Put Your Dance Shoes on Your 2 Left Feet. They're here.

This is where our community discusses almost anything! While we're mainly a Cambodia expat discussion forum and talk about expat life here, we debate about almost everything. Even if you're a tourist passing through Southeast Asia and want to connect with expatriates living and working in Cambodia, this is the first section of our site that you should check out. Our members start their own discussions or post links to other blogs and/or news articles they find interesting and want to chat about. So join in the fun and start new topics, or feel free to comment on anything our community members have already started! We also have some Khmer members here as well, but English is the main language used on CEO. You're welcome to have a look around, and if you decide you want to participate, you can become a part our international expat community by signing up for a free account.
User avatar
General Mackevili
The General
Posts: 18416
Joined: Tue May 06, 2014 5:24 pm
Reputation: 3407
Location: The Kingdom
Contact:
United States of America

Put Your Dance Shoes on Your 2 Left Feet. They're here.

Post by General Mackevili »

Dancers in town to trade moves

To the beat of tribal music, the couples draw each other closer. One of the female dancers starts to sing a slow song, and her partner replies with his own guttural tune. Suddenly it ends, and the small room is left entranced for a moment before the audience breaks into applause.

These mesmerising, animalistic dances were the result of a two-day workshop between the Mark Morris Dance Group (MMDG) and Amrita Performing Arts on October 15 and 16. Visiting Cambodia on a cultural exchange program run by USA Motion and Brooklyn Academy of Music, MMDG will collaborate with the Royal University of Fine Arts (RUFA), Amrita Performing Arts, Tiny Toones and Epic Arts, among others, during their 10 day tour.

Established by Mark Morris in 1980, MMDG is one of the world’s leading dance groups, famed for the bold and provocative style of its founder and choreographer. Some of the pieces that Morris is well known for include a dance interpretation of Henry Purcell’s famed opera Dido and Aeneas, and Petrichor – a rare all female production.

The program, assisted by the US embassy, aims to facilitate a cultural exchange of ideas, techniques and practices. “We wanted to get as far from New York as possible,” Mark Morris said at a press conference on October 14.

Morris described himself as an admirer of Cambodian culture:

“Dance has always been a big part of the culture here and I adore that,” he said. “My own choreography is based on very old classical forms and also new ideas. That’s something that’s happening here, too.”

In their two-day workshop with Amrita Performing Arts, MMDG learnt more than just new dance moves. “Even from yesterday to today, I feel we’re more comfortable, we’re communicating better,” said Brian Lawson a dancer from MMDG.

“You really get to know people through their culture, through their dance,” he said, adding that he was amazed by the intricate ways that Cambodian artists mould their hands in the dances.

A half-day workshop with hip-hop group Tiny Toones on October 16 resulted in an exchange of contemporary dance and hip-hop moves. “The big achievement was seeing new and different types of dance than what they are used to seeing day to day,” said Chhoeun Shhort Reuth, general manager of Tiny Toones, hinting that the exchange would be sure to influence their upcoming dances.

The highlight of MMDG’s visit will come on Wednesday night, when they perform a number of works at the Khmer Arts Theatre in Takhmao.

One of the pieces they will perform is their highly acclaimed Words, which premiered earlier this month in New York. Based on Felix Mendelssohn’s Songs Without Words, the performance will have live accompaniment from a violin and piano.

Music is famously an integral piece of Mark Morris’s work, and over the years the choreographer has occasionally taken on the role of conductor for the musicians at performances. While in Phnom Penh, he and MMDG music director Colin Fowler have been working with musicians from the Royal University of Fine Arts to recreate the polka using the piano and traditional Cambodian instruments. The results of that collaboration are also to be performed at the traditional Khmer Arts Theatre in Takhmao......

...click link to continue reading...

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/post-weeke ... rade-moves

Tickets for Wednesday’s show are free but need to be collected from Amrita Performance Arts (128-G9 Sothearos Boulevard) beforehand. The show is on at 6.30pm at Khmer Arts Theatre, Takhmao.
"Life is too important to take seriously."

"Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh."

Have a story or an anonymous news tip for CEO? Need advertising? CONTACT ME

Cambodia Expats Online is the most popular community in the country. JOIN TODAY

Follow CEO on social media:

Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Google+
Instagram
  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Majestic-12 [Bot], Semrush [Bot] and 480 guests