Jamaica Gleaner

Feeling the rhythm: Deaf dance festival a beauty to behold

DEAF DANCE FESTIVAL A BEAUTY TO BEHOLD

- Keisha Hill Senior Gleaner Writer keisha.hill@gleanerjm.com

THE MOST beautiful thing for a dancer is to hear the beat. But how can you move to the rhythm when you are hearing-impaired? On Thursday, that could not stop the competitor­s in the Jamaica Cultural Developmen­t Commission’s (JCDC) Deaf Dance Competitio­n from dancing. Even though the participan­ts are hearingimp­aired, their passion and skill remain unfettered.

About 80 children and adults from various schools across the island competed for top honours in the festival, with each rendition. Their responses to the rhythm and the notes were beautiful and on point and even more so the flawless way in which the participan­ts kept track of the beats.

The inspiring event featured dance items that ranged from creative folk to praise to modern contempora­ry and popular dance. The dancers dazzled as they commanded the stage and gave spirited performanc­es for each rendition. EXCITING PERFORMANC­ES

The audience was left in awe at the exciting performanc­es from the participan­ts as they glided effortless­ly across the stage led by the pulsating musical beats they were feeling in their feet.

While the younger performers impressed, some of the evening’s most memorable pieces came from the senior category. With wellchoreo­graphed and beautiful costumes, students from The Abilities Foundation delighted the audience with their highly energised piece Meck Wi

Frolic and their efforts paid off with a trophy for the best performanc­e in the creative folk category. The students also won in the senior duet section with their piece I Am Not Alone.

Afro Vibes, which was performed by the Caribbean Christian School for the Deaf took the audience down memory lane with their exhilarati­ng renditions of certain ethnic traditions.

The dancers’ spirited movements were further complement­ed by their creative costumes. The school also won an award in the modern contempora­ry category for their performanc­e dubbed ‘Out Cry’

Other creditable performanc­es came from the St Christophe­r’s School for the Deaf, the Port Antonio Unit for the Deaf the and the Danny Williams School for the Deaf, which won for best overall junior performanc­e for their piece titled Rhythmic Roots. The Port Antonio Unit for the Deaf received the best overall performanc­e in the intermedia­te category for their piece Boys

Just Having Fun while The Abilities Foundation won for best overall performanc­e in the adult section for Jolificati­on Time.

The St Christophe­r’s School for the Deaf also won for best overall drama/skit for their performanc­e dubbed Walk Away.

In addition to the invaluable experience and talent developmen­t offered by the competitio­n, the performers also received attractive prizes, including cash incentives, trophies, and gift packages courtesy of the CHASE Fund and the Digicel Foundation.

The JCDC’s Director of Marketing and Public Relations Stephen Davidson said that the Deaf Dance Competitio­n is an annual favourite on the overall performing arts national finals calendar. “The competitio­n showcased the cultural strides being made by the deaf community through dance and the wholesome family entertainm­ent that the JCDC is known for,” he said.

Organised by the JCDC, an agency of the Ministry of Culture, Gender, Entertainm­ent and Sport, and the Jamaica Associatio­n for the Deaf, Deaf Dance is part of the weeklong celebratio­n in dance, dubbed Dance Week, included in the National Finals of the Festival of the Performing Arts.

 ??  ?? MAY 6, 2018 The Abilities Foundation performs ‘Mek Wi Frolic’.
MAY 6, 2018 The Abilities Foundation performs ‘Mek Wi Frolic’.
 ??  ?? A performer from the Danny Williams School for the Deaf performing ‘Rhythmic Roots’ at the JCDC Deaf Dance Competitio­n at the Little Theatre on Thursday.
A performer from the Danny Williams School for the Deaf performing ‘Rhythmic Roots’ at the JCDC Deaf Dance Competitio­n at the Little Theatre on Thursday.
 ?? PHOTOS BY SHORN HECTOR ?? St Aloysius Primary School performing ‘Prayer of Desperatio­n’.
PHOTOS BY SHORN HECTOR St Aloysius Primary School performing ‘Prayer of Desperatio­n’.
 ??  ?? Caribbean Christian Centre for the Deaf, out of St James, performing ‘Afro Vibes’.
Caribbean Christian Centre for the Deaf, out of St James, performing ‘Afro Vibes’.

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