The Scotsman

Feelgood acrobatics, then the tough questions begin

- KELLY APTER

DANCE

Born To Protest

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Traffic Light Cabaret

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Queen’s Park, Glasgow and Online

We hear them before we see them. Laughter and shouting announcing the imminent arrival of a small gang. Sitting in the concrete amphitheat­re of Glasgow’s Queen’s Park in broad daylight, all we’re feeling is anticipati­on at the show about to unfold. In other circumstan­ces, however, would the five young Black people bursting into the space provoke a different emotion? “Do I make you nervous?” asks one of them to the silent crowd.

The follow-up to Joseph Toonga’s excellent 2020 work, Born To Manifest – also presented by Dance Internatio­nal Glasgow – Born To Protest continues the choreograp­her’s exploratio­n of cultural identity, racial stigma and unconsciou­s bias. Opening with highly energised, synchronis­ed hip hop to a beat-heavy soundtrack, this new work gets the audience immediatel­y onside. But once the feel-good acrobatics are over, Born To Pro

test takes on a whole different vibe. From the monkey chants to the proclamati­ons of tiredness at being judged for what you are, not who you are, the piece demands more of us than just passive enjoyment.

Queen’s Park is also one of the backdrops for Traffic Light Cabaret, part of Dance Internatio­nal Glasgow’s online offer. Beautifull­y shot, with dynamic direction by David Banks, the short film is a whistle-stop tour of the city populated by roller-skating duo Sugar and Spin, freestyle dancer Dyron Sandoval and contempora­ry dancer Jenn

Taggart. It’s an entertaini­ng love letter to urban living, to dancing like nobody’s watching and to reclaiming the streets.

Sugar and Spin get the ball rolling, gliding down roads and zipping across a skate ramp, clearly loving every second. In an alleyway, they pass an invisible baton to Sandoval whose hip hopinfused movement leads to an unexpected­ly charming reveal. Then into the aforementi­oned amphitheat­re saunters Taggart, bringing a gentle elegance to the hard stone surroundin­g.

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Born To Protest challenges the audience
0 Born To Protest challenges the audience

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