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Review / ‘L’ at the Q

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“L” was conceived as the second half of a two-part program to be presented in the Dunstan Playhouse this Saturday, to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Australian Dance Theatre, which Dalman founded in June, 1965. Australian Dance Theatre will provide the first half of that program.

Presented for just two performances at the Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre, prior to its Adelaide outing, “L” proved to be a charming elegy to Dalman’s 50-year contribution to professional contemporary dance in Australia.

Graced with excellent lighting and sound design, and superbly danced by the six excellent Mirramu Dance Company dancers, Hans David Ahwang, Amanda Tutalo, Vivienne Rogis, Mark Lavery, Miranda Wheen and Janine Proost, together with Dalman herself, “L” is performed without interruption, as a stream of consciousness series of vignettes. Among them several examples of Dalman’s seminal works, choreographed either by Dalman herself or with collaborators over the years, including the striking “Old Company” performed to bird sounds, the super romantic “Homage to Botticelli”, the deliciously druggy “Generation Gap” , and a brilliantly performed “Limousine for Janis”.

Interspersed between these, are choreographic contributions by Mirramu Dance Company alumni, of which Miranda Wheen’s sparkling interpretation of “The Firebird”, danced in Dalman’s original red costume, and Vivien Rogis’s evocative “Sapling” were outstanding.

Appropriately Dalman herself is the connecting thread of the work. Whether retrieving a red feather dropped by the firebird or, as an old woman struggling with a bag of stones which she carefully places around the base of a sapling to become the symbol of the circle of life, as each scene transitions seamlessly into the next, Dalman is the reason.

But her contribution is much more than that. At one point she performs a demanding solo, “Silver Lining”. Later she joins Hans David Ahwang in a graceful duet, choreographed by Albert David, “Tree Spirit”. She even contributes some energetic jive during the joyous “Dance Party”.

More than just a life-affirming tribute to an extraordinary career, “L” is a superbly cohesive work in its own right. Not only for the fascinating insights it contains into the life’s work of a remarkable dancer and dance-maker, but also as inspirational proof of the energy and continuing influence of this remarkable human being. As such it deserves a much wider audience.

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