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Jessie Ware shoots disco video in quarantine

By Makeda Easter, Los Angeles Times
Published: August 13, 2020, 6:04am

Inside a seedy-looking motel room, a dancer sashays, twirls and vogues alone to the pulsating bass line and sultry lyrics of Jessie Ware’s “What’s Your Pleasure?” In the nearly five-minute video, dancer Nicolas Huchard plays a game of seduction with the camera while wearing different outfits of leather, lace, satin and fringe.

This is the COVID-era dance visual for the title track of Ware’s latest album, released in June. She’s part of a wave of pop artists like Kehlani, John Legend and Haim who have found new ways to create music videos during the pandemic.

Over the last few months, the British singer-songwriter has released a steady stream of intimate, dance-centered videos to accompany the disco-inspired album she describes as “feminine and dramatic and verging on camp and fabulous and direct.”

Before global shelter-in-place orders, Ware began working with Parisian choreography and art direction duo I Could Never Be a Dancer, composed of Carine Charaire and Olivier Casamayou. They were hoping to solidify a through line of dance in her music videos that had a feeling of “camp-ness and swag,” inspired by Ware’s love for the FX show “Fosse/Verdon.”

In January they shot her first video “Spotlight” with a cast of dancers in a narrow train car in Serbia.

“We were going to keep on doing choreography stuff that isn’t too hard because I am not a professional dancer,” Ware said. “I wanted that feeling of people could learn the dance and bring it to my shows so that we could do it together.”

But there would be no traditional rollout of the album.

And when it became clear the pandemic would totally upend typical album promotion, Ware convinced her label to release visuals for songs on the album, trading sleek music videos for something more feasible within the confines of quarantine and social distancing.

In “Save a Kiss,” the first video released in May during worldwide shutdowns, Charaire and Casamayou taught their choreography to Ware and cast of about a dozen dancers via a video tutorial. The dancers, based in cities including L.A., Milan and Oslo, then recorded themselves at home and were edited together into a cheery video.

Instead of creating more quarantine-style, self-taped visuals though, Ware, Charaire and Casamayou decided to shoot dancer portraits, focused on one idea in one location. They drastically pared down the number of people who are typically needed on a music video set, usually between 40 and 60, to fewer than five the performer, the director and sometimes the creative directors.

The inspiration was “like a feature film, to have something more to tell the story, because we don’t want to go too much in the aesthetic of lockdown videos” said Charaire.

Ware wanted to showcase the dancers, whom she had never met, more than herself in “Save a Kiss.” “It made sense to give the stage to these phenomenal dancers,” she said. “I wanted to just celebrate the beauty of dance and how brilliant these characters could be.”

The choreographers scoured Paris to find a hotel room that felt like a Las Vegas motel, where they could shoot “What’s Your Pleasure?” Huchard, a dancer who previously toured with Madonna, improvised the entire video and brought his own clothes.

“We didn’t feel like choreographing him, he’s an amazing freestyler,” said Casamayou, who also ran lighting during the shoot.

The choreographers worked virtually with dancer Eric Schloesser, who was quarantining at home with his parents in Colorado for “Step Into My Life.” They let Schloesser create his own moves but gave him a few references: integrate choreography from “Save a Kiss” plus, “Fosse meets Christopher Walken meets disco meets Big Lebowski,” Casamayou said.

Shot in a Wyoming bowling alley, the video feels like a 1970s throwback with Schloesser strutting among lanes in a suit jacket and white loafers.

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