A local choreographer behind the popular Piss in the Pool events with partner Andrew Tay – where they literally take the piss out of contemporary dance and democratize all that esoteric dance vocabulary for us laymen, Sasha Kleinplatz sums it up best. “I’m from Windsor, and in Ontario it has to be a big dance company, like National Ballet, for people to go see a show,” she says. “Here you can do something really bizarre and it’s not only wackos who are going to come, it’s regular people too. I hate to say regular people, but they’re the ones who don’t have a job in the arts, and they still come to see art.”
François Arnaud, Clara Furey, Alessandra Naccarato, Niels Schneider and Andrew Tay
TALENT + TIMING – EGO = CANNES?
When I meet our 20 performers at a studio shoot, I’m taken aback by their honesty and humility. They’ll readily concede that fate and chance encounters had a lot to do with making it this far. For instance, there’s the tale of Niels Schneider, the flaxen-haired charmer who is on a roll with Tout est parfait and J’ai tué ma mère. Our shoot took place only two days after Schneider got the news that his latest collaboration with director Xavier Dolan, Les amours imaginaires, would get the full-blown Cannes treatment. “I met Xavier at the premiere of Tout est parfait, and I had the impression of rubbing a bottle of Scotch, and out came the little genie, Xavier! We’ve done two films together and it’s allowed me to meet a lot of people. I’ll be moving to France this summer to work on three projects there, and I owe that to the international success of J’ai tué ma mère.”
A select group of talented, doe-eyed young’uns join the ranks of working (starving?) artists every year, ensuring the scene never stagnates. The reality alone conjures up fond memories of Hollywood’s quintessential performing arts film, 1980’s Fame (because when are remakes ever better than the original?) In one of the film’s many classroom pep talks, the school’s drama teacher cautions his students: “Most actors do commercials to pay the rent, the rest wait tables, clean other people’s apartments, live on welfare, and hope. And don’t think talent is enough to get you through. You’ve got to have a strong technique, a good agent and most of all, a thick skin, because now you’re part of an underprivileged minority and you’re going to suffer.”
Queen KA, Virginie Brunelle, Robin Henderson, Luca "Lazylegz" Patuelli and Brent Skagford
The hodgepodge of local artists singled out by our top 20 as inspirations is nothing short of reassuring, as it confirms that this young generation finds mentors and role models in its own community. Sébastien Ricard, A-Trak, Jay Baruchel, Dave St-Pierre (“He whose knife was not dulled by years of work,” muses Emmanuel Schwartz), Denis Villeneuve, Marie Chouinard (“She makes me want to kill myself, vomit and die, I love her so much,” gushes Michel), Thee Silver Mt. Zion and Daniel Bélanger are all cited as people who’ve carved out distinctive, commendable career paths.
Etan Muskat, Dan Beirne, Jesse Camacho, Emmanuel Schwartz and Dana Michel
Last fall, reigning local improv threesome Dan Beirne, Brent Skagford and Etan Muskat made a big splash in English Canada with their uproarious web series The Bitter End, which featured their trademark Mile End slacker characters and sketch comedy antics. Yet it remains largely unknown with francophones. “It’s funny because there’s a French improv league at Lion d’Or, and we go to Théâtre Ste. Catherine, which is a 10-minute walk away. And rarely do those worlds ever cross,” remarks Muskat.
DB: It’s funny, on our way over here, we saw a guy who we’ve never seen leave the same three-block radius.
BS: His apartment and his job and where he goes to drink are all, I think, in the same building.
EM: I think if we ever saw him, like, in Verdun, we’d go up to him and say like: “Are you okay? Do you know what bus to take?”
DB: So I think yeah, the Mile End is as much of a bubble as you make it.
For playwright and actor Emmanuel Schwartz, who founded Abé Carré Cé Carré Compagnie de Création with Wajdi Mouawad, there’s infinite potential and timeliness in this idea of cultural fusion. “The strength of our times lies in this idea of métissage. It’s what characterizes our generation and it’s what will make our era unique, I believe. We’ve arrived at a time where the question is being asked everywhere, both in culture and in social work. We’ve exacerbated the question, and Montreal kind of finds itself at the heart of the matter, with Canada and Quebec positioning themselves as lands of refuge. Now it’s time to ante up.”
Read individual profiles of our Class of 2010 online as of Wednesday, May 12. Artist interviews will be published throughout the month.
1. Évelyne Brochu, la femme à marier
2. Dana Michel, the warrior
3. Virginie Brunelle, la coqueluche
4. Niels Schneider, le ravissant
5. Andrew Tay et Sasha Kleinplatz, les inséparables
7. Alessandra Naccarato, la renversante
8. Robin Henderson, la puissante
9. Jesse Camacho, the whiz kid
10. Sébastien David, le charismatique
11. Emmanuel Schwartz, the mastermind
12. François Arnaud, the valedictorian
13. Maxime LeFlaguais, the patron of the arts