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'Why aren't there Oscars or Baftas for what we do?'
The Guardian Weekly
|February 28, 2025
From Matilda to Dear England, choreographer Ellen Kane's work has lit up show after show. It's time this art received proper recognition, she says
Ellen Kane is on a roll. When we speak, the choreographer and movement director has two shows running, Ballet Shoes at London's National Theatre and Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812 at the Donmar Warehouse across town. She has just finished Why Am I So Single?, the follow-up from the writers of Six, the smash hit about Henry VIII's wives, and she's in rehearsals for the revival of Dear England, James Graham's funny and stirring depiction of Gareth Southgate's tenure as England football manager. If you watched all those shows you would have no idea the same person had a hand in them all, such is the art of the movement director, a job many may not even realise exists. But it's an essential one.
"Outside actually directing a scene, everything that moves on the stage is usually done by me," says Kane, chatting backstage at the National. That means any dance, obviously, but also scene transitions, characters getting from A to B, and working with actors on how they connect with the audience. She helps make visible a character's emotional experience. "So that we, the audience, can feel it," she says. "I love to feel. I can watch something and appreciate it, 'Oh that's beautiful.' But do I leave moved?"
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