Pilobolus Dance Theatre

ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre, Auckland

30/04/2008 - 03/05/2008

Production Details



Dance and Acrobatics Merge On Stage in Auckland in April  

Acclaimed American dance company Pilobolus Dance Theatre visits New Zealand for the first time, performing exclusively in Auckland as part of THE EDGE® International Arts Season 2008.

THE EDGE® International Arts Season and IMG Artists present Pilobolus Dance Theatre in a strictly limited season of four performances at the ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre, THE EDGE® from Wednesday 30 April to Saturday 3 May.

Pilobolus is a unique modern dance company – athletic, graceful and continually expanding the definition of dance, the company brings a mix of skill, agility and humour marking their performances as fun as they are thrilling.

"Pilobolus is a mind-blowing troupe of wildly creative and physically daring dancers who leap, fly, intertwine and break all the rules….. audiences should expect the unexpected with Pilobolus." – NYC Newsday

The company combines dance with acrobatics and creative invention and their innovative exploration of dance has give rise to a unique style where dancers transform their bodies into wondrous shapes.

"… converts bodies into interlocking and interchangeable parts, erecting structures on stage that are closer to sculpture than dance." – Newsweek

Formed in 1971, Pilobolus has developed more than 100 choreographic works and is recognised as a major American dance company of international influence. The company has won numerous awards including Berlin Critic’s Prize and a Primetime Emmy Award for outstanding achievement in cultural programming.

Pilobolus has created works with numerous organisations including the renowned Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival (USA), the Ballet du Rhin (France) and performed to acclaim at the 79th annual Academy Awards in 2007.

"…one of the world’s most popular modern-dance troupes… famous for its wit and sensuality." – The New York Times

Pilobolus Dance Theatre performs at the ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre, THE EDGE® as part of THE EDGE® International Arts Season for 2008 from April 30 to May 3 at 7.30pm. Tickets are $30-75 and available from Ticketek at www.ticketek.co.nz or phone 0800 TICKETEK.




Swimming alongside NZ Dance

Review by Felicity Molloy 02nd May 2008

Choreography: a blast from the past – no doubt about it. Pilobolus was showing me moves I distinctly remember doing twenty years ago in Limbs er.. Maybe twenty five? Did Douglas (Wright) copy them or did they copy Douglas??

It was fun in those days and the dancers in Pilobolus, once they got used to us/ the theatre/ themselves performing last night – also seemed to be having a lot of fun.  I am going to have to go backwards though because in terms of programming, Pilobolus might have given us a better evening by starting at the end and dancing forwards to the beginning. I am including the splashy slippy curtain calls – imagine the dancers crawling back up out of the dance floor and then getting on with their dance!

What is most basic about this evening’s programme is the approach the dancers take to the choreography – it’s certainly not improvised but crafted and molded then nestled into the dancers’ imaginations.

The last piece of the programme, Day Two (1980), is not really just a dance to stage but staged to produce expanded movements into dances. The music, Brian Eno, David Byrne and Talking Heads, suited the different funky nearly naked company bodies. Both the women, Sheaff and Mendez revealed movements at their very best unclothed. Both women: feline, dynamic and strong. I wanted to see them by themselves.

Instead we saw a very beautiful male quartet: ‘Gnomen’, dancers Herro, Kuribayashi, Minniefee and Olvera with riveting simplicity etched into their dancing. They were dancing, Pilobolus. That was dancing.

The two works prior to this, ‘Solo from the empty suitor’ and ‘Aquatica’ were more literal.

Herro as the soppy hero, denied the red apple of temptation, made a mild attempt at comedy. This work was situated strangely in this particular dance fest. It was a relief to see Herro’s strong calm body work in ‘Gnomen’ – both he and Kuribayashi featured as capable, emotive and matured.

‘Aquatica’ as anthropomorphic seemed at odds with the coyness of the catch gazes between the dancers. I was wondering how our recently captured giant squid would sit in on that dance; probably as soporifically as me. Big distant gaze made sightless by trying to project a deeper choreographic intention.

This was the bit where I thought they could have brought in the water and dredged us up from the deep! Not too late Pilobolus – New Zealand dance has been swimming alongside you, establishing a history nearly as profound as yours.

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