nzherald.co.nz

Review: Language of living with the New Zealand Dance Company

By Bernadette Rae
12:48 PM Saturday Aug 11, 2012
The NZ Dance company launches its premiere season in Auckland next Friday.

The NZ Dance company launches its premiere season in Auckland next Friday.

The brand new NZDC make their debut with a platinum performance, sophisticated, innovative, polished and professional, and with cutting edge creativity. After a decades' long diet of less than inspired or inspiring home-grown contemporary dance in the city this new venture shines out like a beacon of salvation!

Five stunning works - diverse, delightful, relevant and revealing - are shown to perfection in a fascinating, all encompassing set with extraordinary lighting and a feast of music, much of it performed live.

Enormous loops of heavy silvery foil line the back of the stage. Sections can lift and lower separately to reveal David Guerin at his piano, the New Zealand Trio, The Electric Boutique in action, or a dancer turned dialogue deliverer. Titles, addresses, dancing dots and spirals and other mystical messages are play across it. In the case of the opening work Evolve, Shona McCullagh's solo for beautiful, strong and uber-expressive Ursula Robb, strange biological images are projected with great beauty on this silver backdrop. Sometimes strips of bright neon enliven its basic gleam. In McCullagh's second work, Trees, Birds Then People it becomes a magic lake then native forest gloom. Suddenly the light escapes and flickers through the auditorium, confusing the audience/ stage divide.
Against all this technical excellence a team of truly talented dancers shine: Robb, Craig Bary, Sarah Foster-Sproull, Justin Haiu, Alex Leonhartsberger, Tupua Tigafua, Hannah Tasker-Poland and Lucy Lynch.

It is Robb's solitary figure, dwarfed but in no way overwhelmed, that comes first, in a study that marvels at the human body's evolution from a single cell. Bary and Haiu are the lyrical highlight in Parmenter's duet to Bach, performed by Guerin, the beauty of which makes the idea of a solo unbearable in that moment. All McCullagh's zany wit and wickedness leaps to life in Trees, Birds Then People, featuring a cacophony of noisy natives in Gareth Farr's Mondo Rondo. Tigafua's indignant bird is hilarious, the olive drab costumes with underflashes of scarlet perfect! Then Haiu releases his Chaplinesque Robot, melding street dance and mime, melting your heart.

The second half sees the longest work, Human Human God, with Eden Mulholland's brilliant score, choreographed by Foster-Sproull and dancers, and exploring the modus operandi of Generation Y as insular, self-focussed and always special, endlessly projecting their own perfection but tormented within.

Diverse, relevant, revealing - a platinum performance indeed!

By Bernadette Rae
Kristian Larsen () | 09:11AM Thursday, 16 Aug 2012
As a reviewer you do your credibility no favours by making a broad and condescending sideswipe at an entire artistic community and its contributions to NZ culture for well over a decade. Not only is it completely unnecessary, it makes me wonder what terrible internal deficit you have that you keep dragging out out this old axe to grind.

You need to read more, think more, and attend more of the rich and diverse performance works on offer from a thriving and relatively young artistic community. Until you do none of us will respect your reviews or take you seriously as a critic.
Paul Young () | 01:16PM Sunday, 19 Aug 2012
I am so offended, for myself and my community. What a rude thing to say.
To our good friends in the NZDC, do us proud. We support you !
To the widely respected young choreographer of the featured work, who didn't seem to warrant a mention in this review. Brava, what a significant achievement !
MH (Glen Eden) | 01:16PM Sunday, 19 Aug 2012
It's great that Bernadette Rae liked this show, but it's extremely sad that she has failed to see very much local choreography or pay attention to the local choreographic scene - so her comment about it is completely unfounded and severely lacks critical insight. It is a vibrant small scene in Auckland.

We have a number of young choreographers whose work gets shown internationally, and we have had a number of world leaders in choreography admiring our work done here, such as Jerome Bel (France), Adrian Heathfield (UK), Stephanie Jordon (UK), Emilyn Claid (UK), to number but a few. So as Kristian Larsen suggests, it would be a good idea for Bernadette to get an in-depth education in the field before attempting to make comments about the local scene.

I suggest doing a post-graduate degree in Dance Studies for instance, and it would help to go to see many more locally made shows, not just by the bigger companies who spend lots on publicity. Joining the DANZ email list to find out what shows are on for instance would be helpful for this also.
Copyright ©2013, APN Holdings NZ Limited