Project Description

This Dancerie: The Paris Project
A collaboration project by Tony Whitfield, Sebastiano d'Ayala Valva, Klaus Fruchtnis, Thierry Micouin, Nils Nusens, Patricio Sarmiento and Andrew Alden


This Dancerie is a multi-event, multi-site, multi-media work that explores the ways in which gay men have created public expressions of desire despite mainstream prohibitions of manifestations of those aspects of their lives in the context of Paris as a complex historical cultural arena for this exploration.

The pretext of This Dancerie is urbanization as a prerequisite for homosexual subculture and the understanding that despite the absence of “gay ghettos, ” gay men developed and carried on forbidden lives in public it cities around the world. This Dancerie focuses on Paris as a cross-road of queer life in which, although, technically, homosexuality was legal since 1791, decency was legislated and under surveillance.

This Dancerie will create a series of foci on Paris as a site of refuge for queer men and the environments they historically frequented. Particular attention will be placed on developing narratives that include a range of differing intersections of class, race, creeds, ethnicities and gender the collaborators will develop a movement based-work for male groupings drawing upon culturally specific traditions. The role immigration plays in these narratives will also be underscored.

This Dancerie is a multi-event, multimedia collaborative work under the artistic direction of Tony Whitfield. This project will be a collaboration between Whitfield, as Executive Producer and Artistic Director, Thierry Micouin as Director of Choreography, media artist Klaus Fruchtnis as Technical Director, fashion designer Patricio Sarmiento, filmmaker Sebastiano d’Ayala Valva and composer/musician Nils Nussen, all from France and composer/ musician Andrew Alden, and filmmakers Joe Lumbroso and Dyana Winkler, from the United States. Eight to ten sites across the City where same sex desire has created a shifting landscape of criminalized activity, class-complicated entanglements, immigrant freedom, forbidden commerce, transgressive beauty and encoded seduction will be the context for short filmed dance/movement based narratives since 1870. Each three to five minute films will begin with a cruising ritual and be filmed in those spaces. For several evenings the films will be presented in situ as projected images activated by passersby movement. Ideally these installations would be debuted as part of Paris’ La Nuit Blanche in 2017.

These films would then be brought together into a single space to produce an additional evening long performance or “dance party” that would be digitally randomized and improvisationally scored for classical ensemble and world pop musicians. Ideally the space would be situated in a cultural center and include a live performance component that involved local gay residents. Various forms of social media will be employed to augment and reveal aspects of the project's narrative content during the culminating dance party and its scatter site installations.

Several aspects of this project should move it beyond the context of performance based works that explore cultural identity and history. They include: the site specific nature of the public installation that will seek to revive unknown queer histories in ways that immerse the audience in the projected work; the creation of apps that will allow the participant to access deeper know of the history behind the narrative they have stumbled into as well as information about the artwork itself and other components of the work at other sites across Paris as well as multifaceted entries into the "dance party."

It is anticipated that audiences for This Dancerie will include: post modern dance, experimental music, expanded cinema, public art and contemporary performing arts audiences. In addition general public members who are attending events associated with Paris' La Nuit Blanche 2017 and local commmunities adjacent to the various sites in which This Danceries' short constituent works will be situated.This project will seek to engage LGBTQI populations including scholars, artists, performers and youth. Social media, print and electronic media associated with La Nuit Blanche and the venue that will host the culminating event will be drawn upon in addition to apps established specifically for This Dancerie.

The primary goal is to reveal the queer past and present of Paris as an urban geography that has been multifaceted, ethnically, economically, and culturally diverse while also revealing those aspects of queer life that defy normalization, concealment behind closed doors challenge notions of "decency" are tied to desire and find expression despite histories of policing and surveillance. In addition this work will seek to engage collaborative, improvisational and interactive structures and technologies to create social points of entry and discussion among various queer communities across Paris and beyond as a means of expanding current discussions about same sex desire.


Friday, October 10, 2014

Magic City, 1900-1937?






In August, Alex Bado, Thierry Micouin and Tony Whitfield surveyed the vicinity where Magic City amusement park and ballroom was situated on the Quai D'Orsay.  Of particular interest was the ongoing occurrence of Drag Balls in the Ballroom and the possibility of creating a contemporary drag ball on the current site that was geared to attract a multi cultural queer community, manifesting a range of current drag traditions. The concept that has evolved is a film of the ball shot from above during the summer before the presentation of This Dancerie.  That film would be projected onto the paved surface of the current site on the Quai D'Orsay at night.

A bit of background on the site.


The reference site on the planet Tango 
Tango Encyclopedia
 
Magic City
 
     1900-1934. Paris. Theme park and huge ballroom. The park is located between numbers 67 and 91 on the Quai d'Orsay, opposite the Pont de l'Alma. The ballroom on the first floor of 188 University Street.
     All is founded in 1900 by Ernest Cognac, the owner of the department store La Samaritaine.
     place is closed by the decision of the authorities on February 6 1934 Up in 1942, the hall continues to be used for gatherings.
 
Ballroom 1910
 
    Mr. Basile Pachkof, which conducts research on the history of the Mi-Carême, brought an interesting piece of information. Indeed, it cites the newspaper Le Matin , 20 February 1937, page 2, 5th column, and notes that the Magic City Hall was still working in 1937, after the administrative decision to close in 1934.
    One might think that the closure of the ballroom has been linked to major disturbances generated by the Mi-Carême balls, collecting gay transvestites, and unleashed a whole population that was loudly partying in the streets avoisinnantes.
   Yet in 1910, the police headquarters in Paris had issued an order prohibiting dancing between men. And in 1934, the Prefect of Police Jean Chiappe implemented this order and has closed all concerned, including the ballroom of Magic City.
  prom This prohibition would therefore not affected other types of gatherings including the one mentioned by Mr. Pachkoff.
  Moreover, the address given by the article does not exactly match that known. Error journalist or other input to the ballroom?
 Source: Email from Mr. Basile Pachkoff 28 April 2013.
 
     In 1942 the park was destroyed. And the ballroom was bought by the government attributes it to Paris-TV. The German Kurt Hinzman installed a television studio, directly connected to the emitter of the Eiffel Tower. The studio was opened September 30, 1943 and issue until 12 August 1944 emissions are primarily for German soldiers hospitalized or convalescing.
 
   The ballroom was famous for its fancy dress balls and gay Lent.
 
    The ballroom had a permanent orchestra, called Dance Orchestra Magic City . He recorded under the direction of conductor M.Brun a disc with two titles tango composer Saint-Servan.
    22cm. Sapphire. Label Opera No. 7021 Two tangos " Enamorada ", 0141. matrix" La Chiquita Linda "0142 matrix.
    Accurate label: " Starting at the edge , "which allows us to suppose that the disk is prior to 1914.



The potential site for This Dancerie Drag Ball





















 
Magic City
 
 Prospectus Magic City
 
 Ballroom
 
 Entry in 1943
 
 The hall in 1943 before restoration.
 
 The hall in 1943, after its transformation into TV studio
 
Others viewed photos on
   
  - http://paris1900.lartnouveau.com/paris07/lieux/magic_city.htm . A slide show presents some amusement park.

Magic City Paris 7th

Theme Park Magic City was built by Ernest Cognac, owner of the Samaritan woman , in 1900 between numbers 67 and 91du Quai d'Orsay and University Street opposite the Pont de l'Alma .
Magic City was the first amusement park of Paris, before Luna Park at Porte Maillot (1909), it included fairground attractions, sights, shows, performances of "natives" and a large dance floor with orchestra.
Closed in 1934, then commandeered by the Germans during the occupation, the ballroom is transformed into a television studio that will become the Fernsehsender Paris after the war studios Cognac-Jay.

Entrance  Scenic railway

  creationsee a larger pictureBridge madness

waterfall the great hall

Magic benchWaterfalldance headhunters

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