For our March Cog night we went to Trinity Laban’s stunning building in Deptford, to see Scottish Dance Theatre’s show, Velvet Petal. Michael tries to articulate why he enjoyed it so much.
Velvet Petal at Laban Theatre
About the building
Our studio window affords us views of a remarkable dance studio. When Herzog & de Meuron’s, Laban Dance building first appeared (on the site of the Council’s municipal tip), it was a beacon of multi-coloured light, shining on the wasteland of the creekside of Deptford.
The hope was that this public investment would be a catalyst for regeneration, and so it has proved. The view from our window has altered enormously, the sky gradually shuttered in by housing developments and ‘river-front’ apartment. But through the gaps we can still glimpse that spark of inspiration.
In the intervening years, Laban (Lar-bun, since you ask, named after the founder Rudolph Laban) has merged with Trinity School of Music (housed in Christopher Wren’s Old Royal Naval College, in Greenwich) to form the conservatoire, Trinity Laban.
At the heart of the Deptford building is a stunning auditorium where they stage occasional public performances of student work and professional shows.
Given its convenience, it’s embarrassing that we haven’t been to a performance there for so long. I think the last time the Cog team spent much time there was when we exhibited as part of Deptford Design, thirteen years ago. Oh, that really is embarrassing.
We arrived in dribs and drabs and met in the bar. Everyone we interacted with was lovely – people helped to find bike parking, the ticket-desk team recognised our name and greeted us, the bar staff were fun and friendly. These things are difficult to quantify but their effect is huge; the friendly welcome set us up for a great evening (and to revisit soon).
About the show
I loved the show; I’m not entirely sure why.
Contemporary dance can be obtuse, focused on the technical and not the entertainment. Tonight’s show had that potential but there was something so evocative about the overall feeling of the work that it swept me up and carried me along. Who sounds pretentious now, eh?
In interviews and programme notes, Scottish Dance Theatre’s Fleur Darkin tells us that the show was inspired by the book, Just Kids, Patti Smith’s recollections of her relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe.
It’s the story of two artists trying on different clothes and different identities, adopting and adapting until they found the personalities that fit, having each other’s backs while they experimented in a hostile climate.
The name, Velvet Petal refers to the emerging of butterflies, shedding their chrysalis and emerging in beautiful flocks (can insects form flocks?) to live short colourful lives.
It’s a story set in the fabled New York of Warhol, Basquiat, and Bowie, of drugs and warehouse parties, of eye-liner and beat-poetry. These are the tales that my generation adopted as a template for everyday life.
We were originally attracted by the promise of a punk soundtrack. I was expecting an edgy, frantic, arse-hanging-out, Michael Clark kind of show. But this was a much more subtle affair.
Opening the show, dancer Adrienne O’Leary sits in a spotlight, setting the first of three scenes. She wants to be noticed, she wants us to remember her, she spells out her name. But she doesn’t want to appear pushy, she doesn’t want to be that kind of person.
She is, I suppose the Patti Smith character, introducing themes (including Robert Mapplethorpe’s Polaroids) but I’m not sure I really followed any kind of narrative.
The whole show is a kind of party. But it’s rarely the frantic main party with a dance-floor, it’s the louche, drunken, stoned, tired activities in the peripheries; the getting ready, the cloakroom, the back-bedroom coupling (or tripling), the after-party come-down, the morning-after hangover.
There are set pieces and solos but never in isolation, there is always something going on elsewhere, on and off the stage. The ensemble use the space brilliantly, finding unlit crannies to occupy, to collapse, to cuddle, beyond the fourth wall.
It felt to me that each dancer was allowed to bring their own style and training into the piece. That must see the work evolve and, to push the butterfly metaphor, metamorphose into something new with each line-up change. It keeps the show fresh but it must also mean that the original narrative arc has long-since fragmented.
I was particularly mesmerised by Pauline Torzuoli who moves in a different way to anyone else I’ve seen. Apparently she and choreographer Hiedi Vierthaler collaborate on a Stream-Flow movement method. There you go.
The music (arranged by Torben Lars Sylvest) was far from the advertised ‘punk’ soundtrack, even if you stretch the word to encompass a New York Dolls definition. It was a hypnotic mix of Fourtet, LCD Soundsystem and P J Harvey, echoing as if through walls and ceiling.
I may not previously have thought of Leonard Cohen as dance music, but now I can’t get Tower of Song out of my head (or my swaying body).
I loved Velvet Petal. I’ll be sure to join Scottish Dance Theatre’s mailing list so I know when they’ll next be in London. And we definitely won’t be leaving it 13 years before we next visit Laban Theatre.
Illustration by Sheyda-Sabetian for our Cultural Calendar.