A dance theater project by James Sutherland
Whether family or fan block, club or party, school class or college: the groups in which we move are as diverse as their dynamics. In a series of images, "Tanzt!" tells the story of a society that is as diverse as the citizens of Reutlingen who appear on stage alongside professional dancers in the production. Here, people stick together and are rejected, oppressed and empowered, work is shared and parties are celebrated. In the midst of a disintegration of cohesion, freedom and equality, this society is faced with the question of what holds it together at its core.
"Tanzt!" explores a fundamental aspect of being human: What does it feel like to be part of a group? And how does it feel to be excluded from a group? What if you are different from the others? Or are afraid to be? And at what point do group dynamics become problematic?
Alongside four professional dancers, James Sutherland choreographs a large group of diverse Reutlingen citizens.
Choreography - Set Design James Sutherland || Choreography Assistance Davide Degano || Project Coordination Renate Hagel || Dramaturgy Alice Feucht || Coordination of the inclusive ensemble Maria Stroppel - Luise Wald || Work shadowing Henry Popp || Technology - Workshops - Inspizienz Lukas Armbruster - Boris Gonzalez - Christoph Henning - Aurel Walker
With Ama - Inge Armbruster - Mojtaba Babeifard - Haydar Baydur - Davide Benigni - Martina Chavez - Bahattin Güngör - Rieke Habfast - Rosemarie Herrmann - Gabriele Janz - Roswitha John - Alfhild Karle - Anne-Kathrin Killguss - Tini Kindt - Florian Klebs - Inga Knotz - Lena Koch - Jutta Konzelmann - Gabriele Lambeck-Engel - Rebecca Maguolo - Alessio Marchini - Santiago Österle - Franco Pangella - Angela Patka - Susanne Pfingsttag - Silvia Phleps - Léa Pinault - Violaine Pinault - Elias Rauscher - Luana Rauscher - Matthias Renner - Manfred Rinas - Jörg Schneider - Sara Schönfelder-Blondel - Bojan Urbanek - Polina Weis - Katharina Witte - Shengli Zeng
This content has been machine translated.