Genesis,a dance work of Wang Yabin (center) choreographed by Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui. [Photo by Wang Jiayue / For China Daily] |
"What's more, my future motherhood will change my roles as dancer and choreographer," she says.
For Rojo, 40, who was a principal dancer and was appointed artistic director of English National Ballet in 2012, presenting a program dedicated to female choreography was part of her vision even before she got the job.
"She Said is an important moment in English National Ballet's history. I really believe that we need more women's voices on the stage," says Rojo.
In terms of choosing the three artists, Rojo says that she has been following the three female choreographers' careers for a while. For Wang, Rojo was especially impressed by Genesis, one of the dance productions of Yabin and Her Friends, which saw the cooperation between Wang and renowned Belgian choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui in 2013.
Wang flew to London to discuss She Said with Rojo in June while she was touring Genesis in nine countries in Europe in 2014. She was surprised to find that all the team members of She Said project will be women, from set and costume designers to music composers.
She also shared her seventh production of Yabin and Her Friends in 2015 with Rojo, which will also be another woman-themed dance work.
Adapted from a Chinese novel written by Bi Feiyu, titled Qing Yi, or Moon Opera, Wang will premier the new work at the National Center for the Performing Arts in Beijing this October. It is about how a female Peking Opera singer lives and struggles between the roles she plays in drama and in real life as well as between the physical and spiritual worlds.
The novel was adapted into a popular Chinese TV series with the same title in 2003, co-starring Chinese actress Xu Fan and late actor Fu Biao.
Wang obtained the authorization to adapt the novel into a modern dance drama after she was introduced to the author because of the role she played in Blind Massage, a TV series adapted from the novel by the same author in 2012.
According to Rojo, the English National Ballet has performed in China in 2012 and will return to the country in April and May this year by presenting repertoires, including Swan Lake and Coppelia, to the Chinese audience at the NCPA, Guangzhou Opera House and the Tianjin Grand Theatre.
"The English National Ballet has developed a very good relationship with their counterparts in China. I also want to bring She Said to Chinese audiences in 2016," she says.
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