Otago Daily Times

‘Spontaneou­s’ performer pioneered mixing of genres

- LINDSAY KEMP Dancer, mime artist

INFLUENTIA­L British dancer, choreograp­her and mime artist Lindsay Kemp was known for tutoring singers David Bowie and Kate Bush during his career.

Director Nendie Pinto-Duschinsky, who is making a documentar­y called Lindsay Kemp’s Last Dance, said Kemp died suddenly after a ‘‘perfect’’ day rehearsing with his students. He was about to work on his memoirs and to go on tour, she said.

He died on August 25, aged 80.

PintoDusch­insky wrote on the film’s Facebook page that ‘‘I’m so sorry to tell you Lindsay passed away last night . . . he was very happy and it was very sudden.’’

The Italian news agency ANSA reported he died at his home in Livorno, Tuscany.

Kemp left Britain in 1979 to live in Spain before later moving to Italy.

Kemp, who often performed in starkwhite face makeup and dramatic costumes, was born in 1938 and formed his dance company in the 1960s.

He is credited with helping Bowie create his ‘‘Ziggy Stardust’’ persona and teaching Bush to dance.

He choreograp­hed and performed during Bowie’s celebrated Ziggy Stardust concerts in London in 1972, and also made cameo appearance­s in the films The Wicker Man and Velvet Goldmine.

ANSA reported that Kemp directed a dance course at Livorno’s Goldoni Theatre, and was until recently working on a social theatre project he hoped would be put on in Como, Italy, this month.

‘‘His (performanc­e) was pure poetry in motion that was able to astonish for its uniqueness and originalit­y,’’ said Dario Nardella, the Mayor of Florence.

He added that while Kemp had worked with some of the world’s greatest stars, he always helped train new generation­s to whom ‘‘he always tried to transmit, with generosity and humanity, his art’’ which was never ‘‘banal, never taken for granted.’’

David Haughton, a longtime collaborat­or and friend, said mixing genres as Kemp did is common today, ‘‘but it was not common at all in the 1970s, and that’s what he brought around the world.’’

He added: ‘‘He was not so much an intellectu­al as a very spontaneou­s artist. He was a very, very rare performer in terms of seducing and hypnotisin­g a public. He was not only mixing different kinds of art but different kinds of moods and atmosphere­s.’’

Kemp grew up poor during wartime in the Northeast English coastal town of South Shields. He was raised by his mother, Marie, after his father, a sailor, died at sea.

Sailors ‘‘permeated his drawings, his dreams and his production­s,’’ Pinto-Duschinsky wrote in The Guardian newspaper. ‘‘He would say seagulls are the souls of drowned sailors.’’

Haughton said Kemp had also been dancing, working on new numbers, with students and collaborat­ors in his company just before he died. He arrived home and felt unwell. His colleagues heard a sound from his room and found him dead, he said. — AAP

 ?? PHOTO: ALLEN AND UNWIN ?? Lindsay Kemp in archetypal starkwhite makeup in 1969.
PHOTO: ALLEN AND UNWIN Lindsay Kemp in archetypal starkwhite makeup in 1969.

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