Monday, October 22, 2012

La Belle et la Bête at the Arts Emerson in Boston from December 5th to December 9th, 2012








Following the sucess of their play La Belle et la Bête at Toronto’s Luminato Festival,
Lemieux Pilon 4D Art is pleased to announce 6 shows at the ArtsEmerson in Boston this winter:

Wednesday, December 5th at 7pm
Thursday, December 6th at 7 :30pm
Friday, December 7th at 8pm
Saturday, December 8th at 2pm
Saturday, December 8th at 8pm
Sunday, December 9th at 2pm


You can buy your tickets here

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

La Belle et la Bête's review from Luminato



A fairy tale of 4D visual beauty

REVIEWED BY PAULA CITRON 

Five years ago, Toronto discovered the immense imagination of Montreal’s Lemieux Pilon 4D Art, who brought their show, Norman, to Luminato’s 2007 edition. The brilliant show fused the experimental films of Canadian cinematic pionner Norman McLaren with live dancer Peter Trosztmer. 
The amazing Michel Lemieux and Victor Pilon of 4D Art are back once again on the Luminato playbill. Their latest show is La Belle et la Bête : A Contemporary Retelling, an awe-inspiring production that cunningly integrates text and technology to create new visual theatre form all its own.
Lemieux and Pilon were inspired by the classic fairy tale, Beauty and the Beast. For them, we all have the beast inside us : our psyches are deformed by our never-ending quest for beauty – a word which can stand for perfection, happiness, love – the curse of today’s individualistic society.
In his grief over a lost love, the Beast (Stéphane Demers) has isolated himself in his castle. He meets Belle (Bénédicte Décary) when she comes to deliver a rose medaillion from her father. Belle is also a visual artist whose inner trauma of abandonment is reflected in her blood-smeared paintings of bound figures. There is also the mysterious narrator called The Lady (Diane D’Aquila) who is the Beast’s protector.
The text by poet Pierre-Yves Lemieux is a bit windy, and is the weakest part of the show.
Yet the glory of La Belle et la Bête lies in its integration of film and live action. Anne-Séguin Poirier’s set is a platform between two borders, with the borders acting as projection screens. Projections also appear on the back and sides of the playing area, and at some points, cover the entire walls of the theatre itself. In fact, at times, it’s hard to know what is real and what is not.
When you layer in composer Michel Smith’s atmospheric cinematic score, and Alain Lortie’s evocative lighting, La Belle et la Bête is a masterpiece of arts fusion.
The show begins with The Lady and a large copy of Henry Fuseli’s 1781 oil painting The Nightmare. The famous picture features a woman asleep with an ugly gremlin hovering over her naked body. As The Lady talks to us about the beast within, the picture slowly revolves, bringing the gremlin more and more into a larger focus until it dominates the screen.
We first meet Belle in her low rent studio which is established by virtual walls. Pictures of her tortured bound figures are everywhere. She dips her hand into a real pail, and with a flinging motion, throws smears of virtual red paint all over paintings. The timing is perfection.
And then there are the masterful holograms.
That a show with so many visual delights is also erotic, poetic and philosophical just gilds the lily.

Friday, June 8, 2012

La Belle et la Bête is Luminato's Festival Highlight



Bénédicte Décary and Stéphane Demers star in multimedia La Belle Et La Bête, a Luminato highlight.

LA BELLE ET LA BÊTE created by Michel Lemieux, Victor Pilon and Pierre-Yves Lemieux, translated by Maureen Labonté, with Diane D’Aquila, Bénédicte Décary, Stéphane Demers and Anne-Marie Cadieux. Presented by Lemieux Pilon 4D Art and Luminato at the Bluma Appel (27 Front East). Opens Friday (June 8) and runs to Tuesday (June 12), Friday-Saturday and Monday-Tuesday 7:30 pm, matinees Saturday 2 pm and Sunday 3 pm. $49-$99. 416-368-4849, luminato.com. See listing.
Luminato Preview

Belle of the ball
Beauty And The Beast tale gets a magical modern update
Don’t look for anything disneyfied in La Belle Et La Bête, Lemieux Pilon 4D Art’s contemporary retelling of the tale in which a troubled woman and a disfigured man discover love’s redemptive power.
That modern element also figures in the presentational style: creator/directors Michel Lemieux and Victor Pilon have live performers interact with characters created through virtual reality.
“Jean Cocteau, in his 40s film La Belle Et La Bête, introduced us to the possibility of having the traditional French fairy tale make a different sort of statement,” says Lemieux from the company’s Montreal studio. “[Our production] isn’t a tribute or an adaptation of Cocteau, but something quite original.”
In this telling, written by Pierre-Yves Lemieux, Belle is a painter whose father withdraws emotionally when her mother dies in a car accident; she uses art to try to make sense of her world. The man is another grief-stricken figure, one who fears intimacy. He’s turned into a beast when he unintentionally scars himself.
The script’s third character is La Dame, a figure from an early French version of the story. Here, she’s the narrator, an older woman who becomes the man’s protector after his parents’ deaths and harbours an unspoken love for him.
“Our first question when we started working was what themes to address,” recalls Pilon, who’s collaborated with Lemieux since the 90s. “We decided to explore appearance and what lies beneath the surface.
“Is it possible, especially in today’s world, to fall in love with the soul rather than the person we see? Given the virtual reality we live with every day on the internet and various electronic media, how do we sort out reality from fantasy?”
Despite the fantasy element inherent in fairy tales, the two artists say the narratives we hear in childhood are key to understanding the world.
“Bedtime stories like La Belle Et La Bête are part of our DNA, and not just intended for youngsters,” muses Lemieux. “The psychological and emotional weight they carry are part of the way we live and function in life.
“In this tale especially, which deals with what we see and what’s hidden underneath, it’s appropriate that we not only talk about appearance but also use it, use the imagery we create onstage, to show how it conditions us to view other people.”
That imagery is pretty impressive. Check out the online clips at 4dart.com/home.html in which a horse gallops across the stage, a young man fights with an earlier version of himself, characters have virtual sex and La Dame reveals her inner desires.
“The hard part isn’t filming the virtual reality – it’s having the actors interact and play with what’s invisible to them,” admits Pilon. “When the actors believe in what they’re doing, so will the audience.”
“We really need the live performers, not just the technology,” agrees Lemieux. “Our job is to use the latter without turning the actors into machines.
“In the end, it’s not about having the actors and the virtual world working side by side, but instead collaborating in an integrated fashion. The result isn’t pure theatre, pure cinema or pure design, but rather a multiplication of those various arts to create a sense of wonder.”




Tuesday, May 15, 2012

La Belle et la Bête to tour in France in 2013



Starting with eight representations at the Theatre national de Chaillot in Paris, Michel Lemieux and Victor Pilon’s, La Belle et la Bête will tour France in February and March 2013.  The tour will take the company to Compiègne, Arcachon, Bayonne, Colombes, Nevers and Ste-Maxime  ( a few other stops to be confirmed soon). 

It is a return to the prestigious Théâtre de Chaillot by Lemieux Pilon 4D Art who had presented in 2010, their previous multidisciplinary show Norman during the Anticode Festival.

The show will star Bénédicte Décary (as Belle), Louise Laprade (as The Lady) and Stéphane Demers (as the Beast). Anne-Marie Cadieux (the Sister) and Peter James (the Demon) will appear virtually.
The team has been rehearsing for the past month in an old boat factory in Montréal La Belle et la Bête for the world English language premiere at Toronto’s Luminato Festival in June 2012.  The show will also be presented at Arts Emerson Theater in Boston in December 2012.
Check out The Gazette’s article with photos and a vidéo of the new version in English: Beauty and the Multimedia Beast

 Photo by Allen McInnis

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Michel Lemieux and Victor Pilon’s La Belle et la Bête : A Contemporary Retelling to première in June at the Luminato Festival in Toronto


Michel Lemieux and Victor Pilon (Norman, Delirium) premiere the English-language version of their award-wining show, La Belle et la Bête at the Luminato Festival in Toronto in June 2012. La Belle et La Bête : A Contemporary Retelling, created by Michel Lemieux, Victor Pilon and Pierre-Yves Lemieux, translated by Maureen Labonté, now begins its touring career outside Quebec. Following this premiere, the production will subsequently be presented in the 2012-13 season of ArtsEmerson in Boston. The production features Bénédicte Décary (Belle) : Stéphane Demers (the Beast) and Diane D’Aquila (the Lady), with Anne-Marie Cadieux (the Sister) and Peter James (the Lady’s demon) appearing virtually. The show runs at the Bluma Appel Theatre from June 8th to June 12th 2012.


« …striking, exciting, convincing…an extraordinary show » Benoit Aubin, Le Journal de Montréal 23 janvier 2011.


Adored by the media, with a sold-out run in Montreal and across Québec, this contemporary adaptation of the classic tale won three Gascon-Roux awards (awards for Directing/Staging, Set Design and Lighting). Initially produced for the Théâtre du Nouveau Monde (TNM), La Belle et la Bête is a co-production of Lemieux Pilon 4D Art, Luminato and the Scène Nationale de l’Oise (France).

Watch the video of Michel Lemieux and Victor Pilon presenting La Belle et la Bête: A Contemporary Retelling at the Luminato press conference.