Sadler's Wells
Thursday 5th February 2015
Sadler's Wells Associate Artists are central to the artistic direction and vision of the theatre, marking it as the leading venue in Britain for dance. Associate Artists have the opportunity to collaborate with other choreographers and artists to develop ideas for large-scale works. The
 triple bill produced tonight by Sadler’s Wells director Alastair Spalding 
presented three choreographers in the midst of choreographic changes. However, a clear gulf is apparent between Crystal Pite’s mysterious An 
Image Of You Falling and Kate Prince and Hofesh Shechter’s pieces, which 
felt limp and clumsy.
Directed by Prince, SMILE opened 
the evening with a seemingly light-hearted exploration of the ‘dark 
side’ of Charlie Chapin’s showman smile. Ridden with repetition and 
bland clichés of sad clowns, SMILE does little justice to dancer Tommy 
Franzén’s exceptional technical and performance abilities. The narrative 
drifts aimlessly through images of overt showmanship to deeply rooted 
sadness, without consideration for the reality of Chaplin’s complex 
psychology. 
Additionally, Shechter’s The Barbarians In 
Love stumbled through its transitions from tight baroque score to 
Shechter’s contrastingly loose physicality, as the dancers stomped 
around the stage like beasts. But somewhere in between the clean ballet 
lines and weighted contemporary movement, the work loses its way. 
Shechter seems to make an attempt at postmodernism, using a cold female 
voice to narrate what appears to be a rather intimate therapy session. 
The woman repeatedly asks Shechter: ‘what do you want Hofesh?’, 
culminating in Shechter’s frank confession of a mid-life crisis and 
marital infidelity. His words cut through the built up tension, leaving 
little for the remainder of the work.
Finally, Pite’s An 
Image Of You Falling, second in the program was a much-needed relief. 
Pite’s choreography glides through dark fragmented images of the 
disturbed relationship between a man and a woman, danced by Peter Chu 
and Annie Plamondon; from the moment they met to their violent end. 
Another cold female voice repetitively narrates the piece; ‘this is where
 it began’, ‘this is the sound of your heart hitting the floor’, ‘this 
is the room where it happened… a bed, a table, a lamp, no curtains’. 
Pite’s use of second person is particularly discomforting and emphasises
 the eerie tone well. The dancers move soundlessly around 
each other, only making contact towards the end of the work. Their limbs
 intimately linger, slide and wrap around each other. In the background the sound of machinery, wind and passing 
cars fills the moments of silence. Was it a car accident that brought 
the couple to their violent end? Or was it a domestic dispute, as 
alluded to by the movement?
Pite remains the clear winner
 in tonight’s triple bill. Of all three choreographers, Pite has total 
control over her choreography and the direction that it takes. Whereas 
Shechter and Prince’s choreography felt incomplete and considerably blander.