Thanks to them and others, milongas begin to open
around the city — MJC Le Point du Jour, Le Tango, La
Maison, Le Bistrot Latina, and others. In 1994, Le Temps
du Tango began to publish news about tango in all its
forms — dance, music, art, history, etc Associations of
tangueros were formed and soon a market for dozens
of private teachers, of all disciplines developed . Argen-
tine tango was spreading throughout France.
At the beginning of the 21st century, dancers chose to come
to Paris to continue a career already started in Argentina or
Uruguay,. But they will not leave, as is the case with the Uru-
guayan Carmen Aguiar and the Argentine Orlando Coco
Dias, both fleeing their country’s dictatorships.
The 1980s are marked by two major events that will once
again make Paris the second capital of tango in all its forms.
In 1981, a unique tanguería performance opened — Les Trot-
toirs de Buenos Aires. It offered a stage open to all the exiles
to play their music, with all of its distracting nostalgia. Two
years after its opening, the Théâtre du Châtelet of Paris
planned a week-long Tango Argentino show that will contrib-
ute to the revival of tango worldwide.
Tango rioplatense, its music, song and dance, returned again
to Paris, rediscovering its authenticity. By the 1990s, French
dancers were going to Buenos Aires to learn the tango,
coming back with Argentine milongueros in their luggage
to start milongas and schools in Paris. They even began cre-
ate choreographies for tangueras. Among these dancers is
Claudia Rosenblatt, who returned to France in 1991, after
many years in Argentina where she was born, Michèle Rust.
In 1996, the contemporary dancer Catherine Berbessou
developed show called A Fuego Lento, named after one of
the most famous compositions of Horacio Salgán. Nathalie
Clouet used a bit of tango in the process, so much so that Le
Monde dubbed her - Queen of Tango.
At the turn of the 21sr century, Paris was the place
where three scientists, an Argentinian, Eduardo Ma-
karoff, a Swiss Christoph Müller, and a Frenchman,
Philippe Cohen Solal, forned the Gotan Project, and
invented a new path for tango. connecting it with elec-
tronic music. At the same time, French people had been
trained in modern and contemporary dance, and began
using tango as a means of expression. Meanwhile, Argen-
tine dancers were experimenting with new forms, what
came to be called the Tango Nuevo. In part, it was born
in Paris with Pablo Veron who has lived here since 1994.
He was followed in the susequent decade by Chicho
Frúmboli and Sebastián Arce, who will formed — some
will say will distorted — the next generation of Euro-
pean dancers with a unique style from the Rio de la Plata.
In the 21st century, the dialogue remains vetween Paris
and iBuenos Aires. A back and forth, with the tango tak-
ing new direction, beyond the constraints imposed by a
deference to the old or contempt of a great part of the
porteña society and its popular dance.
Fifteen years into the new sentury, Paris is one of the
capitals of tango, with several milongas of all styles, every
night of the week and twenty on Sunday, not to mention
the multiple free milongas and a multitude of outdoor
events during the beautiful seasons.
At the heart of contemporary tango dance is the abrazo
and caminando combined with the freedom of movement
of contemporary dance: The dance got closer to the tradi-
tional tango when the milonguero, Tete Rusconi, was invit-
ed to Paris. But these experiences mixed dance expressions
with new forms of the ballroom tango diffusing into strolling
urban, performances at milongas in historic places, such as
Le Tango on rue du Maire and the Quais de Seine which will
become one of the most popular places for tango in Patis in
the next century.
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