Already in Sa prière, the presence of her mother Marie-Bernadette intuitively imposed itself, sparking a desire to create a documentary film and a play and to transform her words into a sound score. Suffering from Alzheimer's disease, her mother began to dance with her hands and face, and a new language developed: "She has a personal, uncodified language of gesture, experienced in the present." Malika Djardi watched her, listened to her, filmed her, and a duet score gradually emerged, informed by their shared memories and anecdotes: intimate, sensitive material shaping a corporeal, textual, rhythmic, and visual narrative that explores her own choreographic practice. Martyre brings back "moments of grace we experienced while dancing together" with, in counterpoint, Malika Djardi's presence against a backdrop of popular refrains and an eclectic playlist that everyone can identify with – a way of sharing memories around a pop hit, a waltz, a tango, or a cha-cha-cha... Throughout the various filmed or danced sequences, their dialogue “takes us on a journey through spaces, the private and the public, the constrained and the infinitely large, the intimate and the worldly".
Martyre
Malika Djardi - STAND
Lyon
Malika Djardi dances her life with a desire to explore the intimate and the external and strive towards the universal. After a first solo about her mother's conversion to Islam, she continues their dialogue in an autobiographical and documental narrative on the language of two bodies that mirror one another.
Practical information
Duration : 1h 25
Age : 12 and over
Bar and restauration on place
Where ?
KLAP Maison pour la Danse
Carsharing available here from June 3