Compagnie Non Nova: L’Après Midi d’un Foehn, The Place

Dancing plastic bags? Yes, really! That’s L’Après Midi d’un Foehn , a work of stunning originally coming to The Place for the delight of both children and adults.

(c) Jean-Luc Beaujault
As you take your seats in the auditorium (during half term 2015) a dark figure is already busy at work on the stage. Dressed in vaguely oriental black garb and surrounded by a circle of huge electric fans, Cécile Briand uses a large pair of scissors to cut and shape a number of coloured plastic bags.
These are your run-of-the-mill, humble supermarket plastic bags. Some pink, some light blue, orange, white. Deftly she shapes them in vaguely human forms.
And then the music starts: Debussy’s L’Après Midi d’un Faune, made famous by the Nijinsky ballet of the same name, but slightly changed here : the Faune becomes Foehn, the name of the warm, dry wind that blows inland from the Mediterranean.
Why, it becomes apparent as soon as the electric fans come alive. Slowly, with measured movements, like a mother sending her child into the world, Briand releases one plastic bag into the air stream. And to ohs! and ahs! from an entranced audience, slowly the bag rises into the air stream, weightlessly drifting and whirling like the most graceful ballerina you have ever seen.
This “wind play” comes courtesy of French performance artist Phía Ménard and her Compagnie Non Nova. Their motto:“we don’t invent anything, we just see things differently.”
Phía Ménard founded the company in 1998 precisely to allow the public a different look at everyday things and their unexpected  possibilities as performers.
And in this case they do so with the help of a new category of artist, a wind designer, no less, in the person of Pierre Blanchet.
So, as more and more and more plastic bags take to the air to the strains of Debussy’s enveloping music and start interacting - here in an ensemble piece, there in a charming pas-de-deux – so the audience feel strangely uplifted, almost as if by witnessing this unimaginable spectacle we, too, were borne aloft and became part of the dance.
One of the sensations of last year’s London International Mime Festival, this is then, in more ways than one, an uplifting show, one that’ll remain with you for much longer than its modest 25-minute duration.
We couldn't recommend it highly enough.


Read our guide to the best half term activities in London 2015



Suitable for ages 5+.




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What Compagnie Non Nova: L’Après Midi d’un Foehn, The Place
Where The Place, 17 Duke's Road, London, WC1H 9PY | MAP
Nearest tube Euston (underground)
When 29 May 15 – 30 May 15, Fri 11.30am, 2pm & 7pm; Sat 10.30am, 12pm & 1.30pm
Price ££7
Website Click here to book via The Place website




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