Dance-Forms 75th
International Choreographers’ Showcase
at St Stephen’s Theatre
* * * * -
-Kerry Teakle, The Weereview, Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
Delivers six distinct
works by choreographers from the U.S.A, Italy,
Helsinki and the UK in a programme shining with
originality, athleticism and grace.
REVIEWS / DANCE /
DANCE-FORMS 75TH INTERNATIONAL CHOREOGRAPHERS’ SHOWCASE KERRY TEAKLE | 8 AUG
2018
Celebrating 17 years at
the Fringe, Dance-Forms’ 75th International Choreographers’ Showcase delivers
six distinct works by choreographers from the U.S.A, Italy, Helsinki and the UK
in a programme shining with originality, athleticism and grace.
Choreographed by Hayley
Descavich, Subway Creatures displays great energy as two bare-footed dancers
dressed in dark suits move to music by Balkan Beatbox as though they are
weaving their way through a crowded subway.
An Edinburgh premiere, If, choreographed by
Mariuca Marza, uses the words of Rudyard Kipling and calming music
(Salento-Plaisirs D’Amour by Rene Aubry) as the dancer, Francesco La Macchia
moves across the stage, beautifully interpreting the words of the poem.
Time and No Time, is
another Edinburgh
premier with choreography by Susana B. Williams, in collaboration with Brandon
Lawrence, principal dance artist with the Birmingham Royal Ballet. Lawrence also performs the piece to music by
Bahramji & Maneesh De Moor’s Call of the Mystic. With great athleticism and
wearing nothing but ballet shorts, there’s something very tribal and warrior
like to the moves and the long lines that Lawrence
creates is a thing of beauty.
Paging Into the Realm of
Imagination is a section of an evening length work, titled Page, which will
premiere in the summer of 2019 in Chicago.
The dance, supported by the fund of Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professorship
at the University of Wisconsin, sees four dancers – three females and one male
– dancing to choreography by Jin-Wen Yu and unlike the majority of the other
pieces uses props in the form of a table, crumpled pieces of paper and an old
fashioned cast-iron iron, but this piece fails to move me.
She Hits a Wall,
choreographed and performed by Hannah Myers in collaboration to music by
Douglas Taige McMahon gives a nod to the Graham technique, the cornerstone of
American dance and that opposition of contraction and release.
The final piece, Vivir,
is choreographed and performed by Aylin Eleonara. Along with Time and No Time
it is the standout performance.
Although born in Helsinki, Eleonara has perfected her craft of flamenco
dancing by studying in Barcelona,
Spain. This is
a performance of two halves. In the first, she is dressed in a sumptuous black
dress with silver glittery panel inlays. She captivates the audience as she
executes the flamenco moves with great expression, fierce feet stomping, and graceful
arm movements. The piece builds to a passionate crescendo as she uses a
vibrant, bright orange scarf, which she sweeps around her much like a matador.
A quick costume change into a white, wedding-like dress is as equally
passionate. She wraps the dress around her, creating beautiful folds in the
material, accentuating some of the Flamenco moves to finish this display of
hugely impressive Spanish dancing.
This
showcase in most cases is choreography stripped bare with few, if any props,
and nothing but the dancers interpreting the moves. It’s a wonderful
celebration of dance.
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