Friday 1 May 2015

National Dance Company Wales - Spring 2015

The Aberystwyth Arts Centre was presented with three of the five dances last week from the National Dance Company Wales’ Spring Season 2015. The varying styles that the choreographers incorporated made for a diverse evening of dance from this prestigious company, although a common theme of relationships and interaction was evident. 


WALKING MAD - by John Inger

A strong opening to the production, Walking Mad by Scandinavian choreographer John Inger explored relationships and the contrasting emotions that come from having them. Set to the soundtrack of the Bolero, Inger used nine dancers in solo, partner and group dances to present relationships with oneself or between people. Feelings of celebration, loneliness and fear so closely interwoven in this 20 minutes piece were highlighted using an extremely versatile set comprising of a wall allowed the dancers to move through doors, climb and use it as a horizontal and vertical plane. This and the vibrancy of costume and colour meant that the journey this performance took never ceased to excite.



THEY SEEK TO FIND THE HAPPINESS THEY SEEM – by Lee Johnston
Matteo Marfolgia and Natalie Corne

The mood significantly changed in Lee Johnston’s They Seek to Find Happiness They Seem, which was also an exploration of relationships. However, it focused on the separation and isolation between couples and was presented in a sombre and delicate, yet desperate fashion. Unlike Walking Mad, the interaction between the pair of dancers (Matteo Marfoglia and Natalie Corne on this evening) was kept at a minimum; the couple never had any eye contact – even when making physical contact – until the last moment of the piece, which made it extremely poignant. A more subtle approach of the presentation of a relationship shown in its minimal lighting and no set, this performance used many movements in unison or conversely the two dancers on opposite side of the stage having ‘lost’ each other. This showed the pair’s longing to be together, but lack of an emotional connection, leading to a feeling of complete isolation throughout, especially at the end of the piece.                                                                                                       



TUPLET – by Alexander Ekman
Tuplet by Alexander Ekman
An intensely exciting and enjoyable dance to end with was Tuplet by Alexander Ekman, a choreographer who frequently incorporates rhythm into his work, so decided to centre a whole piece on the element. This dance featured six dancers who all performed various examples of rhythms; be it improvising individually to create a wall of sound accompanied by movement, or working in unison to create movement informed by words, conversation or sounds. This dance interchanges the eleven dancers in the company on different nights, allowing room for change in the piece every time it is performed and the amount of effort both physically and mentally that it took to perform was astounding. This piece was very gripping, my only wish was that it was longer as I did not want it to end!


4*

Monday 19 January 2015

Behind The Beautiful Forevers


Behind the Beautiful Forevers is a play directed by Rufus Norris and based on a non-fiction book by Katherine Boo who went to Annawadi in Mumbai to report on the poverty in a small community. The play centres around many families and how their lives intersect when faced with immense religious prejudice corruption as well as petty problems that every society experiences. Abdul Husain - sensitively portrayed by Shane Zaza – is a rubbish sorter at the top of his trade and providing for a wealthy family who also happens to be one of the only Muslim families in the neighbourhood. His mother Zehrunisa (Meera Syal) is a foul mouthed and proud woman who constantly picks fights and when this catches up to her, a spiral of deceit and corruption takes its toll on the whole community.

The Olivier at the National Theatre is known to be a grand space and the set conveyed the vastness of the slums in Annawadi perfectly. From the rubbish falling from the ceiling downstage to the billboards advertising luxuries in the background, the divide between classes was painfully obvious to the audience. The music was particularly poignant as the blaring, upbeat songs contrasted with the downbeat feeling of the community and represented what people relate with Mumbai rather than the reality; something that Boo commented on herself. The revolving stage cleverly separated the domestic setting with the corporate showing the many different types of corruption present and that there are two sides to every story.

This production highlights the extreme conflict which occurs when everyone is just trying to get by. It was cleverly written and wonderfully acted by the first entire British Asian cast at the National. Other standout performances include Thusitha Jayasundera as the conniving Fatima and Anjana Vasan as Manju, an educated girl who is the voice of morality along with Abdul.

For a gripping and sobering story, 

Behind the Beautiful Forevers will be broadcast as part of the NT Live cinema series in March.

5*