Signature Stories Vol 7 | Page 18

I’m interested in psychology and what makes people tick...I’m interested in the emotional life of the character. As I’m watching performers I think in images. They come into my head like Frida Kahlo’s little pictures of Diego Rivera. It’s not a thought process. I get very prepared and then I just go, like a wild boar looking for truffles. Signature: So what drew you to Chéri in the first place? When did you first come upon it or read it? MC: I read Colette when I was in my early twenties. I don’t know how I found Colette – or how she found me. But besides loving her writing, she loved animals, like me. Dogs and flowers and the countryside. And as a woman she had a very wild, tempestuous love life. I was drawn to that as a young woman. I tried to do a film of her novel Vagabond. Joe Papp was going to produce it and I was going to play the lead character, based on Colette herself, who was a dancer and toured with a small troupe throughout France in the That opened in 1984, came back to New York in 1987, went on tour in ‘89 and opened at the Minetta Lane Theatre in 2009. Lyn then went on to commission Vienna: Lusthaus, which was produced by Jim Nicola in 2002 at New York Theatre Workshop. I then went nineteen-teens. She fell in love with a middle-class man who she referred to as the Big Noodle. Ultimately she decided to stay in her life in vaudeville, and I was drawn to her joie de vivre, her freedom, and her extraordinary perceptions of nature. on to directing opera. The story of how Chéri came about is a bit of a story. Signature: How do you “use” the paintings and music and literary works that inspire you, when creating a new piece? on an old trio that I had made when I was married and MC: I think I was a lazy student. It feels like a continuing the air with this raven blue-black hair. He finished the education, and I get excited as I learn. For instance, I was just in Italy and although I’ve seen Caravaggio for years, I’m now thinking about working on a piece About a year ago I was working at American Ballet Theatre falling in love with somebody else. Very Colette. I walked by a studio one day and saw this creature flying through phrase and I stood at the door, transfixed. It was Herman Cornejo, who I didn’t know at all, and I said to him, “I love you.” I was caught like a deer in headlights by his brilliance. about Caravaggio and his muses. I’ll fall in love with a subject, and with collaborators. But I don’t try to recreate the “reality” of the source. Signature: Are there certain stories or obsessions or themes you’re drawn to? MC: Sex and death has been a big one. I’m interested in psychology and what makes people tick, which is not particularly predictable coming out of dance because I’m interested in the emotional life of the character. How do you bring that out physically, make it into movement, but keep it harnessed to the emotion? Signature: What is your rehearsal process like? MC: I work completely instinctively. I mean, I’m not Joan of Arc and I don’t channel voices! But I do a lot of research. I go in and just go free. David Zinn and Martha Clarke give a presentation of the Chéri set, 2013. 17