François Chaignaud, Geoffroy Jourdain
Revue des Tumerels
decemberdec 20
Saturday december 20
00h
Artistic direction François Chaignaud, Geoffroy Jourdain. With Simon Bailly, Mario Barrantes-Espinoza, François Chaignaud, Florence Gengoul, Myriam Jarmache, Geoffroy Jourdain, Evann Loget-Raymond, Marie Picaut, Alan Picol, Antoine Roux-Briffaud, Vivien Simon, Maryfé Singy, Ryan Veillet, Aure Wachter, Daniel Wendler. Lighting and technical management Anthony Merlaud. Sound management Aude Besnard.
Production: Mandorle productions (Chloé Pérol, Jeanne Lefèvre, Emma Forster)
Co-production: Grand Palais; Festival d’Automne à Paris
François Chaignaud is an associate artist at Chaillot – Théâtre national de la Danse, the Maison de la Danse, and the Biennale de Lyon
With the support of Dance Reflections by Van Cleef & Arpels
The Festival d’Automne à Paris is co-producer of this performance and presents it in co-production with the Grand Palais.
"Tumer", in Old French, means to dance, stir, or fall backwards. In the company of a collective of singing, dancing, and constantly transforming tumerels, Geoffroy Jourdain and François Chaignaud have concocted a mischievous review. Moving between different eras and genres, from polyphonic singing to variety, it brings this Portrait, and indeed the 2025 edition of the Festival d'Automne, to a close.
Brought together by Geoffroy Jourdain and François Chaignaud, the tumerels are members of a community of performers centred, since 2020, on the combined practice of dance and singing. Together, they made the shows t u m u l u s and In absentia, in which the sacred music of the Renaissance is put into voice, body and movement. With its shared aim of collaboration and plurality of voices, the bringing to a close of this Portrait sees this singing and dancing community coming together once again. Here, François Chaignaud and Geoffroy Jourdain become Frannie from the block and Mademoiselle Crapote, alternating between performers, singers, pianists, and mistresses of ceremonies. Setting in motion the gestural and vocal skills that this collective has developed, they set forth a joyful piece that drifts between the different codes of cabaret, thereby celebrating the multiplicity of registers and expressions of self. By means of constant interplay with the audience, the performers from switch from playing their instrument to dance, from early music to contemporary hymns.
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