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Stephen Petronio's Underland Description What The Critics Say Performance History Choreography & Concept Stephen Petronio Music Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds Visual Design Ken Tabachnick Video Artist Mike Daly Costume Tara Subkoff Lighting Ken Tabachnick Duration 70 minutes [no interval] Ensemble 1618 dancers |
Description
Click here to view the Underland E-Card An ambitious theatrical collaboration, Underland received its world premiere on 27 May 2003 at the Sydney Opera House. Joining Petronio from New York for the project were Tara Subkoff, of the 'Imitation of Christ' fashion label, and visual and lighting designer Ken Tabachnick, who worked with Australian video artist Mike Daly. Conversing with Nick Cave on the music landscape for the production were producer Tony Cohen and soundscape artist Paul Healy. Underland provided Sydney Dance Company's talented ensemble of dancers with the challenge of mastering Petronio's highly influential, visceral language in a short creative period - a challenge they met with dazzling results. The dancers perform Petronio's intricate, angular movement with grace and ease. Described by Petronio as an 'archaeological dig through some of Nick Cave's most beautiful masterpieces', Underland unravels in a series of solos, duets, quartets and asymmetric ensemble formations. The triptych of screens provides a cinematic backdrop to the journey, the mood of which, like Subkoff's costumes, shifts in rhythm with Cave's music throughout this frenetically energised dance piece.
Venues, Dates & Bookings
What The Critics Say
Truly excellent multimedia dance theatre is all too rare in Australia, so when the lights came up on the triptych of screens that forms the backdrop to Stephen Petronios Underland and a thread of white smoke began to snake its way across them, chills rand down my spine. The rest of this dark, abstract, wide-ranging work did not disappoint... between the music, the spoken and sung word, the magnificent screen work by Sydney video artist Mike Daly, and Sydney Dance Company's superb dancing, Underland is a dark feast, a melancholy celebration of all we are and might be.
JACQUELINE PASCOE, DANCE AUSTRALIA, 2003
weapons-grade movement
DEBORAH JONES, THE AUSTRALIAN, 2003
[Underland] is an intriguing dance piece with compelling dance and constantly changing moods - or rather, an overall mood of thoughtful solemnity that lifts, deepens, swirls and edges its way into a range of subtle variations... Its intensity and emotional depth take hold in a partnership of dance, music and visuals... Everyone who can should see it. Perhaps more than once.
JILL SYKES, THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD, 2003
inventive movement structure that seamlessly captures both wild abandon and formalism.
JULIE HUFFER, SUN-HERALD, 2003
the most marvellous thing is to see how the dancers have responded to Petronio.
DIANA SIMMONDS, SUNDAY TELEGRAPH, 2003
Petronios skill as a choreographer manifested in a profusion of solos, combinations and formations, an impressive variety of modalities and infinite variations
Petronios originality shines through those dancers most suited to his more frenetic range; Bradley Chatfield and Chylie Coopers duets and solos dazzle and Katie Ripleys Prelude to Weep is another high point.
ERIN BRANNIGAN, REALTIME, 2003
[Bradley Chatfield] dances
with such thrilling corporeality and spine-bending, time-bending ease.
CHRIS BOYD, THE AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL REVIEW, 2003
Its a privilege to watch magnificent dancers at the peak of their powers.
OLIVIA STEWART, COURIER MAIL, BRISBANE, 2003
The work confirms that Murphy is one of Australias most flamboyant and startling artists and also one of the countrys most theatrical collaborators.
MICHELLE POTTER, THE CANBERRA TIMES, 2002
9.5/10: Non-narrative and non-linear, Underland lies somewhere beyond the realm of language: it gets under your skin, seeps into your pores. Essentially, it is Stephen Petronio's emotive response to Nick Cave's music and the great sum of any clever parts. When those parts - movement, sound, film and design - combine at the right time in space, it's like atoms colliding to create an explosive, fleeting force.
JULIE HUFFER, SUN-HERALD, 2003
It is technically demanding, but the dancers rise to the challenge
with an aggressively gritty panache.
HILARY CRAMPTON, THE AGE, MELBOURNE, 2003
[Nick Caves] music is the key to Underland. Wildly and yearningly romantic while heading to hell in a handbasket, it niggles and jangles but also gets to the heart of the matter. Cave's gift is to be able to bypass sentimentality on his way to richer, darker emotional states.
DEBORAH JONES, THE AUSTRALIAN, 2003
There are 18 dancers on display and Petronio's choreography seems to rejoice in this virtual army of virtuoso performers, whisking them on to the stage in fluid formations at such speed and in such ever-changing combinations that there seems to be a least double that number of bodies...The costumes are spectacular: wisps of brief black, scarlet and green tutus worn with bra tops and garters, deconstructed army fatigues and, finally all white...Underland is certainly impressive, stunning, a bombardment of talent and cleverness.
BERNADETTE RAE, THE NEW ZEALAND HERALD, 2004
Brilliant, dazzling, stunning, different: superlatives compound.
MELDA BRUNETTE, DANCE INTERNATIONAL 2005
Performance History
8-11 March 2006 His Majesty's Theatre Perth, Australia 1828 June 2003 Playhouse, Queensland Performing Arts Centre Brisbane, Australia 312 July 2003 State Theatre, The Arts Centre Melbourne, Australia 16-19 November 2004 The Opera House Wellington, New Zealand 10-13 November 2004 ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre at The Edge Auckland, New Zealand 18-19 March 2005 The Capital, Bendigo's Performing Arts Centre Bendigo, Australia 22 March 2005 Her Majesty's Theatre Ballarat, Australia 11-12 May 2005 Brighton Dome, Brighton Festival Brighton, United Kingdom 27 May14 June 2003 Opera Theatre, Sydney Opera House Sydney, Australia 18-22 July 2006 Playhouse, Canberra Theatre Centre Canberra, Australia |
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