Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
Posthumous career of a ladies’ man
JAN WOOLF swoons to a sublime blend of poetry and choreography
SUBLIME: Dance Me by Les Ballets Jazz de Montreal (BJM) [Rolando Paolo Guerzoni]

Dance Me – Music by Leonard Cohen
Ballets Jazz Montreal, Sadlers Wells, London EC1

 

 
LEONARD COHEN’s rumbly bass, speak-singing his introspective yet transcendent poetry, has formed the backdrop of many a boomer’s social and solitary life. He was the butt of an Alexei Sayle routine: “Let’s all listen to some Leonard Cohen and go and kill ourselves.” Suzanne, with her “tea and oranges all the way from China,” serviced many a sensitive introvert’s evening in the 1960s and 1970s.
 
At Sadlers Well, London, Ballets Jazz Dance Montreal work through the Leonard Cohen playbook in Dance Me. As complex as the workings of a Swiss watch – yet not complicated – each song and poem is described by a dancing body, or pair of bodies, or a line up routine like synchronised swimmers, or a tableau.
 
It is sublime. Monochromatic and simple in its presentation, the poetry and choreography breathe together. This is not illustrative dance, but makes a beautiful whole as neither art form dominates. It plays against a superb scenography of light, shadow and film, reminiscent of a Bill Viola piece, that forms part of the whole.

Cohen himself advised and approved of the project before his death in 2016. He wryly observed that he could enjoy a “huge posthumous career” as director and dramaturge Eric Jean takes Cohen’s poetry and music, fused with dance, to new world audiences.

Choreographers Andonis Foniadakis, Annabel Lopez Ochoa and Ihsan Rustem bring forth the bodily magic of the 14 performing artists of Ballet Jazz Montreal as they perform songs including Suzanne — a stunning pas des deux — So Long Marianne, Famous Blue Raincoat, Tower of Song, Dance Me to the End of Love, A Thousand Kisses Deep and that much loved anthem Hallelujah.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
quad
Theatre review / 27 June 2025
27 June 2025

JAN WOOLF finds out where she came from and where she’s going amid Pete Townshend’s tribute to 1970s youth culture

PP
Exhibition review / 6 June 2025
6 June 2025

JAN WOOLF applauds the necessarily subversive character of the Palestinian poster in Britain

Tower of Babel, 1982
Culture / 10 April 2025
10 April 2025
This is poetry in paint, spectacular but never spectacle for its own sake, writes JAN WOOLF
Poetry review / 19 November 2024
19 November 2024
JAN WOOLF relishes a book of poetry that deploys the energy of political struggle, rooted in post-war working class history and culture
Similar stories
quad
Theatre review / 27 June 2025
27 June 2025

JAN WOOLF finds out where she came from and where she’s going amid Pete Townshend’s tribute to 1970s youth culture

flam
Dance / 30 May 2025
30 May 2025

PETER MASON is wowed (and a little baffled) by the undeniably ballet-like grace of flamenco

DANGEROUS LIASONS: Dominique Larose and Joseph Taylor in Jan
Ballet Review / 17 March 2025
17 March 2025
SUSAN DARLINGTON applauds the translation of Jane Eyre into a ballet that preserves the drama of her formative years
INNOVATION: High energy duets that are mixed with chorus lin
Ballet / 29 October 2024
29 October 2024
WILL STONE applauds a quartet of dance vignettes exploring the joys and sorrows of the human condition