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Introducing...
Alice
Wagstaff
Adelaide's Alice Wagstaff, graduate of
Western Australian Performing Arts Academy, is a budding new choreographer
on the contemporary dance scene.
Recently debuting a groundbreaking full
length work with choreographer Chris Hewitt - The Art of Communication,
for Adelaide's Fringe Festival, Ms Wagstaff's fresh choreographic
style and flair for artistic direction is proving her to be an artist
to watch.
Alice began full time dance training
at Sheila Lang's Academy of Performing Arts, now Elayne Cherry Dance
Centre, when she was seventeen, culminating in a six week European
tour which included training with prominent European dance companies.
After graduating from Sheila Lang's Alice studied at WAAPA where
she completed a Bachelor of Dance, working with inspiring choreographers
Fiona Cameron, Sue Peacock, Justin Rotzou, Reyes Delara and Peah
Leach.
Kirsty Duncan, Adelaide based dance teacher and choreographer had
the pleasure of reviewing Art of Communication. Recently
she has also enjoyed Alice's choreography in her pieces for Ausdance's
Choreolab and Move Through Life Dance Company, titled Alone Together
and One Man and a Whole Lot of Nonsense.
The Art of Communication
The Art of Communication was a
two price work choreographed by Adelaide based Alice Wagstaff and
Chris Hewitt. It explored the universal theme of communication through
two pieces named The Loss of Senses and Body Language.
The Loss of Senses was sweet,
lighthearted and entertaining. It was simple and effective, short
and straight to the point. Telephones and gaffer tape over the ears
and mouth were used as props to symbolize unsuccessful and blocked
communication. Failing to get through on the phone represented failing
to effectively communicate, demonstrated with lighting and carefully
planned staging that enhanced the message. The use of telephones
provided simple, comprehensible imagery and symbolism that was easily
grasped by the wide audience. Through their movement the dancers
cleverly displayed the frustration we all feel when we are struggling
to be heard.
A humorous and unexpected switch from
the use of a telephone to a banana in the last scene brought laughter
throughout the audience. The dancers portrayed confusion in an appealing,
cute manner, delivering the final lighthearted comment that perhaps
it is all 'a bunch of bananas' and not so important anyway.
Alice expressed The Loss of Senses
as 'I lose my sense of normality when I can't communicate. However,
losing your senses does not necessarily mean no-one understands
you, you just find another way to express yourself. Most of life
is about communicating - or is that just a load of bananas?'
Choreographed by Chris Hewitt, Body
Language explored the use of our bodies in communication through
a bar scene. Without words, communication was expressed through
the body, asking the question 'how do you portray yourself through
the way
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