G'day All

Here is an item in which the Law of 4 Feet is illustrated very nicely. 



You may wish to go first to the end of the article to see what I am alluding to.



I wonder if you see the allusion as metaphorical or, as Florian pleaded for 

so eloquently, the real thing!? 



"why, oh why we like so much
to look on something
as if it is like another something
why, oh why we speak
about something
as if it is like another something 



>snip ...."



From: "Florian Fischer" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Metaphors for the magic?
Date: Sunday, 31 October 2004 8:46 AM




Looking forward ...



Alan 

Adelaide 



 

      http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/30/theater/newsandfeatures/30cava.html




       


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      November 30, 2004
      The Stage Is Set: Enter Horses at Full Gallop
      By JOE SHARKEY



             
           
      SANTA MONICA, Calif. - On the beach near the Santa Monica Pier, Normand 
Latourelle is successfully growing a small pasture of grass for his horses, all 
37 of them.



      Mr. Latourelle, a founder of the Cirque du Soleil who is taking an 
elaborate new equestrian-based circuslike extravaganza called "Cavalia" on 
tour, is a detail man who decided that since horses like grass, grass they 
shall have, even on a beach. "The city authorities, they said I was insane, but 
I found the right sod and seeds to order, and look: grass," he said, showing 
off the sprouting green blades. 



      "In a week or two, horses can graze on this," said Mr. Latourelle, a 
49-year-old Canadian. He created "Cavalia," which is being presented through 
Jan. 2 inside a huge, 90-foot-high white canvas tent pitched like a 
multitowered sand castle on the beach here. 



      The show, with its cavorting horses and troupe of 32 riders, aerialists 
and acrobats who perform feats against swirling images projected on a screen, 
has been selling out most of its 1,900 seats nightly since it opened here on 
Nov. 10. Ticket prices range from $62 to $92 for all but a special section of 
special-package seats. Mr. Latourelle said he expected to bring "Cavalia" - 
pronounced ca-VA-lya - to New York in the spring. 



      In 1985, Mr. Latourelle helped push the Quebec-bred Cirque du Soleil from 
a motley collection of acrobats, jugglers, clowns and other street performers 
into an international big-top phenomenon. 



      He has replicated some of the Cirque atmospherics for "Cavalia." But 
there is a big difference. While Cirque does not use animals, "Cavalia" 
luxuriates in the horse. 



      Mr. Latourelle left Cirque in 1990. When deliberating on the current 
project, he and his companion and business partner, Dominique Day, decided that 
horses were just the thing, though neither knew much about them. 



      One thing Mr. Latourelle did know: performing horses, shackled to bits 
and reins and obediently repeating tricks as they circled a ring, would not do. 
He wanted horses that would express the idea of freedom. 



      This concept - the horse unfettered - has its charms but also poses some 
challenges, especially considering that stallions were to be the stars in 
"Cavalia." 

      "You know about stallions?" Ms. Day asked with a small laugh on opening 
night this month as she and Mr. Latourelle watched the equestrian co-director 
and principal trainer, Frederic Pignon, work with a gray Lusitano stallion in a 
training ring in the expansive side tent where the horses are stabled. 



      Any experienced rider knows about stallions. Most important is the fact 
that these proud, muscular, unneutered male horses are intensely competitive, 
in a ring or on a racetrack. Riding a stallion in the company of other 
stallions is not to be done lightly, since macho horse-to-horse grudges can 
become suddenly, brutally physical. 



      The "Cavalia" herd consists of hardy breeds: swift quarter horses; fast, 
agile Arabians; proud Lusitanos; and big, steady Percherons. Eighteen are 
stallions and the rest are geldings: neutered males, still strong and sometimes 
willful, but without that fierce stallion temperament. 



      "Cavalia: A Magical Encounter Between Man and Horse" is being promoted as 
a celebration of the unique emotional and physical bonds between humans and the 
animals. The performance is presented on a 150-foot-wide stage: 150 feet is 
about the length a galloping horse needs to create a blazing blur under the 
swirling lights, as riders and soaring aerialists perform their stunts. 



      Nonriders in the audience applaud loudest for the high-flying riders' 
acrobatics. But experienced riders, who began talking about the show during 
earlier performances in Seattle, San Francisco and San Diego, can be heard 
murmuring appreciatively at stunts that would be considered virtually 
impossible in show competition or dressage. 



      Here is one you won't see at the Olympics: a rider plants a leg on each 
back of a cantering pair as they circle the stage and jump a five-foot-high 
hurdle while the rider executes a somersault and manages to land, upright, in 
the original position. 



      Another act is more subtle. Mr. Pignon cavorts with three unfettered 
white stallions onstage, putting them through dressage paces. Mr. Pignon, a 
soft-spoken horseman who says that the only way to train a horse is with 
patience and gentleness to build mutual respect, then has each animal lie down, 
side by side. In turn, he asks each to get up. Two do. The gag is that the 
third, a big, splendid Lusitano, refuses importunings to arise. 



      "That's the hardest trick in the show," a horsewoman in the audience 
whispered on opening night when the stallion finally jumped up and joined his 
two companions in a wild, rearing finale.



      "Cavalia," with its herd and its 100-strong company of performers, 
trainers, grooms, stagehands and others, was expensive to mount. It took six 
years and $27 million before it opened last year in Canada. "Raising the 
financing was the longest part, but of course that allowed me a lot of time to 
think about what I wanted," Mr. Latourelle said. 



      Both "Cheval," another horse-themed circus created by a Cirque alumnus, 
and "Zingaro," a French horse circus, failed to attract a sizable following in 
the United States. At each, horses performed in traditional circus rings. 



      "We certainly didn't want to have a circus with horses in a ring going 
round and round for two hours," Ms. Day said.

      Though many of the horses in "Cavalia" do in fact perform fitted with 
saddles, reins and bits, Mr. Latourelle insisted that the show hew to a 
narrative of the horse as free spirit. The concept blossomed fully on a trip to 
France, where he and Ms. Day looked up Mr. Pignon and his wife, Magali Delgado, 
who are prominent breeders and trainers of Lusitanos.



      "At their farm in the south of France, I was expecting to see the usual 
things - riding horses in the round," Mr. Latourelle said. "Instead, Fred 
brought three stallions to the field and started to run and play with them. For 
me, the script was partly written right then: the dream for freedom. I said, 
this is the story we have to tell, that it is possible to be in a good 
relationship with horses in which there is mutual respect and a sense of the 
possibilities of freedom."



      He was sold when Ms. Delgado put one of her Lusitanos through its paces 
using finger and body gestures. She is a fearless rider who performs precise 
dressage movements on a stallion, without reins or bit, and then gallops 
bareback merrily around the stage. The four quickly teamed up. 



      A major part of the training philosophy is that respect is owed the 
wills, temperaments and moods of a horse. "The stallions know they can just 
walk off that stage if they want," Ms. Day said. 



      Each performance of "Cavalia" is predicated on the possibility that at 
least one horse might well decide he is tired or bored and simply say, 
"Goodnight," Mr. Latourelle said. "This is not my night. I'm out of here." 

       

      Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company | Home | Privacy Policy | 
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