Toronto Star

Groundbrea­king ballet reimagined

Côté, Lepage rework their 2018 multimedia hit, ‘Frame By Frame,’ for the National Ballet

- MICHAEL CRABB “FRAME BY FRAME” RUNS TODAY TO JUNE 11 AT THE FOUR SEASONS CENTRE FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS, 145 QUEEN ST. W. VISIT NATIONAL.BALLET.CA OR CALL 416-345-9595 OR 1-866-345-9595 FOR TICKETS.

Almost exactly five years to the day and on the cusp of the National Ballet of Canada’s new, improved revival of “Frame by Frame,” principal dancer and choreograp­hic associate Guillaume Côté still vividly recalls the world premiere of his groundbrea­king collaborat­ion with Canadian theatre maverick Robert Lepage.

Billed as an homage to the Oscarwinni­ng Scottish-Canadian experiment­al filmmaker Norman McLaren, “Frame by Frame” was the keenly awaited culminatio­n of years of research, workshops and rehearsal. Côté and Lepage sat together in the audience.

“I was very fidgety,” Côté said. “Robert turned to me and asked, ‘Are you nervous?’ ‘Of course,’ I replied. ‘I want it to be good,’ to which Robert coolly responded, ‘Well, we don’t even know what it is yet.’ ”

As with any ambitious new production — and “Frame by Frame” is arguably the National Ballet’s most ambitious to date — its creators can never be sure exactly what they’ve made until it is performed before a live audience.

On that score, Côté and Lepage should have been overjoyed because, in 2018, the audience response to “Frame by Frame,” with its mashing of dance, storytelli­ng, film and hi-tech visual effects, was wildly enthusiast­ic. The reviews — even the New York Times weighed in — ranged from qualified praise to over-the-top encomiums. Most importantl­y for the National Ballet, the show sold lots of tickets. The magnetic Lepage factor also attracted people beyond the regular dance crowd.

While the ballet’s allusions to McLaren’s same-sex relationsh­ip with lifetime companion and colleague Guy Glover might not get Ron DeSantis’s imprimatur in Florida, Lepage describes it as a “family show” in that there is never a dull moment. It’s quirky, full of action, visually riveting and often quite funny.

As ballets go, “Frame by Frame” is appropriat­ely cinematic in structure. It originally comprised 22 vignettes, some of which provided an outline of McLaren’s journey from the Glasgow School of Art to Canada’s National Film Board where, from 1941, he began establishi­ng its first dedicated animation studio. McLaren and his team, in a predigital analogue age, often working hands on with film stock, etching and painting frame by frame, built an internatio­nal reputation.

Several scenes brought some of McLaren’s most celebrated films to life on stage: the Oscar-winning pixillatio­n short “Neighbours” (1952), the black-lit “A Chairy Tale” (1957) and, perhaps most famously, his influentia­l ballet film “Pas de deux” (1968). Others were more abstract and impression­istic with Côté’s choreograp­hy riffing playfully off McLaren’s most boundarypu­shing experiment­s.

The problem was that Lepage, who directed the show, and Côté ended up with too much stuff.

“We had wanted to be faithful to the subject matter,” Lepage said, “but had not had enough time to reflect. We knew it would need revision.”

Added Côté: “We weren’t fooling ourselves that we were going to make something incredibly coherent right from the get-go. We did not see all the vignettes back to back in sequence until opening night. It felt very driven by the passion and by the style and creativity of McLaren as we explored many different facets, including his personal life.”

For Côté and Lepage it was clear there were too many scenes, some indispensa­ble and others possibly not. At 132 minutes with no intermissi­on it was also a lengthy haul for audiences. “Frame by Frame” needed a rethink.

The way big ballet companies operate, that’s easier said than done. They run to carefully planned timetables often mapped out several years in advance. Allowance for making substantia­l changes to new work is rarely pencilled in. Fortunatel­y, then artistic director Karen Kain who, according to Lepage, had long been angling for him to work with the National Ballet, agreed to commit the time and resources required to stage a revised production. Then the pandemic hit, accompanie­d by a change of artistic direction from Kain to Hope Muir.

“I was thrilled that Hope agreed to honour Karen’s commitment,” Côté said.

And why wouldn’t she? “Frame by Frame” had created so much buzz that London’s leading dance house, Sadler’s Wells, has stepped in as a co-producer, offering the National Ballet the chance to present the work in England. Sadly the pandemic scuttled that plan.

Still, with the prospect of a remount before them, its co-creators got to work.

For several years outside the National Ballet, Côté and Lepage have been working together on a dance version of “Hamlet,” to be produced by the choreograp­her’s own company,

Côté Danse. A “first draft,” as they call it, will be shown in late July at the summertime Festival des Arts de Saint-Sauveur in the Laurentian­s north of Montreal, where Côté serves as artistic director.

“When we got together for ‘Hamlet’ we usually left a moment to sit down and review and talk about ‘Frame by Frame,’ things that were redundant, not clear or half-baked,” Lepage explained.

As had happened in the lead-up to the ballet’s 2018 premiere, Lepage also invited several of the dancers to attend a workshop at the headquarte­rs of his company, Ex Machina, in Quebec City. It meant that a good deal of the preparator­y work for a revised version could be accomplish­ed without cutting into the National Ballet’s busy schedule.

“It was also an opportunit­y for us to re-explain because you have all these young dancers now who don’t necessaril­y know anything about McLaren,” Lepage said.

There has been a substantia­l turnover of dancers at the National Ballet since 2018. Five of the original lead dancers involved have retired or moved on. Fortunatel­y, Jack Bertinshaw, who so incandesce­ntly brought Norman McLaren to life in 2018, is still around to reprise the role, but for many of his younger colleagues this will be their first outing with “Frame by Frame.”

Deciding what to cut proved to be a sometimes heart-wrenching task.

“There is the picnic scene which we’ve cut. It had such sentimenta­l value for us because it was like a home movie with Norman and his friend Guy and other National Film Board animators. It was such a precious thing, but sometimes you have to sacrifice your babies,” said Lepage

Remarkably and by their independen­t accounts, Côté and Lepage accomplish­ed all the necessary chopping without butting heads.

“Never, never, ever,” emphasized Lepage, “because of the complete ignorance on my part and on Guillaume’s part of each other’s craft; complete ignorance and so also complete trust. It is truly a 50/50 collaborat­ion and it happens that we’ve also become very good friends. We have such respect for each other.”

The end result of all the apparently amicable editing is a new version of “Frame by Frame” that now clocks in at 120 minutes of actual performanc­e. A 20-minute intermissi­on has been added.

Lepage and Côté feel strongly that all the work that’s gone into the revision of “Frame by Frame” will pay off in the long term.

“It is so distinct and different,” Côté said. “It’s a glimpse perhaps of a new way of making ballet for today’s audiences.”

Added Lepage: “It is expected to be one of the shows that can represent the National Ballet to the outside. It has so much potential.”

 ?? KAROLINA KURAS NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA FILE PHOTO ?? Harrison James and Heather Ogden perform in “Frame by Frame,” the 2018 National Ballet show that received wildly enthusiast­ic reviews and sold lots of tickets.
KAROLINA KURAS NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA FILE PHOTO Harrison James and Heather Ogden perform in “Frame by Frame,” the 2018 National Ballet show that received wildly enthusiast­ic reviews and sold lots of tickets.
 ?? ?? Above, James, Ogden and Jack Bertinshaw in ‘Frame by Frame,’ which is being reworked for a National Ballet restaging this summer. Bertinshaw, left, Guillaume Côté, centre, and Robert Lepage chat during rehearsal for the new show.
Above, James, Ogden and Jack Bertinshaw in ‘Frame by Frame,’ which is being reworked for a National Ballet restaging this summer. Bertinshaw, left, Guillaume Côté, centre, and Robert Lepage chat during rehearsal for the new show.
 ?? KAROLINA KURAS NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA FILE PHOTO ??
KAROLINA KURAS NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA FILE PHOTO
 ?? ELIAS DJEMIL NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA ??
ELIAS DJEMIL NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA

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