| INTER VIVOS – PHOENIX DANCE THEATRE (Eden Court Theatre, Inverness, Thursday 26 May 2005) | |
27 May 2005GEORGINA COBURN finds artistic quality and social comment skillfully integrated in Phoenix Dance Company’s programme.INVERNESS AUDIENCES have been treated to a superb range of modern dance this year with touring performances by the Australian Dance Theatre, Curve Foundation Dance Company and now Leeds-based Phoenix Dance Theatre. "Inter vivos" is an exhilarating, ingenious and engaging triple bill with works by choreographers Robert Cohan, Didy Veldman and Phoenix Dance Theatre's Artistic Director, Darshan Singh Bhuller. The extraordinary skill and talent of their dance ensemble together with the company's choice of choreography transports, engages and entertains their audience without reliance on traditional narrative. The range of atmosphere, feeling and social critique revealed in these three very different performances is both challenging and affecting. Lighting Designer Ben Ormerod and Set and Costume Designer Stijn Celis created a multidimensional atmosphere with the filtered light of the deep ocean and mirrors suspended at varying angles on the ceiling giving a distorted view simultaneously above and below. It was like looking into the depths of the ocean and seeing movement emerge out of light, shadow and colour. With Eden Court about to close its doors for refurbishment I hope it will continue to programme bold new work such as this in it's new "21st Century Theatre"The Phoenix Dancers together form a powerful ensemble, but here too were stand out performances. Tia Ourila for her crustacean like, embryonic and highly disciplined movements and the particularly sensual beautifully balanced duet by Lisa Welham and Theo Ndindwa. This is a grounded work of tremendous beauty, infused with an energy of place and the green glow of life and light of the forest. It is a relief from the modern world, and evokes a timelessness and power of nature through movement that was inspired by Native American healing dances. It is the spirit of this piece that is so striking, the suggestion through the recorded soundscape is of a great cathedral of trees. We do not hear a rustle of leaves but the roar of the wind through a space that extends beyond the physical limits of the stage. In stark contrast Darshan Singh Bhuller's "ENG-ER-LAND" is a brilliant, often hilarious but ultimately knowing look at modern British binge culture. It could be Friday night in "Anytown" or city in the UK. Fuelled by the infectious beat of DJ Blessed, which physically manifests as projected sound waves on stage, the dancers and audience are driven through the crude spectacle of a typical night out. The settings of our bedrooms (getting ready to go out), the curry house, kebab shop, club dance floor, toilets and taxi rank are the backdrop for a parade of comic characters that even as we laugh we can instantly recognise – the wallflower at the disco, the stumbling glitzy pair of gold lame blondes on a girls night out, young men drunk on booze and testosterone "out on the pull". The dancers engage in a heady fusion of disco, modern dance, hip hop, theatre and urban attitude that is an ingenious comment on our culture and completely relevant to every town in the UK today. With Eden Court about to close its doors for refurbishment I hope it will continue to programme bold new work such as this in it's new "21st Century Theatre". Georgina Coburn is based in Inverness, and has a degree in Art History. Her interest in the arts includes Visual Arts, Dance, Traditional Music, Film and Theatre. © Georgina Coburn, 2005 | |
16 Mar 2010 | |
09 Mar 2010 | |
19 Jan 2010 |
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March 2010 Editorial |
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