation of the meaning of this intriguing word: that moment of reflection around the fire, after the grandparents pass on their stories and knowledge to the younger generations. In other words, once again: the sensation that remains after the stimulus has ceased.
“And what do we do with what remains, with our ancestries, losses, joys, sighs, shivers, pains… that we keep in our reliquary: Yoin. This new creation invites us to return, therefore, to the beginning of my encounter with these artists and to reflect on the sensations that have lingered within us and those we have left with the audience. What remains from each of our past experiences, from our ancestries, what legacies have been passed down to us and wrapped by us? We transform into new versions of ourselves after the stimuli that have permeated or crossed us have ceased,” Jomar shares.
The soundtrack metaphorizes this universe, featuring versions of songs whose original interpretations have marked the brazilian musical scene and what they have become after being transformed by new perspectives. The costumes utilize upcycling as an analogy for the new and better versions we can create of ourselves from the remnants of lived experiences, which we keep in our inner display cases. The lighting symbolizes the bonfire in a contemporary way, around which knowledge and ancestries are transmitted to transform us. Yoin also speaks to the dance itself, which, with its ephemerality, leaves its marks and sensations after the curtains close… for the audience to cherish in their reliquaries.
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@ Marcelo Machado
Cada Olhar (2024)
Choreography: Henrique Rodovalho
On tour
Cada Olhar (2024)
Choreography and lighting: Henrique Rodovalho
Music: Obatalá, written by Kiko Dinucci, interpretation and production by Metá Metá
Costume: Fábio Namatame
Cast: 7 dancers
Duration: 8 minutesThis work is a reinterpretation of “Desassossegos”, also by Henrique Rodovalho
This choreography explores the perspective of each of the seven dancers, focusing on how each one feels and embraces this unique moment of movement and music, initially shaped through the vision of the choreographer. From this creation, it seeks to evoke the gaze of each spectator, inviting them to make their own choices and form their genuine impressions of this ephemeral and intense moment that unfolds before their eyes, before each unique perspective.
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Iari Davies
Casa Flutuante (2024)
Choreography: Beatriz Hack
On tour
Casa Flutuante (2024)
Choreography: Beatriz Hack
Musics: Boi nº1, by Foli Griô Orquestra with Cacau Amaral; Nordavindens Klagesang, by Vàli; Giardini Di Boboli, by Manos Milonakis feat. Jacob David and Grégoire Blanc; Encruzilhada, by Tulio; and Marie, by Cristobal Tapia De Veer – mixed by Renan Lemos.
Costume: Balletto
Duration: 14 minutes e 44 seconds
Cast: 7 dancers
Preview: 2024 | Teatro Municipal de Itapevi, Itapevi/SPCasa Flutuante, the first creation by Beatriz Hack for Sao Paulo Dance Company, reveals different concepts of “home” and its impermanence on stage. Guided by an eclectic soundtrack, the cast floats between movements proposed by the choreographer and developed from each dancer’s personal experiences. The individual and group movements explore human and interpersonal relationships. “We live in a time of continuous information flow, with no time for reflections on the depth of our existence. To address this, we need to ground ourselves, return home – whether it be a physical space, the human body, or planet Earth,” reflects Beatriz.
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The Eighth (2024)
Choreography: Stephen Shropshire
On tour
The Eighth (2024)
Choreography and lighting: Stephen Shropshire
Music: Symphony no 8: IV: Finale de Anton Bruckner (1824-1896)
Costume: Fabio Namatame
Duration: 22 minutes
Cast: 10 dancers
Preview: 2023 | Sesc Guarulhos, Guarulhos, SP
Premiere: 2024 | Linz, Áustria“The Eighth” is the result of a partnership between the Dutch Performing Arts Program from the Performing Arts Fund NL in the Netherlands and the Associação Pró-Dança, São Paulo Companhia de Dança. It is also a co-production of the Bruckner Festival and supported by the Dutch Government.
Since 2020, Stephen Shropshire has been the resident choreographer of the Sao Paulo Dance Company, for whom he has already created: Rococo Variations (2020), Marmorea (2021), and Partita (2022). Together, these works reveal a line of research that began with Shropshire’s (re)investigation of classical ballet technique in order to discover new ways of thinking and engaging with his choreographic process. In The Eighth (2024), he offers the audience a footnote to these three distinct yet interconnected works. Shropshire creates this piece to the sounds of Anton Bruckner’s Eighth Symphony (1824-1896), an emotionally charged composition, as the music journalist Tom Service put it, “that cannot be explained by the rules and regulations of music; instead, its ‘form’ is phenomenological and is something you need to experience.”
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Iari Davies
Ver o Ar Ouvir o Verão (2023)
Choreography: Eduardo Fukushima
On tour
Ver o Ar Ouvir o Verão (2023)
Conception and Choreography: Eduardo Fukushima
Musical arrangement: from Fukushima based on Night’s Calling by Rodolphe Alexis; Summertime by Tunekichi Suzuki; and Sedna by Kyungso Park.
Artistic Collaboration and Coreography assistant: Beatriz Sano
Textual Collaboration: Isabel Ramos Monteiro
Acknowledgment: Toshi Tanaka (leque)
Costume: Cláudia Schapira
Lighting: Caetano Vilela
Premiere: 2023 | Centro Cultural São Paulo, São Paulo/SPThis work was part of the Ensejos project, a partnership with the Centro Cultural São Paulo, curated by Mark Van Loo and directed by Rodolfo Beltrão.
Ver o Ar Ouvir o Verão is a choreographic score created by Eduardo Fukushima based on his research with Chinese and Japanese body practices, intertwining contemporary dance and performance through multiple references. “Air is the main substance of this choreography. It is an attempt to choreograph it, to shed light on its simultaneously concrete and invisible matter that envelops and unites us. Is there someone in the wind? The wind passes, and what was once summer is now autumn. But we still need to listen to the warmth, to hear the summer,” says the choreographer. This is a dance for the forces of the wind.
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Iari Davies
Veias Abertas (2023)
Choreography: Poliane Fogaça
On tour
Veias Abertas (2023)
Choreography: Poliane Fogaça
Musics: Canción para un Niño en la Calle, by Algel Ritro, Armando Tejada, René Pérez; Alfonsina y El Mar, by Ariel Ramírez, Feliz Cezar Luna; Razón de Vivir, by Victor Heredia; and Canción Con Todos, by Armando Tejada Gomez, Cézar Isella.
Lighting: Caetano Vilela
Costume: Cláudia Schapira
Duration: 15 minutes
Cast: 7 dancers
Premiere: 2023 | Centro Cultural São Paulo, São Paulo/SPThis work was part of the Ensejos project, a partnership with the Centro Cultural São Paulo, curated by Mark Van Loo and directed by Rodolfo Beltrão.
Inspired loosely by the literary work “Las venas abiertas de América Latina” by Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano (1940-2015) and set to the songs of Argentine singer Mercedes Sosa (1935-2009), Veias Abertas by Poliane Fogaça proposes a meeting between these two great artists who shared the common goal of telling the stories of Latin American peoples. Galeano tells us that “the future always needs to be reinvented,” while Mercedes said “it is necessary to give voice to those who have no voice.” The work reveals social aspects—such as hunger, lack of opportunity, and the struggle against repression—as well as resilience, love for others, and a sense of unity among peoples. “Perhaps it is a utopia to believe that it is possible to stop the blood from the open veins of our society. But let it be a dream in action, an act of hoping for a new future of justice and unity. Through the poetics of the art of dance, may the pain cease, may the wound heal, and may it inspire us at every step to be and stand by one another,” says the choreographer.
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Iari Davies
Memória em Conta-Gotas (2023)
Choreography: Lili de Grammont
On tour
Memória em Conta-Gotas (2023)
Choreography: Lili de Grammont
Musics: by Ed Côrtes, featuring the songs Você é Doida Demais, Vou Rifar Meu Coração, and Linda, by Lindomar Castilho.
Lighting: Caetano Vilela
Costume: Cláudia Schapira
Premiere: 2023 | Centro Cultural São Paulo, São Paulo/SPThis work was part of the Ensejos project, a partnership with the Centro Cultural São Paulo, curated by Mark Van Loo and directed by Rodolfo Beltrão.
Using the classics of Lindomar Castilho, such as “Você é Doida Demais,” “Vou Rifar Meu Coração,” and “Linda” — revisited and modernized by composer Ed Côrtes — choreographer Lili de Grammont creates her first work for Sao Paulo Dance Company, based on one of the most well-known passionate cases in the country: the femicide of Eliane de Grammont, her mother, by Lindomar Castilho, her father. The dramaturgy of the piece is constructed from Lili’s brushstrokes of memories related to the story. “The narrative is not direct, nor does it intend to tell the story. It is an inspiration, filled with feelings and complexities. Memória em Conta-Gotas exposes vulnerability and sadness, but above all, it engages in a dialogue about how to move forward with courage and hope,” she says.
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Iari Davies
Teia de Renda (2023)
Choreography: Arilton Assunção
On tour
Teia de Renda (2023)
Choreography: Arilton Assunção
Choreography assistant: Henrique Duarte e Samuel Elias Rodrigues
Musics: Teia de Renda, by Milton Nascimento and Túlio Mourão; and Evocação das Montanhas, by Henrique de Curitiba
Soundtrack mixing: Lucas Romualdo
Lighting: Caetano Vilela
Costume: Cláudia Schapira
Premiere: 2023 | Centro Cultural São Paulo, São Paulo/SPThis work was part of the Ensejos project, a partnership with the Centro Cultural São Paulo, curated by Mark Van Loo and directed by Rodolfo Beltrão.
Teia de Renda, by Arilton Assunção, draws on themes such as literature, poetry, dramaturgy, politics, and religiosity in motion to construct the work. The choreography finds its inspiration and freedom of conception in the compositions “Teia de Renda” and “Evocação das Montanhas.”
“A web that sustains, nourishes, unites, and separates relationships,” says Arilton.
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Samira Dantas
Sal (2023)
Choreography: Lucas Valente
On tour
Sal (2023)
Choreography: Lucas Valente
Musics: Em Transe, by Cadu Tenório & Márcio Bulk, sung by Lívia Nestrovski; Fragmentos, by Cadu Tenório; and Afterglow, by Rival Consoles.
Lighting: Nicolas Marchi
Costume: UMA – Raquel Davidowicz
Duration: 15 minutes
Cast: 3 dancers
Premiere: 2023 | Sesc Guarulhos, Guarulhos, SPBased on two essential facets of salt – the physical and the energetic – the choreography of Lucas Valente – who was a dancer at the São Paulo Dance Company – explores movements that capture its texture, its rough, dry and sharp nature, seeking a sense of intensity and vigor. The work explores ideas of what a salty dance would look like in the pursuit of an energetic, tasty, effective and agile physicality. “We are faced with a duality inherent in salt, which dissolves and coordinates in water, finding an almost ambiguous fluidity when in combination, it transforms and adapts,” says the choreographer. The exploration of the richness of meanings and ideas associated with salt in Brazilian culture, which are expressed from the rituals of baths of salt, present in various spiritual traditions, to the cultural manifestations, such as the maracatu of baque loose, which use salt as part of their dance in gesture of offering and connection with the earth are also present in the choreography. This ritualistic element conducts the play, which seeks to share a sensory experience, combining a physical narrative and a conceptual narrative to the powerful energy of salt and the rich cultural diversity of Brazil.
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Iari Davies
I’ve Changed My Mind (2023)
Choreography: Shahar Binyamini
On tour
I’ve Changed My Mind (2023)
Choreography: Shahar Binyamini
Choreography assistant: Yotam Baruch
Musics: Le Tombeau de Couperin M 68: II Fornane and III Minuet, by Maurice Ravel; Blade Runner, by Hans Zimmer and Benjamin Wallfish; and Hard to Tell, by Andy Stott and Alison Skidmore.
Lighting: Wagner Freire
Costume: Shahar Binyamini
Costume Execution: Cris Driscoll
Duration: 24 minutes
Premiere: 2023 | Teatro Sérgio Cardoso, São Paulo/SPI’ve Changed My Mind, created by Israeli choreographer Shahar Binyamini specifically for Sao Paulo Dance Company, questions who we are as humans, animals, souls, and entities. The title is connected to the artistic creation process in the rehearsal room, where at times we need to let go of certain concepts and embrace the unknown. On stage, to remain present, the performers seek a connection with themselves while simultaneously connecting with the whole, perceiving it as part of a single body. “We are no longer ‘there’ (in the past) but ‘here’ (in the present), and this allows us the freedom of not being responsible for everything, but rather for what the situation itself demands,” says the choreographer. This dynamism proposed by the work is an invitation for the audience to make space within themselves—honoring their uniqueness—and to encounter what the choreographer names as “the freshness of change”: a constantly exchanging energy between the performers and the audience.
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Iari Davies
Petrushka (2023)
Choreography: Goyo Montero
On tour
Petrushka (2023)
Concept and Choreography: Goyo Montero
Music: Igor Stravinsky
Set Design: Curt Allen Wilmer and Letícia Gañán
Costume and Puppets Design: Salvador Andujar
Lighting Design: Nicolas Fischtel
Staging: Igor Vieira
Organization (Spain): Carlos Iturrioz
Costume Execution: Fabio Namatame
Consultant for puppet construction and manipulation: Beto Andreetta
Inflatables and art painting (realization): Carlos Delfino
Masks and Marionettes (realization): Dino Soto
Duration/cast: 35 minutes with 14 dancers
Premiere by SPDC: 2023 | Sesc Pinheiros, São Paulo/SP – Brasil© GOYO MONTERO, all rights reserved
One of the most popular ballets on the global stage, starring Vaslav Nijinsky in 1911, Petrushka narrates the story of love and jealousy among three puppets that come to life. Goyo Montero takes this classical story to adress issues that are relevant today . In this unprecedented reinterpretation, in a distopic future a group of secluded people witmess an spectale that presents a croocked and ever repeated outcome reopresented by three Puppets :The Hero-Fighter ,the Heroin -Doll and the Anti Hero-Petrushka .This is the staring point of tale of love, death, joy, sorrow, rejection, and manipulation that plays on different dimensions as we witness Petrushka´s journey to self awareness and ultimate freedom.”It’s a theater within another theater, so that I can tell this story from different perspectives,” says the choreographer. This is Goyo Montero’s second production for the SPDC, for whom he previously created Anthem (2019).
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Marcelo Machado
O QUEBRA-NOZES NO MUNDO DOS SONHOS (2022)
Choreography: Márcia Haydée
On tour
O QUEBRA-NOZES NO MUNDO DOS SONHOS (2022)
Choreography: Márcia Haydée
Musics: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893), Get up Off, by Stro Elliot mixed by Matheus Carrato Alexandre, Jingo Bells, by Stefen Swansoon and Fertility of the Sea, by Eitetsu Hayashi
Scenography: Nicolás Boni
Costume Designer: Tânia Agra
Lighting: Wagner Freire
Guest Ballet Master: Pablo Aharonian
Choreography Assistants: Aline Campos and Beatriz Hack
Choreography Assistant (Urban Dance): Ciça Veronese
Kobudo Technique: Gunter Schöberl
Duration: 1h40 minThe Nutcracker in the World of Dreams is a retelling of the libretto by E.T.A. Hoffmann (1778-1822) which narrates the experience of two brothers on a special Christmas night, when a nutcracker dummy comes to life and leads them on an unforgettable journey through a magical and dancing kingdom. The popular Christmas tale, in this unprecedented version by Márcia Haydée – one of the most important artists to make a career in Europe as a dance director and prima ballerina – brings references from Brazil, with passages through capoeira, urban dances, samba and, of course, from the classical ballet. The story, like the original created in 1892 and choreographed by Marius Petipa (1818-1910), is driven by one of Tchaikovsky’s (1840-1893) most famous compositions, putting side by side the ballet tradition with Marcia’s inventiveness.
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Marcelo Machado
Cartas do Brasil (2022)
Choreography: Juliano Nunes
On tour
Cartas do Brasil (2022)
Choreography and Costumes: Juliano Nunes
Musica: Bachiana Brasileira nº 8, de Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887-1959)
Lighting: Wagner Pinto
Costume Production: Cássio Brasil
Duration: 24 minutes
Cast: 14 dancers
Debut SPDC: 2022 | Sala São Paulo, São Paulo/SP – Brasil
Cartas do Brasil (Letters to Brazil) is Juliano’s Nunes first creation for São Paulo Dance Company and for a Brazilian company. “This work is a little bit of Brazil that exists in me. It is the place where the gesture of one affects the gesture of another and, although everything passes very quickly, everyone is connected like a flock of birds”, says Nunes. In the choreography, each dancer writes with the body a continuous dialogue that translates the urgency of being alive.
Nunes created inspired by the Bachiana Brasileira no 8, by Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887-1959) and his childhood memories that refer him to the universe of birds and forests. In the dance, the hands, arms and heads vibrate and remind us of the images of birds’ wings, of leaves in the wind, of the waving of birds’ heads. “The beauty of the body in motion touches us like live words”, says Nunes. The costume, a blue mesh in reference to the sky of Brazil – with details hand-painted by the choreographer on the body of the performers – reveals the silhouette of the artists and the individualities of each one. The light completes the atmosphere that transports us to a vibrant, agile and intense time.
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Marcelo Machado
Ibi – da Natureza ao Caos (2022)
Choreography: Gal Martins
On tour
Ibi – da Natureza ao Caos (2022)
Conception and choreographic direction: Gal Martins
Original Music: Dani Lova (music and creation) with the voice and artistic contribution by Thaís Dias (in the creation)
Costume and Visagism: Gil Oliveira
Lighting project: Camila Andrade
Set and props: Caio Marinho
Cenotechnician: Pedro Paes
Costume Assistant: Bábi Batista and Giselle Carvalho
Debut SPCD: 2022 | Teatro Alfa, São Paulo/SP – Brazil
Cast: 10 dancers
Duration: 25 min
From the Tupi-Guarani word Ibi, which means earth, ground that you walk on, Gal Martins’ creation to São Paulo Dance Company reflects on the issue of post-isolation in the society and on the lack of connection between man and nature. Inspired by “The Tomorrow Is Not for Sale”, by Ailton Krenak, and in dialogue with his research on ancestry and the becoming-animal, the work is divided into three moments. At first, the choreographer wanted to bring the idea of the scorched earth, of provocation how it is reconstructed. In the second part, the dancers get in touch with the individual ‘I’ and their ancestry in a battle against adversity, and in the third, we see a reflection on what we have learned along this journey. According to Gal, the idea is “to keep insisting on being what we are”.
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Marcelo Machado
Partita (2022)
Choreography: Stephen Shropshire
On tour
Partita (2022)
Choreography, Costumes e Lightning: Stephen Shropshire
Music: Partita, Perihelion I, II e III (Allamande; Sarabande e Gigue) by Margaret Anne Schedel, played by: Schedel and Mikylah Myers
Duration: 15 min
Cast: 10 dancers
Debut SPCD: 2022 | Teatro Alfa, São Paulo/SP – Brazil
“Partita” is Stephen Shropshire’s third creation for the São Paulo Companhia de Dança, inspired by the painting by the Renaissance artist Pieter Bruegel (1525-1569) “Landscape with the Fall of Icarus” (1555), in dialogue with the homonymous poem written , in 1939, by William Carlos Williams (1883-1963). With a minimalist costume, the dancer explores the scenic space and rewrites each letter of the poet’s verses, in dialogue with the gestures of the other performers. A ballerina, in the corner of the scene, spells out the full text in the air, which gains even more power with each danced phrase. Under three contemporary movements of “Partita, Perihelion”, by Margaret Schedel and Mikylah Myers McTeer, instruments such as flute and violin gain electronic nuances. The piece encourages the spectator to perceive the interpretations and sensations of what is seen in the body itself. A work “abstract and challenging, with normal people doing extraordinary things”, reveals the choreographer.
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@Charles Lima
DI (2022)
Choreography: Miriam Druwe
On tour
DI (2022)
Choreography: Miriam Druwe
Music: Choros n. 6, by Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887-1959)
Scenography and Costumes: Fábio Namatame, inspired by works by Di Cavalcanti (1897-1976) kindly provided by Elisabeth Di Cavalcanti for this creation
Lighting: Wagner Freire
Cast: 14 dancers
Duration: 25 min
Debut SPCD: 2022 | Theatro São Pedro, São Paulo/SP – Brazil
Di Cavalcanti (1897-1976) inspires this work based on the imagination and lyricism of the canvases of this great name in the country’s visual arts, in dialogue with Choros nº 6, by Villa-Lobos (1887-1959). In common, these artists manifest impressions of Brazil based on modernist thinking, and Miriam Druwe starts from the movement to present new proposals for these images in the context of the 21st century.
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@ Marcos Alonso
Reflexos de um Tempo Presente | Dança Hoje Part 2 (2022)
Reflexos de um Tempo Presente | Dança Hoje Part 2 (2022)
Conception and Artistic Direction: Inês Bogéa
Music: J.S. Bach (1685-1750), Gioachino Rossini (1792-1868), Henrique Oswald (1852-1931) and Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975), played by Theatro São Pedro Orchestra, directed by Claudio Cruz
Lightning: Nicolas Marchi
Photography: Chrales Lima and Nicolas Marchi
Assembly and Finalization: Charles Lima
Musical dramaturgy and Plateau: Rodolfo Dias Paes (DiPa)
Camera Operation: Charles Lima and Alan Fabio Gomes
Conducting assistance: Gesiel Vilarubia
Direct sound capture: Julio Abreu
Audio assistant: Ítalo Belfiorie
Making of: Alan Fabio Gomes
Still: Marcos Alonso
Duration: 27 min
Cast: 20 dancers
Debut SPCD: 2022 | Stream on YouTube channels of SPCD and Theatro São Pedro
Divided into two volumes, each with four different works, Reflexos de um Tempo Presente (Reflections of a Present Time) brings different environments of Theatro São Pedro – facade, lobby, corridors, balconies, audience and stage –, revealing this architectural heritage of the capital of São Paulo under new perspectives from the interaction with dance and orchestral music in the form of video dances in which the dancers from São Paulo Companhia de Dança dialogue with instrumentalists from the Theatro Theatro São Pedro Orchestra. The films are part of the Dança Hoje (Today Dance) series, which began in 2020, and feature the work of young choreographers based on 8 unpublished contemporary works created especially for the audiovisual sector, which have, in common, a fine interweaving between music and movement.
Reflections of a Present Time | Dance Today Part 2 is composed of the following choreographies:
Momentum
Choreography: Letícia Forattini
Music: Sonata for Violin No. 1 in G Minor, BWV 1001 /II. Fugue, by J.S. Bach (1685-1750), played by Claudio Cruz (violin)
Costumes: Raquel Davidowicz – UMA
Scenography: Luiz Antônio Dias
Dancers: Ana Roberta Teixeira, Cecília Valadares, Hiago Castro, Luan Barcelos, Luiza Yuk, Mateus Rocha, Matheus Queiroz, Otávio Portela, Thamiris Prata and Yoshi Suzuki
“Il Cast”
Choreography and Costume: Artemis Bastos
Music: The Barber of Seville Overture, by Gioachino Rossini (1792-1868), played by Andrey Ivanov (piano), Franklin Martins (cello), Mariela Micheletti (violin)
Costume Execution: Edmeia Evaristo
Dancers: Alan Marques, Beatriz Paulino, Cecília Valadares, Luan Barcelos, Poliana Souza and Vinícius Vieira
Special participation: André Souza and Luiz Antônio Dias
O Voo (The flight)
Choreography and Costume: Vinícius Anselmo
Music: En Nacelle, by Henrique Oswald (1852-1931), played by Andrey Ivanov (piano)
Costume Execution: Edmeia Evaristo
Poem: O Voo (The flight), by Rubem Alves, in the voice of Inês Bogéa
Dancers: Beatriz Paulino and Luciana Davi
Totentanz
Choreography, Costumes and Interpretation: Ammanda Rosa and Nielson Souza
Music: TPiano Trio No. 2 in E Minor, Op. 67: IV. Allegretto, by Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975), played by Anderson Santoro (violin), Franklin Martins (cello), Andrey Ivanov (piano)
Costume Execution: Edmeia Evaristo
Scenic effects: André Souza, Luiz Antônio Dias and Nicolas Marchi
Poem: Johannes Klöcking in the voice of Bastian Thurner