Gary and Pel |
Whoever decided to have Alex Marshall Parsons' Gary and Pel kick off Day 2 of Wales Dance Platform deserves a round of pirouettes. The duo is a tour de force of comedy, using both slapstick and mime, and really warmed the crowds up during their opening performance in Chapter's foyer.
Gary and Pel are two comedy characters played by Alex himself, along with Kim Noble. Gary looks like a reject from The Little Shop of Horrors, while Pel is a vision in bright yellow fright wig straight out of the B-52s. They "drive" into view in their shocking pink cardboard car and proceed to leap about the space with the energy and vigour of a pair of antelopes. Their faces are what elevates this physical piece from mere entertaining to downright brilliant, Alex in particular being blessed with a range of expressions that say every word he does not speak. I love the persona Kim has built up too, like a cross between Elvira, RuPaul and Cindy Lauper.
The crazy antics of these two grotesques - whose obsession with frying pans and 1950s infomercials forms a core of this routine - deserves to be developed and expanded. I can see these guys storming the Royal Variety Show or - God forbid - Britain's Got Talent, but I'd never want their anarchic roots to be ironed away (would Simon Cowell stick with a dance piece which essentially depicts 1950s domestic bliss through the lens of David Lynch?). Gary and Pel were among the highlights of the entire weekend for me.
Before the live dance presentations got started in earnest there was a schedule of six short films to see in the cinema. The difference between watching a live dance piece and watching dance through the medium of film or photography is that the art is no longer just the dance, it's also the way it's being presented through the agency of the director or photographer. So it's important to take into consideration not just what you're seeing the dancers do, but also the lens through which it's been viewed. For instance, Jane Castree's It's a Gender Affair would get a different response from a live audience than it does as a filmed presentation. Castree choreographs and performs, alongside Hal Smith, but all of this is then set in the highly evocative location of a fairground in Devon, and directed by Charlotte Eatock. Automatically, there's more than just the choreographer at work here. The theme of It's a Gender Affair is to take gender norms and turn them upside down, asking how equality can be truly achieved when we are essentially all so different. We see Castree dressing as a male fairground employee, complete with bowler hat and boots, while Smith dons skirt and heels, and the fairground location adds a richness to the piece. It's a good use of the location, and the two dancers manage to connect with the viewer through the lens, especially Smith, whose vacantly grinning face counteracts the grim, unsmiling facade of Castree's masculine character. Do women generally smile and laugh more than men? I've never thought to notice, but when you think about it...
Simon Whitehead's Studies for Maynard left me somewhat nonplussed. Simon is a movement artist from rural West Wales, and the rugged beauty of that location is to the fore in this film. He claims the movements in the film resemble ephemeral line drawings, some of which have emerged from the systematic movement of a table (the eponymous Maynard). It's the kind of language which runs through contemporary dance like a bad smell, and I do wish artists would try and communicate their work in plainer English. It's the only way to shrug of the pretension and be more accessible. Moving a table around may be art to some, but I fail to see why it resembles a line drawing. The silent out-of-focus close-ups of Whitehead laying his forehead on the table just left me wondering if perhaps he'd been spending too long alone in rural West Wales.
Another film that left me cold was Lara Ward's Laura's 'mals. I'm the kind of guy who likes to see dance in his dance films (I'm kooky like that), but the only choreography (if you can call it that) in this film was that of Laura Moy playing with her miniature toy animals. They live in matchboxes and she takes them out with her and plays with them, moving them between her fingers and, at one point, popping them in her mouth. This is a form of choreography which baffled me, although the underlying humour in the film was sweet. I would have preferred to see a documentary film about Laura and her love of her 'mals, rather than a dance film masquerading as such.
As with It's a Gender Affair, Chloe Loftus' Taking Flight made fantastic use of location to accentuate the theme. This time it was the abandoned, dilapidated Custom House owned by Skyview Estates in Cardiff. The piece explores the importance of failure, and how, almost like photographs, we develop from negatives. It's the age old adage that we should learn from the bad things, grow stronger as a result of setbacks and take as much positive out of negative as we can to move on. This is beautifully made physical when Chloe unexpectedly tumbles headlong down a flight of stairs, then simply gets back up and carries on walking with confidence. She fell, it hurt, but she got up and carried on carrying on. She may fall again, but she'll always get up, stronger and more determined. Perhaps one day the same will happen for the Custom House, which has surely seen better days but which may rise again if its owner ever manages to start that next chapter.
My favourite two films both had an element of danger to them. Uma O'Neill's impressive Too Close, Too Personal probably boasts a number of meanings, but for me it was about a mutually abusive marriage and the effect it has on the child. Lisa Spaull and Colin Daimond battle it out beautifully and viscerally, trading blows and insults through some vital dance movements, while the younger Angharad Harrop tries to remove herself from the situation, dreaming of nature and altogether more aspirant things. I may have read the piece a little too literally, but I got a lot of out of it, which is not something all of these films achieved.
My very favourite was Wren Ball's Y Chwarelwr (The Quarrymen), a haunting, disconcerting, sinister film shot on location in the wet, cold, dank Dinorwic Slate Quarry in North Wales. Dressed in a zebra mask and hoodie, Wren populates the landscape in slow-motion, staring threateningly into camera, stalking the audience, staring us out, sometimes running toward us, at other times nonchalantly stretching out, taking indignant ownership of his space. It capitalises beautifully and unsettlingly on the mysterious atmosphere of an abandoned quarry, and Wren's trademark use of parkour adds to the queasy feeling of the film. Katherine Betteridge's haunting music is the icing on the cake too. I have no idea why Wren is dressed as a zebra in a slate quarry in December, but for me this was a stand-out film, sparking a reaction in me rarely felt. Another highlight of the weekend.
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
Zosia Jo's Herstory demonstrated great conviction but lacked originality. It claimed to give a voice to women's stories, the most powerful of which was that of a woman in an abusive relationship. But while the story was performed with professionalism and passion, and utter conviction, the story itself was (sadly) not unique or original enough to warrant the publicity's claim. There were other stories in there too, with some well considered text and dialogue, but I was left with the feeling that more could be made of it, that women's stories can be so much more than oppression or inequality. This was a finished work, which I think is a shame because it promises more than it delivers. I don't want that to sound too damning, because Zosia is a talented performer capable of great stuff, but I simply felt there is better than this to come from her.
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
Pic: Roy Campbell-Moore |
The power of The Long Winter stayed with me long after I'd left the building. That, for me, is a haunting legacy to leave your audience.
Click here for a review of Day 1 of Wales Dance Platform 2015
Click here for a review of Day 3 of Wales Dance Platform 2015
The stats
Gary and Pel
Choreographer: Alex Marshall Parsons
Music: Kevin MacLeod
Performers: Alex Marshall Parsons, Kim Noble
Studies for Maynard
Choreographer: Simon Whitehead
Sound: Barnaby Oliver
Performer: Simon Whitehead
Film-maker: Tanya Sayed
Laura's 'mals
Choreographer: Lara Ward
Sound: Sion Orgon
Performer: Laura Moy
It's a Gender Affair
Choreographer: Jane Castree
Music: Aaron James
Performers: Hal Smith, Jane Castree
Film-maker: Charlotte Eatock
Taking Flight
Choreographer: Chloe Loftus
Music: Cotton Wolf
Performer: Chloe Loftus
Film-maker: Joby Newson
Y Chwarelwr
Choreographer: Wren Ball
Music: Katherine Betteridge
Performer: Wren Ball
Film-makers: Osian Williams, Matthew Harris, Wren Ball
Too Close, Too Personal
Choreographer: Uma O'Neill
Music: Rob Spaull
Performers: Angharad Harrop, Lisa Spaull, Colin Daimond
Film-maker: Uma O'Neill (plus body cameras)
Dances I Made on My Bathroom Floor
Choreographer: Gemma Prangle
Performer: Gemma Prangle
Sou Tafahom (Misunderstandings)
Choreographers: Mounir Saeed, Zosia Jo
Music: Night Sessions parts 1 and 2 by Riverside
Performers: Mounir Saeed, Zosia Jo
4.33
Choreographer: Mike Williams
Performer: Mike Williams
Harbingers
Choreographer: Jem Treays
Performers: Maria Fonseca, Andrea Hackl, Jamie Morgans, Christopher Radford (Cascade Dance Theatre)
Nayika
Choreographer: Vibha Selvaratnam
Music: India Dance Wales
Performer: Vibha Selvaratnam (India Dance Wales)
Tell Me a Story
Choreographer: Eleanor Brown
Music: A Song for the Shipwrecked by Silence at Sea
Performers: Kim Noble, Louise Lloyd, CĂȘt Haf, Sarah Hudson, Eleanor Brown
Waltz of the Flower Sellers
Choreographer: Louise Lloyd
Music: Waltz of the Flowers by Pyotr Ilych Tchaikovsky (from The Nutcracker)
Performers: Shakeera Ahmun, Sarah Lee Pryke, Krystal Dawn Campbell, Louise Lloyd
Time Lapse
Choreographer: Sarah Vaughan-Jones
Music: German Bello
Performers: Sarah Vaughan-Jones, Vicci Viles (SVJ Dance)
Herstory
Choreographer: Zosia Jo
Music: Tom Sinnett, Dave Crowe
Performer: Zosia Jo
The Long Winter
Choreographer: Caroline Lamb
Music: Trio Mediaeval
Performers: Janet Fieldsend, Caroline Bunce, June Campbell Davies, Dylan Davies, Shirley Stansfield (Striking Attitudes)
Performed at Chapter, Cardiff, on June 27th 2015, as part of Wales Dance Platform 2015.
Links
Wales Dance Platform 2015 website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Wales Dance Platform 2015 on Chapter website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Gary and Pel website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Simon Whitehead website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Lara Ward website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Jane Castree website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Chloe Loftus website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Wren Ball website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Gemma Prangle website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Zosia Jo website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Mike Williams at Dancers Pro (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Jem Treays/ Run Ragged Productions (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Cascade Dance Theatre (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
India Dance Wales website(retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Eleanor Brown Dance on Facebook (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
SVJ Dance website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
Striking Attitudes website (retrieved Jun 30 2015)
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