Terpsichore

Emily May
Terpsichore Podcast

Named after the Greek goddess of dance and chorus and also an allusion to historian Sally Banes’ seminal book on postmodern dance “Terpsichore in Sneakers,” Terpsichore is a podcast celebrating dancers, choreographers, and bodies in motion. Curated and hosted by dance critic and writer Emily May, Terpsichore interviews leading voices from the dance industry about their lives, careers, and the artists that have inspired them.

  1. 23/11/2023

    Episode 21: Andrea Miller

    Andrea Miller is a US-based choreographer, creative director, and the founder of the internationally renowned multidisciplinary organisation GALLIM. Working across dance, film, fashion, and the visual arts, Andrea is known for her exploration of the essential elements of human behaviour and the alchemy of human expression through the medium of movement and performance.Andrea is a Guggenheim, Sadler's Wells, New York City Center, and Princess Grace Fellow. She is the first choreographer to be named Artist in Residence at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, creating two large scale works for The Temple of Dendur and the full 5th floor of The Met Breuer. Andrea has been commissioned by the likes of New York City Ballet, Martha Graham Dance Company, Rambert2, and Ailey II, presenting her works in world renowned venues including the Lincoln Center, The Joyce, BAM, the Royal Albert Hall, London’s Royal Opera House, and Theaterhaus Stuttgart. This September, Andrea presented ‘Les Noces Ascent to Days’ at London’s Sadler’s Wells. Created for English National Ballet, the piece is her reimagining of the famous Stravinsky score originally choreographed by overlooked Russian dance pioneer Bronislava Nijinska. For the piece, she collaborated with the late great British sculptor Phyllida Barlow on set design. Holland Park Opera also performed the music live on stage. You can read the review I wrote for the TLS here. On Friday 24th November, Andrea will be returning to London to restage excerpts of 'Les Noces Ascent to Days' at the Victoria and Albert museum as part of their dance-focused V&A Friday Late event. Ahead of the performance, I couldn’t wait to talk to Andrea about breaking out of the concert dance bubble to present work in non traditional performance spaces, her collaborations with visual art organisations and creators in particular Phyllida Barlow, and her plans for the future of her company who are fast approaching their 20th anniversary.

    60 min
  2. 11/08/2023

    Episode 20: Shobana Jeyasingh CBE

    Shobana Jeyasingh CBE is a London-based choreographer. Born in Chennai, India, Shobana trained in Bharata Natyam (the classical dance of Tamil Nadu) and read English Literature before founding her eponymous company in 1989. Since then, she has created over 60 critically acclaimed works for stage, screen, and out and indoor sites, ranging from Palladian monasteries in Venice to contemporary fountains in London. Shobana’s work is known for both its intellectual rigour and visceral physicality. It is rooted in her experience and perspective of life as a female postcolonial citizen of the world. Over the course of a distinguished career she has collaborated with scientists, curators, composers, film makers, digital creatives, dancers and designers to make dynamic multi-disciplinary work that places the body centre stage in the dialogue of ideas. On 19th and 20th August 2023, Shobana will be restaging her site specific work ‘Counterpoint’ in the courtyard of Somerset House in London as part of the venue’s Summer in the Courtyard series and Westminster City Council's Inside Out festival. Originally choreographed in 2010, the work contrasts the powerful curves and thrilling physicality of 22 dancers with the formal lines of the neoclassical courtyard and modernist fountains. Ahead of the performances, I couldn’t wait to talk to Shobana about the original inspirations behind the piece, as well as her career long investigations into composition and writing stories with the body.

    39 min
  3. 29/06/2023

    Episode 19: Florence Peake

    Florence Peake is a London-based artist who has been making solo and group performance works intertwined with an extensive visual art practice since 1995. Presenting work internationally and across the UK in galleries, theatres and the public realm, she is known for an approach which is at once sensual and witty, expressive and rigorous, political and intimate. Florence explores notions of materiality and physicality: from the body as site and vehicle of protest to the erotic and sensual as tools for queering materiality. Most recently, she’s been working on her exhibition and performance, ‘Factual Actual’, focusing on the possibilities of painting, exploring its relationship to movement and upending its static representation often found in museum collections. Originally commissioned by London’s National Gallery in 2021, 'Factual Actual' has been on show at Southwark Park Galleries since 16th April, and will close this weekend on 2nd July before touring to Edinburgh’s Fruitmarket Gallery and Towner Gallery in Eastbourne later in 2023 and 2024. Alongside ‘Factual Actual’, Richard Saltoun Gallery in London has also been showing ‘Enactment’, a complementary exhibition open until 8th July that presents new installations, sculptures, canvases, and works on paper that continue Florence’s artist's research into the possibilities of painting. I couldn’t wait to sit down and speak to Florence about where her interest in melding human bodies and artistic materials came from, the absurdity of the performance-making process, and why she never lets her work arrive in one place.

    45 min
  4. 22/05/2023

    Episode 18: Dollie Henry MBE

    Dollie Henry MBE is recognised as one of the most formidable exponents of artistic and creative jazz dance and theatre dance in the UK and globally. Over the past 40 years, she has led a respected career as a performer, choreographer, theatre director, creative jazz artist, working on diverse projects in the West End, film, and TV, as well as in concert dance, jazz theatre, cabaret and the commercial dance sector. In 1996, Dollie decided to found the premiere jazz theatre company in the UK, Body of People, or BOP, with her partner the jazz composer Paul Jenkins. Now in its 26th year, BOP Company has produced an array of original productions and taught countless workshops, with the aim of advocating for jazz to be respected as an art form alongside other contemporary and classical genres. This mission has also seen Dollie and Paul write ‘The Essential Guide to Jazz Dance’ a landmark text charting the development of jazz theatre in 2019, and establish Jazz Theatre Arts UK, a network for jazz dance practitioners developed in partnership with One Dance UK. Currently, BOP is working towards their inaugural Jazz Arts Rewired festival, which will consist of a day of workshops and an evening of performances at The Place, London showcasing the diversity and creativity of jazz theatre in the UK. Before the festival takes place on 27th May and 3rd June, I couldn’t wait to speak to Dollie about where her intense passion for Jazz came from, how it’s sustained her throughout her career, and what her hopes are for the future of the art form.

    58 min

About

Named after the Greek goddess of dance and chorus and also an allusion to historian Sally Banes’ seminal book on postmodern dance “Terpsichore in Sneakers,” Terpsichore is a podcast celebrating dancers, choreographers, and bodies in motion. Curated and hosted by dance critic and writer Emily May, Terpsichore interviews leading voices from the dance industry about their lives, careers, and the artists that have inspired them.

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