Film Screening
Keep Moving

The black and white image shows a group of dancers in a dance studio. The people are all doing the same dance movement. In the foreground is a dancer in a white t-shirt, all the others are dressed in black.
© Salar Ghazi

Egomio Cultural Centre

The Goethe-Institut is screening the film Keep Moving within the framework of the Weeks of the German language, and Moving Images organised by Egomio Cultural Centre.

In January 1988, Birgit Scherzer’s Keith is a phenomenal hit at the Komische Oper in Berlin, capital of the GDR. The dance piece marks the young choreographer’s breakthrough. Seven dancers perform in Keith. Less than a year later, four of them – including Birgit herself – will have left the GDR, some of them fleeing during guest performances for the “class enemy”.

These dancers, most of whom come from “modest” backgrounds, have been trained by the state to be top performers. As an artistic elite and the public face of the GDR, they are allowed to travel to the West in order to shine their light far and wide. Their families in the GDR are bargaining chips against their defecting. At first, the creative atmosphere at the Komische Oper forms a protective shield against ideological strictures, but at the end of the 1980s the pressure increases. In the months leading up to the fall of the Wall – an event that no one has foreseen – many ensemble members are faced with a crucial decision: to stay or to leave.

Filmmaker Salar Ghazi was friends with some of the dancers at the time. Now he has sought them out to look back and reflect on events. Their memories and private VHS footage create a complex picture that brings to life the zeitgeist just before German Reunification.

Directed by: Salar Ghazi
Production:  Salar Ghazi
Music:     Gert Anklam, Beate Gatscha
Cinematography: Salar Ghazi

Details

Egomio Cultural Centre

Neas Engomis 8
Nicosia

Language: German with English subtitles
Price: Admission free

+357 22 674606 kultur-nikosia@goethe.de
Part of series Weeks of the German Language