Dance Review: Worlds in Motion
By Melange Dance and Prana Productions
August 27, 2009
The Theatre Factory, Marrickville
Ticket: $37.50
Fasten your seat belts, it’s a whirlwind tour of the world where the only thing you need to pack is your imagination. Checking in at the Factory Theatre in Sydney last month was an all-star cast behind Worlds in Motion, a song-and-dance extravaganza that promised to take the audience around-the-world through dance – and yes, it did leave me feeling like my passport was stamped several times!
Worlds in Motion's Dance Cast
Worlds in Motion's Dance Cast
If I list all the dance genres they showcased – Polynesian, Indian, French, African, Carribean and Latin American – it would be understating what co-producers Tamara Vahn and Sashya Jayawardena (and the entire crew) pulled off in one night – two hours, to be exact. From the feet stomping in a Bollywood routine, to skirts rustling in the African dance, and to the juk and wine during the soca and reggaeton sets – the audience were in for a night of high-energy.
What was also great about the performance of the Melange dance troupe and friends was that it was consistent. The Bollywood dance was just as fierce as the Brazilian dance routine. The dancers were just as relentless one minute as they are in the next. And all the costumes were fabulous: from the Cabaret wear (tight bustiers, lace stockings) to the Brazilian Carnaval (see picture), the show was an explosion of colours.
It would be remiss of me not to mention the heart palpitations caused by said sexy outfits. The Moulin Rouge segment alone must have sent pulses running wild among the male audience. Help! Not that the female audience was short-changed. There were certainly no complaints when some of the male dancers – not gratuitously, mind – performed in tight and chest-baring costumes. Somebody stop me before I say ohh la la!
From the boom, boom, boom of Mory Traore’s West African-influenced routine, to the shake, shake, shake of Leo Successo’s Brazilian Samba-Axe, each and everyone of the dancers were on top of their game, delighting the crowd with their pow, pow, pow hip (read: booty) shaking and leg kicking.
The audience joined the party too, wiggling their wiggly bits, including a little girl (Sashya’s niece) who stole everyone’s hearts when she copied Leo’s dance steps to a tee. That’s if those same hearts weren’t smitten by one gorgeous guy plucked from the crowd to dance alongside 20 others on stage.
As a surprise treat, there was a free mini-flag for all to wave as they would at a Caribbean carnivale and the “Display your Heritage” kinda music crackled through the speakers.
It was a night of dance, live percussion (impressive!) and a night of song. Co-host Miriam Waks wowed the audience with a setlist that reflected the dance styles on stage. She comfortably switched from French chanteuse to dancehall artist on cue. Her co-host Daniel Doody was the event’s promised “dash of humour”. His onstage antics and attempt at being multi-lingual had the crowd laughing out loud.
For a dance fanatic like me, two hours passed as if they were two seconds. The night was a celebration of diversity and spirituality expressed through body movement. Different beats, different rhythms and different sounds. An eye-opening journey without the hassle of delayed flights, lost baggages and a snoring passenger next to you.
Dancers from Worlds in Motion will be performing at the Sydney World Masters Games next month.