The Telegram (St. John's)

2018 Festival of New Dance concludes

- BY WENDY ROSE wendyrose7­09@gmail.com

The 2018 Festival of New Dance concluded in the capital city on Sunday, after eight consecutiv­e jam-packed days of captivatin­g performanc­es, engaging workshops and highstakes auctions for locally made pie.

Attendees took home a lot more than pie from the festival, which brought local and Canadian artists together to present brilliant and unforgetta­ble works of art for dedicated audiences.

With nearly 20 unique performanc­es at various locations, I managed to squeeze in five shows – “Telemetry” by Shay Kuebler/radical System Art, “Burning Skin” by Sinha Danse, “Devil’s Purse” by Catherine Wright, on Oct. 1-2, and “Mozongi” by Compagnie Danse Nyata Nyata, and “Long’s Hill: I Live(d) Here” by Louise Moyse this past weekend.

Travelling to Newfoundla­nd via Montréal, Compagnie Danse Nyata Nyata, under the direction of artistic director Zab Maboungou, delivered a worldly and otherworld­ly performanc­e at the LSPU Hall on Friday night.

The show, “Mozongi,” began slowly, with dual musicians playing a trio of congas, a type of African drum. Starting off slowly, the percussive tempo accelerate­d as five dancers entered the stage.

Performing upright and horizontal, the dancers used all available space, joining the musicians by creating percussion with their feet and hands. Humming, chanting and clapping throughout, their bodies followed the rhythm of the drums, a mix of synchroniz­ed and wholly unique moves leaving me transfixed, and in awe of this performanc­e, unlike anything else I have ever seen in St. John’s.

I would continue to be awed

the next day, at Louise Moyes’ “Long’s Hill: I Live(d) Here,” a walking tour being filmed for an in-progress docu-dance.

We started at 53 Long’s Hill, moving through the home of a local resident and into a backyard, where dancers Ryan Davis and Karen Fennell began performing a lightheart­ed dance, frolicking in the grass. From a balcony nearby, another neighbour began playing accordion, providing a soundtrack for the show. I’m already in awe of this show – so warm, friendly and strangely hospitable

to a group of strangers, who are mostly strangers to one another.

As we moved through Tessier Park, onto Tessier Place, up Carter’s Hill, down Young Street, through an alleyway, and back onto Long’s Hill, our group resembled a small parade.

We listened intently to anecdotes about the area – the residents of yesteryear, the fire of 1992, the businesses that have come and gone, and the present-day sociopolit­ical landscape and economic climate

of the neighbourh­ood.

Winding around the area, we listened to excerpts from the works of neighbourh­ood authors Lisa Moore and Michael Winter via wireless speaker, as well as soundscape­s of Long’s Hill throughout the seasons.

In addition to numerous pieces by Moyes, Davis and Fennell, local artists Kim White and Lee Saunders performed unique and insightful dance pieces, encouragin­g the audience to engage with the material. Local orator Dave Paddon also recited a piece

about his time on Long’s Hill.

Though it is a short road, Long’s Hill has a lengthy and colourful history, and Louise Moyes is going above and beyond in serving and preserving her neighbourh­ood by encapsulat­ing a small but grand piece of local lore by combining community spirit and dance – undeniably the highlight of the 2018 Festival of New Dance.

I’m already excited for next year.

 ?? JARED REID PHOTO ?? Dancers Louise Moyes and Karen Fennell perform in the middle of Young Street. Some neighbourh­ood residents watched the action in the street from their open windows.
JARED REID PHOTO Dancers Louise Moyes and Karen Fennell perform in the middle of Young Street. Some neighbourh­ood residents watched the action in the street from their open windows.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada