Bausch / Platel / Mahler
Adagio / Soûl
In dialogue with Gustav Mahler
With her early work Adagio, Pina Bausch created a haunting choreography set to the first movement of Gustav Mahler’s unfinished Tenth Symphony. The music, composed during a profound personal crisis, oscillates between ecstatic joy and heart-rending sorrow. Bausch constructs a poetic universe in which seemingly everyday encounters and simple gestures take centre stage. The dancers experience extremes: from rapture to despair, from resistance to surrender. In doing so, they touch upon what fundamentally makes us human.
Alain Platel, Bausch’s artistic heir, is creating the new production Soûl (French for ‘drunk’) with a few dancers from Opera Ballet Vlaanderen. Like Bausch, he draws inspiration from Gustav Mahler. The early symphonic poem Totenfeier, which would later be transformed into the first movement of the Second Symphony ‘Auferstehung’, is a monumental funeral march. Gentle, almost pastoral moments of hope resound through the sombre score. Within this arc of tension, Platel poses an urgent question: could a slight drunken haze make this world more bearable?
ORIGINAL PRODUCTION: Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch (1974), Adagio is part one of the double bill Adagio – Fünf Lieder von Gustav Mahler by Pina Bausch.
PRODUCTION 2027: A co-production of Opera Ballet Vlaanderen and the Pina Bausch Foundation. A reconstruction from 2024 by the Pina Bausch Foundation en Hamburg Ballet.
Click here for the credits of the world premiere of 1974 and the adaptation.
With the support of the Tax Shelter measure of the Belgian Federal Government.
The creators
Adagio
Gustav Mahler
Composition
Pina Bausch
Choreography
Karl Kneidl
Scenography and costume design
Breanna O'Mara
Artistic direction
Soûl
Gustav Mahler
Composition
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Dansers Opera Ballet Vlaanderen
Dance and creation
Alain Platel
Direction
Bérengère Bodin
Creative assistance