list.co.uk/festival Don Quichotte du Trocadéro | FESTIVAL DANCE

PARIS MATCH

As Jose Montalvo’s Don Quichotte du Trocadéro comes to the International Festival, Kelly Apter discovers a key ingredient to the show’s success comedy.

I f he lived in the UK, it’s safe to say Patrice Thibaud would be a busy man each December. An acclaimed comic actor in his na- tive France, Thibaud’s style lends itself perfectly to pantomime which is why Jose Montalvo’s new show is pulling in audiences most dance shows could only dream of.

‘This show is really open to all kinds of crowds,’ says Thibaud. ‘It’s not only for dance fans or people who go to the opera. Children and families are coming and laughing, older people, young people, it’s wide open. And that’s what I like and I knew working with Jose, that’s what I would get.’

stage, my ‘craziness’. And from my point of view, I wanted to work with Jose because of the mix on stage the different kind of dancers you i nd in this work. I felt comfortable bringing myself into that.’ To help with a cultural reference, Thibaud compares himself to ‘Mr Bean in your country’. But while there are similarities, Thibaud’s style has a dei nite European edge, which lends itself perfectly to this story. Inspired by Cervantes’ original 17th century novel, Montalvo has taken Don Quixote’s donkey ride across Spain and changed it into a present- day journey on the Paris metro (and yes, the donkey is still there courtesy of some clever video footage).

The audience isn’t the only reason Thibaud wanted to work with Montalvo. Last seen at the Edinburgh International Festival with 2007’s On Danse, Montalvo is known for blending engaging video images with all kinds of movement. In Don Quichotte du Trocadéro (or Don Quixote of the Trocadero, as it translates) there are dancers trained in classical ballet, contemporary, tap, hip hop and l amenco.

Each is given moments to shine in their chosen specialism, then come together for ensemble routines. And all of them interact with Thibuad who, as the central character Don Quichotte, meets the dancers on a rather surreal journey he undertakes. It’s the i rst time Thibaud and Montalvo have worked together, but it was a match waiting to happen. ‘Jose had wanted to work with me for some time,’ explains Thibaud, ‘because of the universe I inhabit on

‘As artists, I think we can all identify with Don Quixote’ Knowledge of this iconic character was another thing that brought Montalvo and Thibaud together. ‘Both Jose and I are originally from Spain I’m half Spanish, and both Jose’s parents are Spanish so that was the i rst thing we had in common,’ explains Thibaud. ‘And in Spain, everybody knows the story of Don Quixote. I i rst read the book itself when I was about 18, and performed other characters from the story in another theatre production. But as artists, I think we can all identify with Don Quixote because we all dream a little bit of changing the world and trying to i ght things, just like he did. To dream the impossible dream.’

Edinburgh Festival Theatre, 473 2000. 29—31 Aug, 7.30pm, £12–£30. 22 Aug–19 Sep 2013 THE LIST 111