Yes and Yes
To mark 100 years since the first publication of James Joyce’s Ulysses, Solas Nua, Washington D.C, with Cork Opera House, has commissioned choreographer Liz Roche to create a brand-new dance piece.
To mark 100 years since the first publication of James Joyce’s Ulysses, Solas Nua, Washington D.C, with Cork Opera House, has commissioned choreographer Liz Roche to create a brand-new dance piece.
John Scott explores relationships, race, identity, and domestic violence in a physical approach to Shakespeare’s Othello, leading the audience on a journey – weaving dance and music.
Othello (maybe a dance) Read More »
Jezebel is a dance performance inspired by the Video Vixen: female models who appeared in hip hop video clips in the late 90s and early 00s.
This dance show is inspired by meditations on Yoruba proverbs, proverbs that act as an archive of ancestral knowledge, intuitions, and values.
Lisa Fa’alafi and Busty Beatz of Hot Brown Honey are BACK at Dublin Fringe Festival!
Hive City Legacy: Dublin Chapter Read More »
John Scott’s Irish Modern Dance Theatre reboots the company’s annual Dancer From The Dance: Festival of Irish Choreography back to a live setting.
Dancer from the Dance Festival of Irish Choreography 2022 Read More »
John Scott’s Irish Modern Dance Theatre [IMDT] reboots the company’s annual Dancer From The Dance: Festival of Irish Choreography back to a live setting.
Dancer from the Dance Festival : Gathering Two Read More »
John Scott’s Irish Modern Dance Theatre [IMDT] reboots the company’s annual Dancer From The Dance: Festival of Irish Choreography back to a live setting.
Dancer from the Dance Festival : Platform Read More »
John Scott’s Irish Modern Dance Theatre [IMDT] reboots the company’s annual Dancer From The Dance: Festival of Irish Choreography back to a live setting.
Dancer from the Dance Festival : Gathering One Read More »
Moderated by Seona MacReamonn, dance writer and journalist, the panel discusses what it means to be an Irish dancer.
Festival Talk – Roots and Traces: What it means to be an Irish dancer Read More »
A multi-disciplinary collaborative performance piece, exploring the use of sign language and the use of movement as a form of communication.
Dublin Dance Festival will burst back onto Dublin’s stages and streets 17th – 29th May with a stunning programme from new Artistic Director Jazmin Chiodi.
DUBLIN DANCE FESTIVAL 2022 Read More »
Delving into the underbelly of queer culture, THISISPOPBABY present an unflinching and provocative new dance-theatre show about desire, intimacy, isolation and addiction.
PARTY SCENE: Chemsex, Community and Crisis Read More »
Pulsating rhythms and powerful movement converge to celebrate the diversity of African dance.
Movement, light, and sound weave together a distinctive narrative inspired by Finnegans Wake.
Somewhere in the Body Read More »
A compelling and hopeful coming together through music and dance to face a turbulent world
A powerful and uplifting duet exploring ageing and care.
Dances Like a Bomb Read More »
A sumptuously-costumed, beautifully shot feature-length film of the music of Anakronos’ The Red Book of Ossory – medieval meets jazz – and its historical backstory of a notorious witch hunt in 14th century Kilkenny.
The Island of Saints – A Film by Eric Fraad Read More »
Anima Fatima is a series of short art films made by Philip Connaughton and Luca Truffarelli, in collaboration with eight women from Fatima Groups United.
EVOLUTIONS, by John Scott, is a dance celebration based on the idea that no member of the same species is alike.
Dance Limerick is proud to present They Started Chanting Too by David Bolger (IRL), and Gafa Cois Farraige by Lucyna Zwolinska (PL/DE), as part of the STEP UP 2021 Irish Tour.
Dance Double Bill : New works by David Bolger & Lucyna Zwolinska Read More »
Liz Roche Company open 2021 with a dance film of The Here Trio, a brand new full digital dance piece. Navigating what it means to connect in the midst of a pandemic, post-Brexit, the work confronts the tension between our sense of boundaries and belonging. As performers challenge preconceived ideas about the right to belong, the piece explores how
The four live musicians and ensemble of six dancers have taken the basics of what makes the tradition of Irish Step Dancing so attractive and translated it into a new but still recognizable language of music and dance.