by Douglas
Messerli
Thierry Malandain (choreography and performance) L'Après-midi d'un faune (Afternoon of a Faun) / 1995
Thierry Malandain’s
version of The Afternoon of a Faun takes the famous ballet further into
pure homoerotic and male homosexual directions. If in Vaslav Nijinsky’s
original it was the nymphs with whom the faun was enchanted, in this case there
are no classic dancers imitating the figures of Greek urns. The dancer
Malandain appears only in his dance belt, otherwise nude, and no women are
allowed into his imaginary world except as big bubbles of plastic.
His is a pure male dance, displaying as
much as his body as the theater of the day allowed. This work is totally
symbolic, for when he reaches for the veil dropped my one of the visiting nymphs
left behind, it is simply out of the Kleenex box upon which he apparently
resides. The fetish becomes even more obvious as he lays down to have sex with
the garment, actually being consumed by the Kleenex box itself.
This takes the women out of the picture
and centers our vision only on the male dancer, which Nureyev almost achieved
but because of his attempt to recreate Nijinsky’s version could not be
eliminated, although they become even in that version ephemeral illusions. In
Malandain’s version they are missing, and we must comprehend his almost nude
representation of the dance as an excitement to homoerotic desire.
Malandain himself describes it:
"A faun is
lying on a rock when nymphs appear. He observes them, then approaches.
Frightened, they run away, except for one. But when he tries to grab her, she
moves away, dropping a veil at her feet. The faun seizes it, carries it to his
rock, and stretches out on the scarf in an act of love.
From this argument, I primarily retain
the faun's desire and the expression of his sensuality in dreams and fantasy.
My proposal does not refer to ancient Greece and its sylvan landscapes, which
is why the rock where he takes refuge is no longer the mound painted by Léon
Bakst, but a Kleenex box. Due to the innovative nature of the choreography, but
also to Nijinsky's gestures of ‘erotic bestiality,’ the first performance was
disrupted by the audience's uproar. This carnal pleasure being at the very
heart of the work, like the original, depicts my faun evolving in a fantastical
and sensual world. Except that it's not a legendary creature, half-man,
half-beast, but a solitary young man pouring out his desire to the same hazy
memory of love.”
Once more, like the Nureyev version, the
focus is on the male, and the viewer can only explore deeply the body of male
desire, making us realize just how truly gay this dance was.
But, obviously, this is a very funny
version of the classic, particularly when he falls into the Kleenex box in
which he is clearly ready to clean-up from his cum.
Malandain, born in 1959, followed a
classical dance career, working with several companies that explored modern
conceptions of dance. But in 1997 he created his own company Ballet Biarritz
for which he created numerous original pieces and won several awards for his
work.
Los Angeles, April
27, 2025
Reprinted from My
Queer Cinema blog (2025).
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