Hail the New Puritan

Hail the New Puritan is a fictionalized documentary about the Scottish dancer and choreographer Michael Clark. It was directed by Charles Atlas. Production design is by Leigh Bowery, who also appears. Much of the music is by The Fall, and Mark E. Smith and Brix Smith appear in a mock interview with Clark. Additional music is provided by Glenn Branca, Bruce Gilbert (of Wire), and Jeffrey Hinton.

Hail the New Puritan
Directed byCharles Atlas
Produced byJolyon Wimhurst
StarringMichael Clark, Leigh Bowery, Mark E. Smith, Brix Smith, Anthony Doughty
Music byThe Fall, Glenn Branca, Bruce Gilbert, Jeffrey Hinton
CinematographyJohn Simmons
Edited byCharles Atlas
Distributed byElectronic Arts Intermix
Release date
  • 21 May 1986 (1986-05-21)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryEngland
LanguageEnglish

Using a faux-cinéma vérité style, Atlas depicts a day in Clark's life as he and his Company prepare for a performance of New Puritans (1984). The Company at that time included Gaby Agis, Leslie Bryant, Matthew Hawkins, Julie Hood, and Ellen van Schuylenburch.

The film was broadcast on 21 May 1986 on Channel 4's "Dance on 4" program (on Channel 4). It is distributed on DVD and VHS by Electronic Arts Intermix.

Plot

The film opens with a strange dance number that continually gets interrupted by Leigh Bowery and his friends (Sue Tilley and Nicola Bateman, later Nicola Bowery), who keep walking over to a table of fruit. Michael Clark wakes up and begins rehearsing. Other members of the Company gradually arrive. A reporter calls, then drops by to interview Clark; they discuss how he started dancing and came to London, as well as his interest in traditional Scottish dance. Clark appears on a TV program with Mark E. Smith and Brix Smith. Gaby Agis walks by the river, musing about how she should find her own apartment (she's been staying with Clark). The Company performs scenes from New Puritans. Julie Hood's boyfriend, meanwhile, is shown wandering London. Clark and Agis shoot a scene in a film. Clark visits Bowery, who along with his friends Trojan and Rachel, are "getting ready" (dressing up) for the clubs. Clark leaves for a rendezvous with "a date," then heads out to a clubs himself, where he dances. Finally, at pre-dawn, he heads home, where Agis is already in bed. Clark strips and dances to Elvis's "Are You Lonesome Tonight?"

gollark: Yes, which you have to do to actually spend it.
gollark: Anyway, here is my *alternative* tax policy plotted on the same axes.
gollark: That doesn't seem like a problem? If they only get minimum wage, they... only get minimum wage? Capital gains tax is a thing.
gollark: Tax should clearly be done like this (precise numbers subject to change).
gollark: How did the discrete tax bracket thing even happen? What made people think "yes, this is clearly the best and most elegant way to do things"?

References


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