Dancing with a difference

Flatfoot Downie Company members, from left, Charles Phillips, Kevin Govender, Karl Hebbelman, Michaela Munro and Sofia Braun in “Now That We Are Here”.

Flatfoot Downie Company members, from left, Charles Phillips, Kevin Govender, Karl Hebbelman, Michaela Munro and Sofia Braun in “Now That We Are Here”.

Published Aug 17, 2024

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The African Dance Disability Network has partnered with the UKZN Centre for Creative Arts and JOMBA! 2024 to present the ADDN JOMBA! Ability Dance Festival 2024 at Durban’s Stable Theatre from August 22 to 25.

The University of KwaZulu-Natal’s JOMBA! Contemporary Dance Experience has a long history of including diverse and integrated dance work in its programming.

In 2023, JOMBA! curator Dr Lliane Loots teamed up with Prof Yvette Hutchison, from the University of Warwick in the UK, to work on the UKRI-funded project, Encountering Disability Through Contemporary Dance in Africa, which explores widening citizenship through dance. Part of the outcome of the partnership is an uplifting four-day pre-JOMBA! festival and colloquium ‒ the ADDN JOMBA! Ability Dance Festival ‒ that sees some of the world’s most inventive and beautiful dance-makers engage with disability and integrated dance practices.

The four-day festival, which takes place before the main JOMBA! Contemporary Dance Experience (August 27 to September 8), sees dancers and guest participants from South Africa, Kenya, US, UK, Finland and China. The daily programme offers workshops, panel discussions and open public evening performances.

The performance programme includes works from Flatfoot Dance Company and its Flatfoot Wheelchair programme, and work from their its 8-year-old Flatfoot Downie Dance Company.

Cape Town’s ground-breaking Unmute Dance Theatre presents Andile Vellem’s signature work Listen to your hands – which use South African sign language as the core choreographic impulse to dance, move and speak.

Johannesburg’s Thapelo Kotlolo connects queer culture to disability struggles in his beautiful and provocative Bells and Sirens 2.

Kenyan Ondiege Matthew and his company Dance Into Space, defiantly dive into cultural myths, disability and gender politics in his work Nyanam.

Kenyan Ondiege Matthew and his company, Dance Into Space, defiantly dive into cultural myths, disability and gender politics in his work “Nyanam”.

Nelisiwe aka Sunshine Sibiya dances with Jarryd Watson’s Dance Movement.

South Durban’s Jarryd Watson and Dance Movement celebrate three women coming together in solidarity, celebrating the beauty, strength and resilience ‒ despite, and in spite of, differences.

Further afield, Chicago-based Sydney Erlikh and Unfolding Disability Futures (UDF) present (among other works) “And Yet We Are Here”, a powerful zeitgeist response to the destruction of war in acknowledgement of war’s physical and emotional impact. War not only leaves death and disability in its wake, but people living with disabilities are more often unable to flee violence.

Erlikh said: “This dance considers and expands on the themes of war and rebuilding while embodying the disability community’s collective care and access, even in the face of bullets, bombs, and brutality.”

With many artist panels that engage ideas of disability as gain, of particular interest is a session by Birmingham Royal Ballet’s Lee Fischer and Tom Rogers, as they talk about and share the work of Free Fall Dance Company ‒ a company of dancers living with intellectual disabilities. Freefall Dance Company was established to challenge stereotypical views of people living with disabilities and dance ‒ through high-quality training that showcases the creative talents of people with learning disabilities.

The festival will host an digital online workshop by disability culture activist, wheelchair dancer and community performance artist Petra Kuppers. Kuppers, the Anita Gonzalez Collegiate Professor of Performance Studies and Disability Culture at the University of Michigan (US), offers, free of charge, her Starship Somatic Workshop on Sunday, August 25 from 4.15 to 5pm. To sign up contact, [email protected]

For the full programme visit: https://jomba.ukzn.ac.za/ability-festival/

The workshops and panels are offered free of charge but places are limited. To book (a full 24 hours before the event) contact Marcia on [email protected]

Tickets for the evening shows are R50 each and booking is via Computicket.