Tag Archive | "On The Rocks"

On The Rocks – Vertical Shadows


Chapel Off Chapel
May 9 2012

By Paul Ransom.

As one of the new breed of young choreographers currently muscling their way onto the Australian dance landscape, Melbourne based Stephen Agisilaou has the daring and sheer entrepreneurial spirit to make it happen. His company, Vertical Shadows, is electric with youthful energy and their latest showcase is a celebration of their smash-together aesthetic, bringing contemporary, urban, Weimar cabaret and narrative grit into the same space.

At times sexual, often sensual, but always energetic, On The Rocks is brimming with creative vigour.

Having said that, we should concede that heavily narrative works can easily overcook themselves and On The Rocks does have moments where it looks a little overwrought. This tale of a recently separated woman finding herself in an eerily Lynch-like bar struggling with melancholy, moving on, and the temptations of alcohol, could have been more subtle, perhaps more visceral, in my opinion.

Vertical Shadows Dance Company, On The Rocks

Photos by Matthew Denton, MDMedia

However, it could scarcely have been more enthusiastically rendered. Agisilaou has coaxed very committed performances from his cast, most notably from the sole female, Jessica Mortlock. The key trick here is the shrewd avoidance of simple, clichéd male/female juxtaposition and the development of character.

If Rocks itself could do with a little more ‘raw’, then the show’s opening vignette, the gorgeous pas de deux Crimson, is just about spot on. More obviously balletic, this is eight minutes of entrancing ‘avian’ courtship. (And beautifully lit birds they are too).

Overall, Vertical Shadows’ latest production ups the ante for Agisilaou. There is a growing confidence here, a willingness to stretch out and yet remain true to an individual vision. If this guy isn’t already on your dance radar, he should be.

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Dancing Outside The Square


Stephen Agisilaou is no ordinary dancer. His idiosyncratic journey from ‘loungeroom’ dancer to company director is one of Australia’s most refreshing and inspiring.

By Paul Ransom.

The rules do not apply to everyone. Take Stephen Agisilaou. He started dancing at eighteen and now, barely a decade later, has danced professionally here and overseas and fronts his own company.

When Vertical Shadows’ two latest works, the pas de deux Crimson and the larger scale On The Rocks take to the boards in May, Artistic Director Agisilaou will once again be living his maverick dream of narrative driven, theatrically inspired contemporary dance. Although he may not be the first to try this particular sleight of choreographic hand his self-taught insights into the marriage of strong theatre storylines and the beautiful abstractions of dance will doubtless be sitting at the heart of both works.

“It wasn’t so much choreography that I enjoyed but directing,” he says, recalling the original idea behind Vertical Shadows. “I enjoyed coming up with concepts.”

As a template for getting dance productions up to speed it sounds upside down. “The chorey kinda comes last,” he cheerfully declares. “I really blueprint the story and the staging first before we ever get into the studio to choreograph. The direction is at the forefront; but because I put so much into the process of the story telling, the chorey sorta comes easily.”

Stephen Agisilaou and Jayden Hicks. Photo by Eddie Hobson

However, Agisilaou is adamant that it is still dance. “It’s not theatrical in the sense that the dancers are playing human beings with personalities,” he explains. “It’s a contemporary piece, so it is abstract. But we do give the dancers direction about character and motivation sometimes.”

For company dancer Jayden Hicks, who appears in On The Rocks, the extra character background is clearly useful. “It’s always better to have a thought behind the movement, either from yourself or given by the director. You need an inner story. Whether or not the audience can tell what you’re doing they can tell from your face that you’ve got intention, that you’re dancing for something and not just for dance.”

It’s an important distinction and something that Agisilaou keeps in focus as he tries to stay on the right side of the dance/mime line. ‘Character’ motivation and narrative intention are restrained by the desire to create non-literal and more emotional forms of theatre.

For a piece like On The Rocks the challenge is to find a way of letting the audience see and feel the heroine’s situation without telegraphing it. Jayden Hicks is confident that the back story will be evident. “With the high divorce rate now and marriage just so disposable, I’m pretty sure that the audience will get the idea of this woman contemplating a separation,” he begins. “Everyone can understand what she’s going through. Y’know, she’s wondering whether she’ll be alone, or whether there are other fish in the sea – all that stuff.”

Vertical Shadows dancer Jayden Hicks. Photo by Chris Parker

If that sounds like a crisis of middle age, Stephen Agisilauo’s “18-25” cast may well be fortunate enough never to have crossed such bridges. As their director though, he is less concerned with life experience and more about presence and potential. “Mostly I need the cast to understand who they are in any space, at any stage, at any time,” he elaborates. “The show is not the kind of show where they need to be military in the way that things are put together, or exactly the same at exactly the same time, but because they are a young cast the progression and development rate should be quite high.”

Meanwhile, Jayden Hicks offers the following insight. “He’s a great director in that he lets you feel that you helped him to create the show. I mean, it’s his way or the highway but he’s not obnoxious about it,” he concludes with a grin.

It’s been a remarkable ten years since his father casually asked him if he wanted to take dancing lessons. Agisilaou has gone from self-taught ‘loungeroom’ dancer to company director, via a stint with Move The Company in Canada and choreographic guest spots on SYTYCD. Sometimes it’s hard work and graft that pays off, other times its inspiration that wins out.

Laughing at his ‘boss’ Jayden Hicks simply says, “I actually started dancing before Stephen.” Now that really tells you something.

Win a Double Pass to On The Rocks!
Just email info@danceinforma.com and tell us “Why and When You Started Dancing”.
Please include your full name, date of birth and postcode. Good luck!
Competition ends May 4.

Vertical Shadows presents ON THE ROCKS
Date: 9-12 May 2012
Venue: The Chapel Chapel Off Chapel 12 Little Chapel Street Prahran VIC
Tickets: http://chapeloffchapel.com.au/melbourne-comedy-theatre-art/melbourne-events/melbourne-live-music/on-the-rocks-9-12-may/

 

Top photo: The dancers of Vertical Shadows. Photo by Chris Parker.

Published by Dance Informa dance magazine – everything dance in Australiadance news, dance auditions & dance events

 

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