Lullaby

2003
Lullaby
Lullaby
Lullaby
Lullaby
Lullaby
Lullaby

Lullaby

2003

Vardimon’s choreography has a compelling power, flicking between humour and horror at switchblade speed
THE TIMES

Set in a hospital landscape, Lullaby explores our relationship with illness and hospitalisation and the effect it has on those living with it daily.

Combining animation and video with live action, dark humour and original text to create an emotionally charged, multi-layered show.

Choreography that is dangerous and beautiful, impassioned and remarkable
DAILY MAIL

Vardimon is a powerful voice in physical theatre and the daring movements she creates leave scars on the memory
THE GUARDIAN

Lullaby
Lullaby
Lullaby
Lullaby
Lullaby
Lullaby

CREDITS

CONCEPT, DIRECTION AND CHOREOGRAPHY
Jasmin Vardimon MBE
CREATED WITH & PERFORMED BY
Mafalda Deville, Kath Duggan, Gavin Liam Rees, Hofesh Shechter, Jasmin Vardimon MBE
ARTISTIC ADVISOR, MEDIA & DRAMATURGY
Guy Bar-Amotz
LIGHTING DESIGN
Chahine Yavroyan
ANIMATION
Klega
COSTUME DESIGN
Deborah Thomas
SOUNDTRACK DESIGN
Ohad Fishof
SET DESIGN
Jasmin Vardimon MBE
CAMPAIGN PHOTOGRAPHY
Tara Moore
PRODUCTION PHOTOGRAPHY
Alastair Muir
PROMO VIDEO
Guy Bar-Amotz
LENGTH
75 minutes plus one interval
PREMIERE
2003
CO-PRODUCED BY
Laban
COMMISSIONED BY
Litchfield Garrick and Welsh Independent Dance
SUPPORTED BY
Esmee Fairbairn and The Place Choreodrome
FUNDED BY
Arts Council England

ARTICLES & REVIEWS

THE TIMES

Vardimon’s choreography has a compelling power, flicking between humour and horror at switchblade speed

DAILY MAIL

Choreography that is dangerous and beautiful, impassioned and remarkable

THE GUARDIAN

Vardimon is a powerful voice in physical theatre and the daring movements she creates leave scars on the memory

LONDONDANCE.COM

Refreshingly inventive the best physical theatre currently on show

The Guardian  •  7 October 2003  •  Stephanie Ferguson

Her new work, Lullaby, is a darkly disturbing game of doctors and nurses in which she gets out the scalpel and slices away at people’s relationships with illness… Vardimon is a powerful voice in physical theatre, and the daring movements she creates here leave scars on the memory.

The Times Literary Supplement, TLS  •  21 February 2005  •  Roderick Swanston

Vardimon in her choreography requires very precise athletic movement; much of the time dancers seems to bent or bending double, and in their duos to be twisting each other round in what in other circumstances would be considered violent. Yet the dancers are athletes, and while they don’t make the moves seem effortless they are never less than graceful and perfectly controlled.

Londondance.com  •  April 2003  •  Sanjoy Roy

The choreography is physically risky, sometimes bruisingly so, and often refreshingly inventive.

Kultureflash  •  10 March 2003

Politically correct it isn’t, but Vardimon’s dance theatre has a compelling dark-magic realism; magnifying neuroses and transforming familiar social ritual into surreal nightmare. Which is what this genre of contemporary dance does best.

Mairead Turner

Jasmin’s work seems to me to be the epitome of contemporary dance. How old-fashioned so much else that goes by that name seems in comparison. It’s one of those works of art that stays with you, that makes you realise that dance can be political and entertaining, and that it can speak about things with a depth and profundity words alone can’t reach.