All posts under ‘Dance’


Scene

Toronto culture picks: A trio of dance performances, and the importance of to-do lists

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Dream of the Red Chamber

I’m going to have to polish off my Arty Girl Outfits–it’s a big week in Toronto for dance and theatre and I want to look “thinky.”

First up is a two-nights only performance of Dream of the Red Chamber from the Beijing Friendship Dance Company. The 80-dancer, 800-costume extravaganza is a sure-to-be pretty Chinese Romeo and Juliet tale combining classical ballet and traditional Chinese dance (sonycentre.ca). Catch the performance at the shiny new Sony Centre for the Performing Arts October 12 to 13.

Next up is the kickoff to the World Stage 2010-2011 performance series at Harbourfront with the internationally acclaimed Out of Context – for Pina, from the award-winning Belgian Les ballets C de la B at Fleck Dance Theatre, October 13 through 16 (harbourfrontcentre.com/worldstage1011).

And on Thursday, October 14 I’ll be adding some words to the mix with the opening of the Governor General award-winning play The List starring Allegra Fulton, a Nightwood Theatre production at Berkeley Street Theatre (nightwoodtheatre.net) about a woman who overlooks one item on her to-do list with dramatic results.

Phew. I feel more cultured already.

On now:

Two large foam blocks provide the set and metaphor for Toronto contemporary dance company ProArteDanza’s first “evening-length” production, in between (from $22, until October 9, Fleck Dance Theatre, Harbourfront Centre, 416-973-4000, harbourfrontcentre.com), which is themed around instability, transition, crisis: the moving of one state to the next. The eight athletic, powerful dancers (these are not the reedy sylphs of classical ballet, although those techniques are gorgeously incorporated) make good use of the blocks—they leap onto them and over them, sit and sprawl on them, fall off them. At one point, all the dancers attempt to stand and balance on a single upturned one, chatting loudly about how tricky it is. It’s one of a few warm, light-hearted moments that pepper the show, interspersed with fluid, intense routines infused with more serious, heartfelt emotion. It’s only on until October 9—if you miss it this time, be sure to watch for the company’s next outing.–Rani Sheen


Scene

Culture pick: A high-wire rivalry in The Great Farini Project

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The Great Farini Project (until September 25, Enwave Threatre, harbourfrontcentre.com) is “a harrowing dance of one-upmanship” that chronicles the real life, decades long rivalry between high-wire walkers The Great Farini and The Great Blondin. Inspired by the life of Canadian William Hunt, or “The Great Farini, this is the first full-length work by choreographer and 2010 Dora Award nominee Sharon B. Moore and promises to be a vivid, exciting look the no-holds-barred competition between the two men.


Shopping » Daily steal

The daily steal: Ballet boot camp class, $10

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Dancer and certified fitness instructor Jennifer Nichols (extensionmethod.com) leads you through a one-hour ballet bootcamp that is hard work but fun–a great way to relive the glory of those under-10 ballet-class days. Watching Nichols gracefully lead the class is almost worth the (very reasonable) price of admission. At 99 Sudbury, Toronto  (99sudbury.ca), Fridays, at 6.30 p.m., $10 drop-in fee.


Fashion

Solid Gold dancer takes credit for the no-pants trend

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What you'll be wearing this spring. Photo via Darcel's Facebook

What you'll be wearing this spring. Photo via Darcel's Facebook

We have some hazy memories of sitting on our mom’s ’70s-brown couch watching Solid Gold. Mostly we remember the sax-heavy theme song, Wayland Flowers and his puppet Madame, and of course, the Solid Gold Dancers, who would writhe around on circular platforms to the top 10 hits while wearing metallic Lycra. Darcel Wynne, who was the principal dancer for five of the show’s eight seasons, recently gave an interview to blogger Auntie Fashion where she revealed that she is the inspiration for the coming barrage of pantsless fashions. Read more »


Beauty

Fitness class report: Body Conditioning by Dancers

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Photography by Steve Carty

For those who like to work up a serious sweat, get thee to Eva Redpath’s Body Conditioning by Dancers class series ($169 for an 8-week series, evaredpath.com). Read more »


Beauty

Dance boot camp: Week three

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Beauty director Adriana Ermter tests the Core Rhythms (corerhythms.com) dance DVDs.

I’ve hit a new level: I can actually perform 30 minutes of Latin dance moves without having to press pause and repeat. It’s a miracle and a head rush all at the same time. So while I only achieved three out of my five intended workouts, the fact that I am no longer wiping the living room floor with my butt is a massive achievement. Read more »


Beauty

Dance boot camp: Week two

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Beauty director Adriana Ermter tests the Core Rhythms dance DVDs.

I feel hungover. I’m not, but working up a sweat while attempting to contort my body into unnatural dance positions within five seconds of ripping myself out of bed is disgusting. I’m not fully awake, I haven’t had my three-cup caffeine infusion, the Globe lies unread at my door, it’s 6:30 in the morning… it’s inhumane.

But I think I love it. Read more »


Beauty

Dance boot camp: Week one

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In my mind, I’m a dancer: My lithe, lean body leaping, pirouetting and chasséing to and from the office, the grocery store, Sunday brunch…

In reality, I’m a beauty director: Sitting on my ass 24/7 be it on a Euro-bound plane or in front of a computer screen. But I covet the art of dance the same way an eight-year-old girl craves cupcakes covered in sprinkles. To be able to make my body⎯the one that trips when walking in flip flops and routinely bangs into my desk, the wall and occasionally my colleagues at work⎯swivel, twirl and undulate anytime I want and look amazing doing it? I could swallow it whole.

Well aware of my not-so-secret desire (thanks to incessant chatter about So You Think You Can Dance), health editor Rani Sheen suggested I give the Core Rhythms (corerhythms.com) dance DVDs a try. Add a little Latin-influenced bump and grind to my current finger snapping, left-foot-right-foot-slide repertoire, and tighten my tushy and abs simultaneously? She didn’t have to ask me twice. Read more »


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