• Keep the Flame, Don't Pray to the Ashes

    Keep the Flame, Don't Pray to the Ashes

    The Choreographer Martin Schläpfer



  • Keep the Flame, Don't Pray to the Ashes

    Keep the Flame, Don't Pray to the Ashes

    The Choreographer Martin Schläpfer



  • Keep the Flame, Don't Pray to the Ashes

    Keep the Flame, Don't Pray to the Ashes

    The Choreographer Martin Schläpfer



Keep the Flame, Don't Pray to the Ashes

The Choreographer Martin Schläpfer

by Annette von Wangenheim

Keep the Flame, Don't Pray to the Ashes

2015 | 85:00 min

Original Title:
FEUER BEWAHREN, NICHT ASCHE ANBETEN

Formal Categories

Biography / Portrait Arts

Content Categories

Documentary
85min original German version with English subtitles available
52min German or French version
Synopsis
Martin Schläpfer, one of Europe’s most creative choreographers, makes the press and the public cheer: “Sensitive, amazing, performing with intelligence and virtuosity – audiences are thrilled.” (Nicole Strecker, tanz) His 'Ballet am Rhein' is winning one prize after another, stunning and exhilarating its audiences within the country and abroad. In November 2014 it performed in Muscat, Oman and in June 2015 in Moscow. For Manuel Brug (Die Welt) Schläpfer’s ballet is 'Germany’s most exciting dance company.'
The film accompanies the exceptional artist, Martin Schläpfer, through his work day and reveals the energy and creativity he infuses to revolutionise ballet. Two world premieres are at the center of this success story, and with “Alltag” (in Ballettabend b.21) the sensation is doubled: After more than 20 years Hans van Manen, ballet master and Grandseigneur of modern ballet, created a new piece for the German dance company and Martin Schläpfer himself danced the main part.
KEEP THE FLAME, DON'T PRAY TO THE ASHES is an intimate portrait of the passionate artist as well as the private individual, and reveals in many aspects why Schläpfer’s ballet means much more than just art for insiders. Through his work, buried emotions and common values, virtues that bond people all over the world, are expressed. Schläpfer’s ballet touches the soul directly by not conforming, by swimming against the current, and through its unflinching commitment to freedom, beauty and nuances. And by revealing human vulnerabilities, it points away from brutality and hate.
Including: Excerpts from the ballets: ein Wald, ein See; Alltag; Johannes Brahms – symphony No. 2; DEEP FIELD
DEEP FIELD, b.20
Cast and Crew
  • Director Annette von Wangenheim
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