A Little Space is an artful collaboration between Gecko and Mind the Gap; exploring all the ways it means to be alone. The show is fantastic physical theatre, in that it explores the complex emotional and institutional features of its main theme using a full range of theatrical tools. The cast begin inside an apartment, where a group of people gather, speaking to each other through the rise and fall of their hands and shoulders, shifting weight, traveling through breath, and chattering casually with deft gestures. From here we dive through the floorboards of the apartment, into memory, trauma, fear, and fantasy. The boundary lines between each is successfully blurred. But this abstraction doesn’t veer into the anti-emotional territories of other vignette fans: late modern (Cunningham) or early American post-modern dance (Yvonne Rainer). Instead, A Little Space stays with feeling until the work begins to take on a haunting sense of associative logic. This allows the show to attend to the aggregate sensations of joy, fear, hope, paranoia, and loneliness that accompany being alone, a complex physical state for many people currently, in a moment where large swathes of the world’s population are considering to self-isolation. (more…)
March 9, 2020
Gecko & Mind the Gap in A Little Space at Oxford Playhouse 4th March 2020 – Marcus Bell reviews
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Alison Colborne, Charlotte Jones, Chris Swain, Dancin' Oxford 2020, Gecko, JoAnne Haines, Lorraine Brown, Marcus Bell, Mark Melville, Mind the Gap, Oxford Playhouse, Paul Bates, physical theatre |1 Comment
March 3, 2020
Sleeping Beauty: Let’s All Dance with Classic Ballet UK, Cornerstone Arts Centre, Didcot, 1st March, 3pm – Maggie Watson reviews
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: ballet, Classic Ballet UK, Cornerstone Arts Centre Didcot, Dancin' Oxford 2020, family show, Fran Mangiacasale, James Aiden Kay, Let's All Dance, Melanie Cox, Ori Sutton, Orlando Bond, Rosy Nevard, Sleeping Beauty, Synanne Day |Leave a Comment
Sleeping Beauty by Let’s All Dance was a joy to watch. The cast of seven dancers delighted their audience of small children from the start with a brief introduction to ballet gestures for them to try for themselves and look out for during the performance. The story was slightly modified: Carabosse becomes wicked because King Florestan breaks her heart by marrying Queen Celeste but they all forgive each other at the end.
This was a delightful introduction to the ballet, which retained plenty of choreographic references to Petipa’s text. Rosy Nevard delivered Aurora’s Act One solo with speed and attack, and Synanne Day’s Lilac Fairy included the huge developpés with ronds en dedans. There was even a Rose Adagio, albeit with only one prince (whom Aurora definitely did not want to marry), played by James Aiden Kay. (more…)
February 29, 2020
Sonia Chandaria Tillu in Untagged: Sona Lisa Dance Company, Old Fire Station, 27th February 2020 – Susannah Harris Wilson reviews
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Āgraha, Arts at The Old Fire Station, Aruna Asaf Ali, Bernhard Schimpelsberger, Breaking Ground, Dancin' Oxford 2020, Kathak dance, Shakti, Shammi Pithia, Sona Lisa Dance Company, Sonia Chandaria Tillu, Sujata Banerjee, Susannah Harris-Wilson, UNTAGGED |Leave a Comment
This year, star performer and founder of the Sona Lisa Dance Company, Sonia Chandaria Tillu, appeared in Oxford as a solo dancer, having established her own choreography and proving that alone on a stage she is able to hold her audience to a spell-binding performance of Kathak dance. She now bills herself as “an independent artist working in dance, choreography and education.” Her formal training in the classical dance form of Kathak expands to show the influence of other dramatic forms including ballet, yoga, kalaripayattu and ballroom dancing. Sonia notes that she particularly enjoys performing work which evokes an emotional response in her audiences. (more…)
February 25, 2020
Dancin’ Oxford Festival, 28th February-8th March 2020
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: Amy Foskett Dance, Backstage At The Ballet, Cornerstone Arts Centre Didcot, Dance Audience Club, Dancin' Oxford 2020, Drishti Dance, Gecko, infuse DANCE, Joelle Pappas, Kapow Dance Circus Theatre, Let's All Dance, Messy Jam Dance Company, Mind the Gap, Moving with the Times, NEON DANCE, Oxford Playhouse, Pegasus Theatre, Pro-Motion, Richard Chappell Dance, Sonia Sabri Dance, Step2Dance, The North Wall, Thomas Page Dances, TPD Young Artists |Leave a Comment
Dancin’ Oxford‘s annual festival of dance this year provides a packed and varied programme of performances, workshops and discussions, something for everyone to enjoy, in a range of venues. Here for convenience is a list of all the performances: for details of practical workshops and taster sessions check out the Dancin’ Oxford website here or the links embedded to particular events. Look out too for Dance Audience Club sessions on 29th February, 3rd March and 6th March; find out more about these friendly opportunites to think and talk about the dance you see with others here. And if planning to take in several events, why not avail yourself of a Festival Pass which will get you reductions on ticket prices… find out about this here. A reminder too that the exhibition of photographs by Colin Jones, Backstage at the Ballet, continues to the end of the Festival; further details here.
Moving with the Times: Pegasus Theatre, Friday 28th & Saturday 29th February, 7.30pm
This annual platform features different companies in new work that is often explosive, moving and thought provoking. This year’s companies are Amy Foskett Dance in Burning House, Thomas Page Dances in Commonality, and Drishti Dance in Sanket. Find further information about the programme and how to book here
Festival Launch: Westgate Centre, Saturday 29th February 12pm-5.00pm
A vibrant afternoon of free dance performances from professionals and local youth dance groups, including Infuse Dance’s BodyGuards, Step2Dance, Messy Jam, TPD Young Artists, Kapow Dance Circus Theatre, Pro-Motion and a special preview of Neon Dance‘s show Puzzle Creature. Find out more here
Neon Dance Puzzle Creature: Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Sunday 1st March at 11.00am, 12.00pm, 1.00pm, 2.00pm, 3.00pm, complete performance 7.00pm
Experience 10 minute excerpts or a complete performance of this remarkable immersive contemporary dance piece from creative director Adrienne Hart, composer Sebastian Reynolds, designers Numen/For Use, and three exceptional dance artists. Find out more about the evening performance here, and afternoon Encounters here, and read Jenny Parrot’s report of the complete show in a recent performance here
Let’s All Dance Sleeping Beauty: Cornerstone Arts Centre Didcot, Sunday 1st March 1.00pm & 3.00pm
A family friendly version of this much loved ballet with Tchaikovsky’s sumptuous music, talented young dancers and gorgeous costumes. Find out more here
Joelle Pappas Nocturne: St Nicholas Church, Abingdon, Sunday 1st March 3.00pm
Lyrical contemporary dance from Oxford dance artist Joelle Pappas inspired by sculptures of Camille Claudel in a programme of French music and song with Diana Hinds (pianist) and Rory Carver (tenor). Find out more here, and read Maggie Watson’s review of this atmospheric show here
Gecko and Mind the Gap in A Little Space: Oxford Playhouse, Tuesday 3rd & Wednesday 4th March 7.30pm
Physical theatre company Gecko and performers from Mind the Gap, one of Europe’s leading learning disability theatre companies, come together in an exciting new show with stunning visual imagery. Find out more here
Richard Chappell Dance Still Touch: Pegasus Theatre, Friday 6th March 7.30pm
Choreographer Richard Chappell has collaborated with sculptor Anna Gillespie in an evocative work which explores touch through the relationship between three dancers and three life-size sculptures, find out more about this fascinating project here
Sonia Sabri Dance Same Same… but Different: The North Wall, Saturday 7th March 2.00pm
Another family show combining Kathak, hip hop, contemporary and street dance with live music and physical storytelling; playful and feel-good. Find details here
Enjoy!
January 26, 2020
Backstage at the Ballet: exhibition of photographs by Colin Jones, The North Wall Arts Centre, 11th February -7th March 2020
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: Backstage At The Ballet, ballet photography, Colin Jones, Dancin' Oxford 2020, Margot Fonteyn, photography exhibition, Rudolf Nureyev, Tamara Rojo, The North Wall Arts Centre, The Royal Ballet |1 Comment
As part of Dancin’ Oxford 2020 The North Wall displays a collection of remarkable photos, Backstage At The Ballet. Colin Jones (b.1936) is one of Britain’s most significant photojournalists but he began his creative career dancing with The Royal Ballet. This dancer-turned-photographer focused his lens on fellow dancers as his subject matter, capturing hardworking bodies and backstage drama.
Jones’ backstage ballet photographs show not just the emotional intensity and beauty of ballet but also reveal the sustained physical exertion and discipline of a dancer’s life. Photographs from the 1960s include Britain’s iconic ballerina, Margot Fonteyn and the Soviet-born Rudolf Nureyev as well as later images from the 1990s, featuring English National Ballet star Tamara Rojo.
This is the first exhibition in a public gallery of Jones’ ballet photographs, featuring rarely-seen backstage images of British ballet from the late 1950s to the millennium.
With grateful thanks to Colin Jones, Topfoto and principal sponsor St Edward’s School.
Dates: Tuesday 11th February – Saturday 7th March
Venue: The North Wall Arts Centre, South Parade, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7JN
Tickets: Admission free.
Opening hours: The North Wall Gallery is open from Monday – Friday 10am – 4pm, and from 12pm – 4pm on Saturdays. Sundays & Bank Holidays: normally closed, except for theatre events.
Related talks:
Photographing Dance and Dancers, Tuesday 11th February, 5.30pm: further details here
The Collaborative Research of Science and Dance, Wednesday 4th March, 6.00pm: further details here
Find out more about Colin Jones here
January 10, 2020
Moving With The Times – First Look, Pegasus Theatre 17th January 2020
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: Amy Foskett Dance, Anuradha Chaturvedi, Burning House, Commonality, contemporary dance, Dancin' Oxford 2020, Drishti Dance, First Look, Kathak dance, Moving with the Times, Pegasus Theatre Oxford, Shammi Pithia, Thomas Page Dances |Leave a Comment
First Look is a preview of new dance works commissioned by Dancin’ Oxford and Pegasus for Moving With The Times, the dance showcase an established part of the annual Dancin’ Oxford Festival. An exciting chance to see this year’s companies present three incredible works in progress, followed by Q&A with the artists.
Burning House is a high physical contemporary dance piece that explores human mortality from Amy Foskett Dance. “Our bodies and our planet. Ignorance is bliss and we are blissfully ignoring it. Disregarding death and highlighting dangerous immortality…”
In a time of tick boxes, labels and separation Thomas Page Dances Commonality looks at the parts of life that everyone has in common. Through the exploration of shared experiences and feelings this performances paints the possibilities of coming together as one community. Featuring contemporary dance, a unique score, live photography and lots of tape!
Drishti Dance, is a well established performing arts organization producing high quality classical Indian dance works. Choreographed by Anuradha Chaturvedi, the Artistic Director, the work will be a contemporary expression of Kathak dance tradition, in all its exquisite grace and composure, creating a dynamic fusion of movement and rhythm set to the music of Shammi Pithia.
Performance: Friday 17th January, 7.30pm
Venue: Pegasus Theatre, Magdalen Rd, Oxford OX4 1RE
Tickets: Moving With The Times – First Look is a Pay What You Can night. Book your place(s) online or through the box office in advance and pay on the night – if you enjoy the evening and can pay more than a standard ticket price – please do, if you can’t – pay what you can. Pegasus can’t take payments online in advance so if you wish to pay any amount by card in advance please call the box office 01865 812 150 and they will process your payment. Otherwise cash or card payments can be made on the night.
The final triple bill Moving With The Times will be at Pegasus 28th & 29th February 2020
There are no age restrictions for this piece and younger audiences are very welcome, but it is likely to be enjoyed most by those aged 11+