Partnering at the Heart with Sylvain Lafortune

Sylvain Lafortune (PhD) has performed all over the world, is a regular teacher for professional programs in dance and circus, and is publishing a unique and comprehensive textbook on dance partnering. As a new faculty member with the Dance Educators' Seminar (August 7 - 10, 2018), and August Intensive (August 13 - 17, 2018) teaching Partnering, we asked him a few questions about his work.

Q&A with Sylvain Lafortune

photo: Laurent Theillet 

photo: Laurent Theillet 

How do you know Peggy?
Sylvain Lafortune: I met Peggy in New York where we both worked at Lar Lubovitch Dance Co. [1980’s]. Aside from being the Canadian contingent of the company, we had a common friend, James Kudelka, which made our acquaintance even easier. 

Can you tell us a little about your current or upcoming work?
SL: I am part of three projects with Montreal Danse: "Prisme" from Benoî Lachambre, "Instant Community" from Peter Quanz and a new creation "Beside" from Marie Béland. I will create and perform a full evening duet entitled "L'un l'autre" (One and another) with Esther Rousseau-Morin. It will be performed in Montreal in the Danse Danse season in October 2018. This project is very personal and I am freely using my knowledge of partnering to bring out the poetry of two bodies being mutually dependant. I am creating a full evening contemporary show called "Horizon Vertical" for a stilt walking company that will be premiered in Moncton in November 2018. I am also finishing the writing of a comprehensive textbook on partnering work in dance, which should be published (in French) by the end of the year. I am also a regular teacher in dance and circus professional programs.

sylvain lafortune and esther Rousseau-Morin in "l'un l'autre", at danse danse montreal, october 2018.

sylvain lafortune and esther Rousseau-Morin in "l'un l'autre", at danse danse montreal, october 2018.

How did you develop your Partnering technique? What were you responding to? Does this directly relate to your choreographic work? 
SL:
Partnering has been at the heart of my dancing career. I have always preferred dancing with a partner rather than in solos and the most significant works I have danced and created have been duets. If I have had any impact as an artist, it would be as a partner. The particular talent, sensitivity, and interest has led me to teach and to research the subject through Master's and Doctorate studies. This experience as an artist, a teacher, and a researcher has given me a unique and comprehensive understanding of partnering, combining both the practical and the theoretical. 

sylvain coaching, courtesy of sylvainlafortune.ca

sylvain coaching, courtesy of sylvainlafortune.ca

courtesy of sylvainlafortune.ca

courtesy of sylvainlafortune.ca

What kind of tools do you work on with dancers in your class? What kind of development and improvement do you see through this work?
SL:
What is important for me in my classes is to gain an understanding of the mechanical principles that determine the success or the failure of a movement. For too many, and I was one for many years, the main approach to partnering has simply been by trial and error. This approach may produce some good results, but at what cost? How much fatigue, frustration, and injury could be avoided with a better understanding of mechanical laws! When we don't really know why some things work or not, often succeeding one day and failing the other, we are simply puzzled. So my goal is to teach a method as much as a technique. How to acknowledge and name the difficulties in order to better solve them?

courtesy of sylvainlafortune.ca

courtesy of sylvainlafortune.ca

What do you think is most important for teachers approaching partnering work?
SL:
For teachers, the important thing is to be able to observe and to name what their students are doing. Some basic mechanical knowledge can help explain why some lifts are easy or hard. Also, to be aware of the variety of lifts that exist so they can choose or help their students choose which ones are the most appropriate for what they are trying to do or express. 

What are you looking forward to about teaching this August with us in Toronto?
SL:
It is always exciting for me to work with fellow teachers to understand what they know and what they need to know. I feel this method and knowledge I am developing will be useful for teachers who often create pieces for their students in which there will be, almost invariably, some lifts. I feel the most impact I can have in the dance community is through the teachers who will spend much more time with their students than I will ever do.

 
 

The Dance Educators' Seminar (Aug 7 - 10, 2018) offers 4 full-days of workshops for dance educators.
The August Intensive (Aug 13 - 17, 2018) offers full stream, workshop, or drop-in options.

constant state of evolution: summer training

As a masterful dance educator, Peggy Baker invests deeply in the on-going practice of dance pedagogy and in artists honing their craft. With her upcoming annual Dance Educators' Seminar (August 7 - 10, 2018), and August Intensive (August 13 - 17, 2018), we asked her a few questions about what participants can expect.

A Q&A with Peggy on the Dance Educators' Seminar and August Intensive 2018

photo: jeremy mimnagh, dance educators' seminar 2017 

photo: jeremy mimnagh, dance educators' seminar 2017 

Can you tell us a little about what you enjoy about the Dance Educators’ Seminar? And the August Intensive?

I love the wide open exchange with colleagues during the Dance Educators’ Seminar – the refreshing stimulation of new materials, approaches, and points of view around working with students at different stages of training. It is also exceptional to have technique classes designed for practitioners who are primarily teachers rather than active dancers – classes that work with a high level of nuanced and sophisticated information, and well-considered physical demands. The August Intensive attracts a wide range of dancers concerned with expanding their physical and expressive capabilities. The mix of backgrounds and objectives creates an exciting context for coming together.

photo: makoto hirata, dance educators' seminar 2015

photo: makoto hirata, dance educators' seminar 2015

photo: makoto hirata, dance educators' seminar 2015

photo: makoto hirata, dance educators' seminar 2015

What sort of needs are you addressing when you develop the curriculum with the invited faculty?

Dance is in a constant state of evolution but fundamentally the underlying concerns are: how to develop capability and expertise; how to prepare for and recover from the extraordinary demands of class, rehearsal, performance; how to expand and deepen our artistry as teachers, performers, creators.

photo: jeremy mimnagh, august intensive 2017

photo: jeremy mimnagh, august intensive 2017

What kind of personal development do you see happen with participants in these programs?

Whenever we apply ourselves with awareness, intensity and a sense of purpose we make good progress. That’s why intensive workshops are so powerful – we all set aside the time and invest the energy.

photo: jeremy mimnagh, january 2018. peggy directing who we are in the dark, which will be taught in her repertoire workshops at the august intensive

photo: jeremy mimnagh, january 2018. peggy directing who we are in the dark, which will be taught in her repertoire workshops at the august intensive

What are you looking forward to about this year’s programs and your classes?

I am especially excited to have Sylvain Lafortune teaching partnering at both workshops this summer. A great dance artist, a masterful teacher, his approach is singular, and highly refined through many years of exploration and development, including a doctoral thesis on partnering. I look forward to Jennifer Bolt’s presentations on student transitions into and throughout high demand / high intensity pre-professional training as part of the Dance Educators’ Seminar. It is always a huge pleasure to welcome participants to the gorgeous studios of Canada’s National Ballet School, and to be able to offer classes by Christine Wright, and to work alongside dancers from my company.

photo: georgie donais, dance educators' seminar 2015

photo: georgie donais, dance educators' seminar 2015

Are there any tips or advice you would share with anyone who is interested in either program?

Don’t be afraid to jump in! There is a huge diversity in age and training among the participants, and the breadth of approaches is what makes these workshops so exciting and powerful.

photo: jeremy mimnagh, august intensive 2017

photo: jeremy mimnagh, august intensive 2017

photo: jeremy mimnagh, august intensive 2017

photo: jeremy mimnagh, august intensive 2017

The Dance Educators' Seminar (Aug 7 - 10, 2018) offers 4 full-days of workshops for dance educators.
The August Intensive (Aug 13 - 17, 2018) offers full stream, workshop, or drop-in options.