The Scotsman

Scottish Dance Theatre: Ritualia and The Circle

- KELLY APTER

Dundee Rep Theatre

A sudden and unexpected burst of music announces the start of The Circle, as the curtain rises to reveal 12 dancers scattering like light across the stage. Equally unexpected are the costumes, which look like the result of an explosion in the remnants box of a fabric shop. Swathes of material that enjoyed a former life as curtains, upholstery or actual clothes have been bundled up and attached to variousp arts of the dancers’ torsos. All this looks and feels strange to begin with, but Thomas Bradley’s costumes turn out to be the perfect gateway to Emanuel Gat’s choreograp­hy. Both have a freewheeli­ng quality that challenges expectatio­ns, confounds interpre-tation and invites you to let go and enjoy.

Individual­s bob around the space performing seemingly random droplets of movement, then suddenly group together in twos and threes to deliver waves of unison. It’s all oddly compelling, especially when backed by hypnotic tracks from Squarepush­er’s Ultravisit­or album.

The Circle is a new work for Scottish Dance Theatre, and so left-field is it, it makes Colette Sadler’s Ritualia look straightfo­rward by comparison. Her 2018 re-imagining of Bronislava’s Nijinska’s 1920s ballet Les Noces bears repeat viewing, so it’s great to have another chance to see this atmospheri­c statement about gender performed by living sculptures.

New artistic director Joan Cl evilléh as only just taken over there ins of Scottish Dance Theatre, so had no hand in this bold programmin­g – but he inherits a company in rude health, unafraid to step into the unknown.

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 ??  ?? 0 The strange yet oddly compelling The Circle
0 The strange yet oddly compelling The Circle

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