2014
LET’S DANCE
INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
DIRECTOR’S NOTE Welcome to Let’s Dance International Festival (LDIF) 2014! LDIF returns for its fourth year bringing an exciting programme of international dance to Leicester. This year’s programme reflects on the Creolization of dance, with artists from Suriname, Jamaica, Argentina, USA, Italy, Guadeloupe and across the UK bringing their unique fusions of traditional and contemporary dance styles, which resonates with the cosmopolitan nature of the city and celebrates diversity in its broadest sense.
Cover Image: Freddie Opoku-Addaie Photo: Benedict Johnson
LDIF brings some of the best international acts to Leicester, including FuturPointe Dance from New York who are making their UK debut with their own distinctive blend of ballet, Latin movement and dance from the African and Caribbean diaspora. We have a thought provoking performance from father and son; Giulio and Stefano D’Anna who touch on the diagnosis of degenerative illness, while exploring the differences between their generations in Parkin’son.
Dance in Three Acts is a combination of three inspirational performances that are brought together for a special evening of dance. L’Acadco returns to LDIF with an energising new duet choreographed by L’Antoinette Stines inspired by Kamau Brathwaite’s poem “It is not enough”. Freddie Opoku-Addaie makes his LDIF debut in a quirky performance featuring sculpted wooden hands. Finally, we have the enchanting Silent Aria; an exciting new collaboration between innovative choreographer Henri Oguike and established composer Philip Herbert. Dance on Film encompasses a selection of dance from the silver screen. This LDIF festival we are showcasing more emerging artists than ever before, with an entire evening dedicated to showcasing a series of films from up and coming filmmakers and artists in Dance for Camera. In association with regional dance agency Dance4 and Embrace Arts, Signatures, emerging artists take centre stage in an integrated showcase of new work. After a successful introduction in 2013, Autograph will return for a second year, to share the experiences and the fully developed work of previous participants of Signatures.
The annual LDIF symposium is in partnership with Modern Moves and King’s College, London. Creolizing Dance in a Global Age will reflect on the diverse collaborations and affiliations that are embodied within the dynamics of dance, from a Caribbean perspective. The festival’s finale is Sana Budaya Dance Company. Travelling all the way from Suriname in South America to bring their unique blend of different dance backgrounds inspired by the diverse cultural heritage the country holds. LDIF brings a full programme of fun and international performances, insightful master classes and energetic dance films to Leicester. This year launch on 29 April with an urban carnival atmosphere, so Let’s Dance!
Pawlet Brookes Artistic Director
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LDIF 2014 Launch Tue 29 Apr, 6pm Athena, £3/£5
Let’s Dance International Festival 2014 kicks off with a collaboration of artists.
Image reference: Hypnotick Photography
Hypnotick and Mahogany combine forces for Possession: Affilia’s Return, blending the best in acrobatic street dance with carnival costume and puppet creations. A story of temptation, deception and power; three friends share the desire to become the greatest dancers. They meet a mystical old man and the giant Affilia, who are able to give the friends everything they have ever wanted, but, at a price. Multi-talented singer/songwriter, rapper, multi-instrumentalist and record producer, Angel, is possibly the UK’s Pop and R&B industry’s best kept secret. The writing force behind songs for many artists, including Cheryl Cole, JLS, Roll Deep, Devlin, Wretch 32, Wiley, and his own chart topping track “Wonderful”, Angel comes to Leicester for an exciting live performance.
Book Launch: The Illicit Worlds of Indian Dance by Anna Morcom Thu 8 May, 5.15pm Guildhall, Free
Anna Morcom, Royal Holloway, University of London, comes to Let’s Dance International Festival to talk about her new publication The Illicit Worlds of Indian Dance. Until the 1930s no woman could perform in public and retain respectability in India, but the latter part of the twentieth century has seen classical performing arts became appreciated by a wide range of audiences. Through in-depth interviews and archival research, Anna Morcom tells the story of India’s female, transgender and cross-dressed dancers and performers, and explores the forces that have shaped Indian performing arts over the last century.
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Master Class: Lee Payne Friday 9 May, 11am Studio 79, £8/£10
A unique opportunity to meet and work with revered tap dancer Lee Payne. With credits including Riverdance, Top Of The Pops and Got To Dance, Lee has been a part of the LDIF programme for the past two years, with Ballare: To Dance (2012) and Tap and Tabla (2013) and inspired many to get their tap shoes on.
ATMA Dance presents ‘Erhebung’
Fri 9 May, 2pm / 4pm / 6pm Museum Square (next to New Walk Museum and Art Gallery), Free New classical Indian dance meets abstract sculpture in Erhebung, a collaboration between choreographer Mayuri Boonham and the sculptor Jeff Lowe. Boonham’s increasing abstraction of the dancers’ figures creates an expressive boundary with Lowe’s striking sculpture – a place where form and abstraction merge. The dance is performed within a sculptural landscape that integrates choreography in its design. A key inspiration for the work is Burnt Norton, a poem from T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets. The title, Erhebung, is a German word mentioned in the poem, meaning rising or elevation.
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Unlocking Creativity Shorts3 Sat 10 May, 5.30pm Curve RR2, ÂŁ10
Image reference: Robert Benschop
Kadam/Pulse present Unlocking Creativity Shorts3, a platform for cutting-edge South Asian dance. The work emerging from the selected artists is fresh, thoughtful and heart-warming. Four artists present four striking solos with guest artist Sooraj Subramaniam in Tightrope Walker. Sooraj is one of the most sought-after dancers on the South Asian classical and contemporary dance circuits (credits include Nina Rajarani Dance Creations, Balbir Singh Dance Company and Shobana Jeyasingh Dance). Tightrope Walker choreographed by Kalpana Raghuraman, is a thirty minute piece of intense soulsearching on what it means to grow up in a culture of shame and finger-pointing. The self-examination delivered by powerful physicality and tender detail resolves in surprising revelations.
Image reference: Ellen Booth , Photo: Sean Goldthorpe
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Signatures
Sat 10 May, 7.30pm Embrace Arts, ÂŁ8/ÂŁ10 Signatures, in collaboration with Dance4, is a platform that nurtures and supports undiscovered talent, by working with emerging dancers and choreographers and enabling them to realise their creative potential. The artists taking part in this showcase of new work have all been selected on the innovative strength of their concepts and their desire to succeed in the arts industry.
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I’mpossible – Studio 79
Image reference: Subtle Kraft Co. Photo: Roswisha Chesher
Impossible is not a fact, it’s an opinion. Impossible is potential. Is it the truth or an illusion? A piece focusing on eliminating the limitations of live dance through the use of mirrors challenging what is visible to human eye.
Where Did It Go? – Ellen Booth
Playing with timing, phrasing and rhythm through an intimate relationship with the music, DMU Dance student Ellen Booth draws on somatic practices to negotiate a balance between focusing attention on internal and external experiences in the moment of performing.
One Man Show – Chris Waldock
Performed with the upbeat score of an indie string band, DMU Dance student Chris Waldock’s solo evokes ideas of a travelling show whilst playing on certain showman stereotypes such as the magician, the mime artist, the gymnast and, of course, the welcoming ringmaster.
Onesquaremeter – Avatâra Ayuso
A contemporary dance duet inspired by the geographic coordinates of London city. The dancers are spatially bound on stage, echoing the place where there is room for chaos, calmness, but also for the unexpected.
Violence of discovery, Calm of acceptance – Cultural Device Dance Project
Image reference: Ellen Booth Photo: Sean Goldthorpe
An innovative and experimental dance company for professional dancers with Down’s Syndrome. Cultural Device Dance Project use improvisational techniques and experimental electronic sounds to push the boundaries of choreography.
Moments – Subtle Kraft Co.
Capturing the various, and sometimes fleeting moments that we experience during our lives, and how they can unite us and separate us. Choreographer Kimberly Harvey and her integrated dance company navigate through these moments in an attempt to discover their fusing point.
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Wai Po – Fenfen Huang
Based on the intriguing life story of her maternal grandmother, FenFen Huang unites contemporary and traditional Chinese dance styles to pay tribute to the strong-willed and resilient women from the traditional society of China.
One, Two – Toby MacNutt
Image reference: Toby MacNutt
Image reference: Fenfen Huang
Signatures’ first international artist, Toby MacNutt, explores the breadth of relationships available between diverse bodies and inorganic extensions or forces, through the dynamic of multi-modal and mixed-ability dance.
Persistence – Chad Taylor
Aiming to deal with social, political and environmental issues, dancer and choreographer Chad Taylor combines Hip Hop and humour in this creative, high energy duet.
Trudy – Ellen Turner
Once someone has gone, is that it? The end? A thought provoking personal true story of love and loss by awarding winning choreographer Ellen Turner. Ellen collaborates for the first time, with sisters Lily and Grace Turner to create a touching duet reflecting their memories of grandmother, and Alzheimer’s sufferer: Trudy.
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Dance In Three Acts
Master Class: FuturPointe Dance
Three inspirational performances are brought together for an evening of dance.
A unique chance to meet and work with company members from FuturPointe Dance, prior to the evening performance. Learn more about their genre blending style of Reggae Ballet, inspired by traditional and modern Caribbean dance forms, ballet and Latin movement, and their quest to unite people through dance.
Cover Image: Freddie Opoku-Addaie, Photo: Benedict Johnson
Wed 14 – Thu 15 May, 7.45pm Curve (Studio), £15
L’Acadco returns to Let’s Dance International Festival with an energising new duet choreographed by L’Antoinette Stines. Inspired by Kamau Brathwaite’s poem Negus and the refrain “It is not enough” this emotive work reflects on the creole heritage of the Caribbean and explores what it means to be free. In his witty and personal new solo Show of Hands, Freddie Opoku-Addaie, addresses preconceptions, and challenges what it means to be part of a contemporary urban generation. Set amidst 25 sculpted wooden hands, Freddie explores the unspoken, equivocating truths of the society we live in, with this humorous and slightly surreal work. Inspired by the hidden dance world of the African Diaspora, Silent Aria is a new collaboration between critically acclaimed choreographer Henri Oguike, established composer Philip Herbert and dancers Noora Kela and Tara Lopez. Featuring an uplifting musical score and theatrical choreography, the artists’ own stories are embodied in this invigorating dance.
Fri 16 May, 11am Studio 79, £8/£10
Image reference: L’Acadco, Photo: Tricia Bent
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Image reference: FuturPointe Dance, Photo: Marc Safran, www.marcsafran.com
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FuturPointe Dance
Fri 16 – Sat 17 May, 7.45pm Curve (Studio), £10 Based in Rochester, New York, FuturPointe Dance will make their UK debut with new work from their exciting multi genre repertoire. The company is celebrated for their unique dance fusion of Ballet, Latin Movement, Reggae, Urban, Contemporary and dance from the African and Caribbean Diaspora. FuturPointe bring the critically acclaimed Psychopomp and Pageantry to the stage. A multi-media work about life’s changes through a dreamlike landscape of confusion, connections and conclusions. Featuring original choreography by L’Antoinette Stines, N’Jelle Gage, Heather Roffe and Guy Thorne, and contributions from visual artist Henrik Soderstrom and sleight of hand expert Nickle Van Wormer. Alan Watts, George Carlin, and Rastafarian elder “Horse Mouth” Wallace make digital appearances as transitional escorts and mediators. Dance, video, text, visual and digital art unite for this beautiful, awe-inspiring performance.
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Parkin’son
Image reference: Stefano and Giulio D’Anna
Sat 17 May, 7.30pm Embrace Arts, £10 Parkin’Son is an intrepid performance by choreographer Giulio D’Anna and his father Stefano D’Anna. With uplifting honesty and humour, father and son explore the differences between their generations. While looking to the future and reminiscing about the past, they confront Stefano’s diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease. And through eloquent dance consider the elements that tie them together; the bonds of blood, their shared memories and histories, and their strong but changing relationship.
In Conversation: ‘A Life in Four Acts’ with Graciela Kaplan Mon 19 May, 7pm City Rooms, £6/£8
Ex-Principal Ballerina, Graciela – Kaplan tells the story of her life as a dancer from early experiences at ballet school in provincial Argentina via an international dancing career to becoming Principal Dancer in one of the UK’s major ballet companies, Northern Ballet Theatre. She tells the intimate life of being a dancer; the travelling, costume malfunction, the highs of success and coping with the trauma of injury and deals with the dancer’s problems of life post dance. This is a warm, life affirmation of determination, dedication and success but laced with humour and down to earth anecdote. The angst of “Black Swan” the movie, it is not……
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Master Class: Altered Skin
Power Games
A unique opportunity to meet and work with Altered Skin, prior to their performance. Learn about their fusion of South Asian dance and Physical Theatre, and the real life events which influenced the creation of the thought-provoking and mesmerising work that is Power Games.
Think you’re in control of your life? Think again…
Tue 20 May, 11am Studio 79, £8/£10
Wed 21 May, 7.30pm Peepul Centre, £8/£10
Blending character-driven physical theatre with contemporary and South Asian dance, this stunning new work by Altered Skin, led by award-winning choreographer Shane Shambhu, explores the forces that shape our destiny.
Photo: Simon Richardson
Deepak is a wealthy banker whose life is spiralling out of control. His high flying lifestyle is not all it’s cracked up to be. Follow Deepak through this reality game show and influence the outcome of his story by voting in a TV-style game show.
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The conference will examine the meaning, relevance, impact and potential of ‘Creolizing Dance’: dance that creolizes, and the creolizing of dance. Through a unique combination of practice and conversation between academics and dancers, it will reflect on and reveal the spectrum of inter-racial, inter-ethnic, and sometimes paradoxical collaborations and affiliations embodied within the dynamics of Caribbean dance.
Photo: Katherine Dunham papers, Special Collections Research Center, Morris Library, Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Questions that will be asked include: • What does it mean to be ‘Creole’? • What cultures have come together under ‘Creolization’?
Creolizing Dance in a Global Age Wed 21 May, 9am Kings College, London Price £45/£55 Early Bird £40
LDIF in partnership with Modern Moves (an ERC-funded project at King’s College, London), and the Cultural Institute at King’s, presents Creolizing Dance in a Global Age: a symposium where dance practitioners, academics, policy makers and funders will share their thoughts and practice on the complex relationship between ‘creolization’ and dance. embodied within the dynamics of Caribbean dance.
• Why is Creolization relevant today? • How does it impact globally on dance and the creative world? • What can dance teach us about the artistic and political potential of Creolization? Creolizing Dance brings together for the first time in Britain key speakers from North America and the Caribbean: L’Antoinette Stines, Artistic Director of L’Acadco: A United Caribbean Dance Force; Patrick Parson, Artistic Director of Ballet Creole; Marie-Laure Soukaina Edom, founder of Essence of Women Dance Ensemble; Thomas F. DeFrantz from Duke University; Gladys M. Francis from Georgia State University; Hilary Brown, programme manager for Culture and Community Development at CARICOM. Also speaking are Roshini Kempadoo, UEL, Ananya Jahanara Kabir, Director of Modern Moves, King’s College, and Pawlet Brookes, Artistic Director of Serendipity.
Top Photo: Keneish Dance, Bottom Left Photo: EIC Dance Theatre, Right Photo: Matthew Dummigan
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Autograph
Thu 22 May, 7.30pm, Peepul Centre, £8/£10 Autograph, in association with Dance4, presents a showcase of work from previous participants of the Signatures programme. The dancers and choreographers taking part will share their experiences alongside their developed work. Tabularasa – Keneish Dance Exchanging sensory information and connecting to people to gain knowledge, power and independence. It is an athletic and sensual intake on humanity using African Contemporary, incorporating the Angolan partner dance Kizomba.
Frontline – EIC Dance Theatre Frontline delves into the lives of 4 women seeking freedom from this world we call reality. A reconstruction of a pre-existing piece, Frontline walks the audience through 4 individual stories of broken childhoods, shattered dreams and hopes for the future. We watch 4 women turn their bodies from money making commodities, traded for the enjoyment of others, into self-empowered instruments, able to express and achieve their full potential. ADRONE – Matthew Dummigan Emerging dancer and choreographer Matthew Dummigan explores how concepts of gender influence dance and performance. In collaboration with digital theatre company ‘A Bang in The Void,’ ADRONE immerses the dancers and audience in a state of androgyny and neutrality, freeing the potential to focus on movement in connection to sound, place and time.
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Masterclass: L’Antoinette Stines
Sana Budaya
Artistic director, dancer, choreographer and teacher Dr L’Antoinette Osunide Stines, shares her experiences that come from a long and varied career in dance, in this stimulating master class. Creator of L’Antech, a modern contemporary Caribbean dance technique, and director of L’Acadco: A United Caribbean Dance Force, L’Antoinette has helped to shape the direction and future of dance in Jamaica and further afield.
This diverse dance ensemble based in Suriname, South America is esteemed for their unique blend of different dance backgrounds which include Ballet, Jazz, Pencak Silat, Kathak and Javanese dance. Sana Budaya’s repertoire examines a spectrum of themes, inspired by their own personal experiences and social histories. “Guloh” (Sugar) considers cultural heritage with a reverent homage to Suriname’s Javanese plantation workers. “Satriya” (Knight) examines respect and the wisdom of elders, whereas “Drang” (Urge) and “Wedhi” (Scared) are pieces which explore facets of the human condition; loyalty, betrayal and the struggle for survival.
Image reference: Sana Budaya Dance Company, Photo: Mario C. Castillion
Fri 23 May, 11am Studio 79, £8/£10
Fri 23 – Sat 24 May, 7.30pm Embrace Arts, £10
Image reference: Graciela Kaplan and Peter Parker, Battle of the Year, Sana Budaya Dance Company, Photo: Chelo C., FuturPointe Dance, Photo: Carrie Mateosian.
Ticket Bundle £25
Save £15 and see three top billing dance shows and a film.
Making the UK chuckle since 1994
The LDIF Ticket Bundle consists of a ticket for Dance In Three Acts, FuturPointe Dance, Sana Budaya Dance Company, and a film of your choice from: Battle of the Year, Dance for Camera, Mad Hot Ballroom, Only When I Dance and First Position.
Funders
“one of the best comedy festivals in the world” The Guardian
www.comedy-festival.co.uk
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Dance On Film
Battle of The Year
Dance For Camera
Dir: Benson Lee, 109 mins, 2013, USA
An evening showcasing emerging artists and filmmakers through a series of short films. This event will be showcasing work from De Montfort University Dance Students in a series of DMU Shorts. Leicester-based filmmaker Ëpha Roe, will be showcasing his new film Panacea’s Score. Birminghambased, Keisha Grant will be showing her new film Head vs. Heart. London-based Omari Carter’s will also be showcasing his new dubstep short film during the evening.
6 May, 7pm Phoenix Cinema, £5
Image reference: xxxxxx xxxxx, xxxxxx xxxxx
Battle of the Year attracts all the best teams from around the world, but the Americans haven’t won in fifteen years. Dante enlists Blake to assemble a team of the best dancers and bring the Trophy back to America, where it all started.
Mon 12 May, 7pm Phoenix Cinema, £5
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Mad Hot Ballroom 13 May, 6pm Phoenix Cinema, £5
Only When I Dance Sun 18 May, 2pm Phoenix Cinema, £5
Dir: Marilyn Argrelo, 106 mins, 2005, USA
Dir: Beadie Finzi, 78 mins, 2009, UK, PG
Based on a feature article written by Sewell, Mad Hot Ballroom looks inside the lives of New York City school kids who journey into the world of ballroom dancing. The film chronicles the experiences of students at three schools in the neighbourhoods of Tribeca, Bensonhurst and Washington Heights. The students are united by an interest in the ballroom dancing lessons, which builds over a 10-week period and culminates in a competition to find the school that has produced the best dancers in the city. As the teachers cajole their students to learn the intricacies of the various disciplines, Agrelo intersperses classroom footage with the students’ musings on life; many revealing underlying
Adesola Akinleye’s film Dance Theatre of Harlem, exploring her own personal experiences as a young dancer, and the conflict between moving to the USA or staying to support Black British dance. Only When I Dance is a documentary following the story of two Black teenagers, Irlan and Isabela, from the Favela in Brazil, and their attempts to pursue careers as ballet dancers. Faced with prejudice and doubt, the young dancers prepare to grasp at what may well be their only opportunity to follow their dreams and gain a place at an international ballet school.
maturity and wisdom.
First Position
Tue 20 May, 7pm Phoenix Cinema, £5 Dir: Bess Kargman, 90mins, 2011, USA First Position is a documentary that follows six young dancers from around the world. Struggling with near exhaustion, debilitating injuries and the drama of adolescence, they prepare for the Youth America Grand Prix, one of the most prestigious ballet competitions in the world. With only a handful of elite scholarships available and one opportunity to try, nothing short of perfection is acceptable.
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Book Tickets Call 0333 666 3366 or Visit www.ldif.co.uk
Athena
Embrace Arts
Peepul Centre
City Rooms Hotel Street Leicester LE1 5AW
Ticket Office 0116 252 2455 E arts-centre@le.ac.uk W embracearts.co.uk
Phoenix Cinema
Curve
RNID Type Talk service 18001 0116 252 2455
Rutland Street Leicester LE1 1SA
Rutland Street Leicester LE1 1SB Ticket Office 0116 2422 3595 E tickets@curvetheatre.co.uk W curveonline.co.uk
Richard Attenborough Centre Lancaster Road Leicester LE1 7HA
The Guildhall Guildhall Lane Leicester LE1 5FQ
Concessions
Concessions, where stated, are available to full-time students, in possession of a Student Card with photo, state pensioners, people with disabilities and their carers, unemployed, and children under 16. Please provide proof of concessionary status.
Access Information
LDIF venues offer access for people with mobility disabilities. In addition we are committed to our diversity policy and aim to ensure full access to all.
Transaction Fees
Please be aware that Transaction fees may apply on tickets bought by telephone through the Ticket Source Box Office and for all card payments made online, by telephone and in person at the Curve Ticket Office. Every effort is made to ensure that these costs are clear where they do apply.
Orchardson Avenue Leicester LE4 6DP
Phoenix Square 4 Midland Street Leicester LE1 1TG
Ticket Office 0116 242 2800 W phoenix.org.uk
Studio 79
15 Midland Street Leicester LE1 1TG
Disclaimer
Please note all details were correct at time of going to press. Whilst every effort will be made to keep to the announced programme, it may be necessary to make changes without notice. No refunds or exchanges will be made to tickets once issued unless the event is cancelled. LDIF 2014 is produced by Serendipity Serendipity Phoenix Square 4 Midland Street Leicester LE1 1RE T +44 (0)116 242 2945 E info@serendipity-uk.com W www.serendipity-uk.com Serendipity Artists Movement Limited Company No 07248813
Twitter @LetsDanceFest #LDIF2014 Facebook LetsDanceFest
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Date
Event Type
Event
Time
Venue
Tickets
29 April
Launch
LDIF Launch 2014 with Hypnotick, Mahogany and Angel
6pm
Athena
£3/£5
6 May
Film
Battle of The Year
7pm
Phoenix Cinema
£5
8 May
Book Launch and Talk
The Illicit Worlds of Indian Dance by Anna Morcom
5.15pm
The Guildhall
Free
9 May
Master Class
Lee Payne
11am
Studio 79
£8/£10 Free
9 May
Performance
ATMA Dance
2pm, 4pm, 6pm
Museum Square, New Walk
10 May
Performance
UC Shorts
5:30pm
Curve (RR2)
£10 £8/£10
10 May
Performance
Signatures
7:30pm
Embrace Arts
12 May
Film
Dance for Camera
7pm
Phoenix Cinema
£5
13 May
Film
Mad Hot Ballroom
6pm
Phoenix Cinema
£5
14 May
Performance
Dance In Three Acts
7:45pm
Curve (Studio)
£15
15 May
Performance
Dance In Three Acts
7:45pm
Curve (Studio)
£15
16 May
Master Class
FuturPointe Dance
11am
Studio 79
£8/£10 £10
16 May
Performance
FuturPointe Dance
7:45pm
Curve (Studio)
17 May
Performance
FuturPointe Dance
7:45pm
Curve (Studio)
£10
17 May
Performance
Parkin’Son – Giulio and Stefano D’Anna
7:30pm
Embrace Arts
£8/£10
18 May
Film
Only When I Dance
2pm
Phoenix Cinema
£5
19 May
In Conversation
“My Life in Four Acts” with Graciela Kaplan
7pm
City Rooms
£6/£8
20 May
Master Class
Altered Skin
11am
Studio 79
£8/£10 £5
20 May
Film
First Position
7pm
Phoenix Cinema
21 May
Symposium
Creolizing Dance In a Global Age
9am
King’s College, London
21 May
Performance
Power Games – Altered Skin
7:30pm
Peepul Centre
£8/£10
22 May
Performance
Autograph
7:30pm
Peepul Centre
£8/£10
23 May
Master Class
L’Antoinette Stines
11am
Studio 79
£8/£10
23 May
Performance
Sana Budaya Dance Company
7:30pm
Embrace Arts
£8/£10
24 May
Performance
Sana Budaya Dance Company
7:30pm
Embrace Arts
£8/£10
£45/£55 Early Bird £40