Playford 1651 … and more !


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Cécile Laye’s talk “Playford 1651 … and more !” (3/3) in English

Saturday , October 9, 2021 

(France : 19h30 – 20h00 / UK : 6.30 pm – 8.00 pm / USA : 1.30 pm – 3.00 pm East ST / USA : 10.30 am – 12.00 am Pacific ST)

This talk will be given in French on September 26, 2021, 6.30 pm – 8.00 pm Paris time  (https://chestnut.fr/playford-1651-et-plus/)

 

 

 


Registration


To attend please click on the button “Participer” below:

N.B.: registration form is in French BUT if you don’t speak the language of Molière, DON’T PANIC ! We provide you a Registration assistance in English over here.

Please note: registration will be definitively closed on October 08, 2021 at 22:00 (Paris time)


Programme


  • In this last talk (3/3), I would like to mention the Revival movement and its figure heads for English Country dancing, Mary Neal and Cecil Sharp.

 

  • In the 2nd talk (2/3) on the 17th century English Country Dances repertoire, using many videos filmed with the support of the French National Dance Center, I have explored, starting with the Measure, the basic structures of the John Playford dances.

 

  • In the First (1/3) in this serie of three talks devoted to the repertoire of 17th Century English figure dances and its reference text, After the generalities of use and the reminder of the historical context, I proposed to guide you step by step through the English Dancing Master (Generalities, Historical background, False leads, Let’s open the book: orientation, numbering, proper and improper, music, …)

    Chestnut Cécile LayeCécile Laye

    Cécile LAYE is CHESTNUT’s teaching and artistic director.

    She studied early dance in England with the Dolmetsch Historical Dance Society,  Nonsuch History and Dance and EFDSS (English folk Dance and Song Society). She worked in particular under such famed teachers and researchers as  Anne Daye, Anne Cottis, Peggy Dixon, Ethyl Anderson, Marjorie Fennessy, Tom Cook and Alan Davies. In France she studied with Francine Lancelot, Andréa Francalancci and Barbara Sparti.

    She founds AMARILLIS, a dance company meaning to bring to the public figure dances of the Stuarts’ time and the English inheritance, as well as some aspects of history and literature, with the collaboration of musicians and singers. CHESTNUT takes over in 1998. CHESTNUT took over its predecessor’s artistic activities (creating dance and theatre shows), its teaching (preparing dancers for Balls through a rich program of workshops and classes) and its publication ones (CDs, dance descriptions, articles on Playford and modern dances).

    Over the years, Cécile LAYE has build up a strong experience as a dancing master and ball caller (French Renaissance balls/ English figure dances balls, or a mixture of both). She can pass on her taste for and pleasure in elegant dancing to beginners as well as seasoned dancers.

    Besides her activities in the field of dancing, Cécile Laye studied dramatic art and staging, graduating at Cours Florent. She also graduated at Eva Ruchpaul’s Yoga Institute and the Paris school of Gestalt-therapy. She played Shakespeare, Molière and Marivaux in Paris and elsewhere in France and takes part in creating new plays and shows, for children in particular.

    She draws on both sides of her extensive training, physical and artistic, to develop her teaching method.

    Her constant aim is to understand the needs of a given group and of each person making up the group, to build up a class so that each person gradually understands the dance, becomes aware of his/her body and its expressive capacities, be it during a lesson, a ball, or on stage.


    Cécile Laye’s interview by Sandra Stevens – Histoire de bal

    French version of this interview on Histoire de bal

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