Tag Archives: Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui

ALCHEMY

★★★★

Brighton Dome

ALCHEMY

Brighton Dome

★★★★

“highly skilled bodies in dialogue with their histories and with one another”

Liam Francis Dance Company’s Alchemy fused autobiography and ensemble work into a double bill that explored identity, memory and connection. The two contrasting pieces revealed both the playful, introspective side of Francis’s practice and the physical precision of a tightly-knit group, offering a performance that was as thoughtful as it was athletic.

Lyre Liar was the more explicitly personal half. A former Rambert dancer and Dance Europe ‘Dancer of the Year’ nominee, Francis revisited formative works of his career through fragments of repertoire by Merce Cunningham, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui and Kate Prince. Rather than offering a straightforward retrospective, the piece unfolded as a dialogue between earlier and present versions of Francis and the dancers who originated or inspired those roles.

Using a PowerPoint presentation as a framing device, Francis wove together a witty, self-aware commentary. Humour ran through the piece alongside a clear-eyed honesty about the demands of the profession and the constant negotiation between authenticity and expectation. Taking the lyrebird, the ultimate mimic, as a conceptual hook, Francis layered autobiography, dance history and anecdote. At times he conversed with his own inner voice, at others lip-synced to recorded interviews, building a case for choreography as something continually passed from dancer to dancer: imitated, reshaped and made anew.

For the framing sequences Francis appeared in formal shirt and glasses at a lectern, engaging directly with the audience. As each dance excerpt emerged he shed a layer of costume, revealing a sequence of differently coloured bodysuits. In the final stage these were tied back together, recalling the fanned plumes of the lyrebird itself. At times the structure felt episodic, but the openness of the performance held it together, the body carrying both technical precision and lived experience. Francis’s control was evident in the clarity of line and phrasing, yet he allowed vulnerability to sit alongside virtuosity. Given the play on the spellings Lyre and Liar in the title, how much invention sits beside imitation remains a tantalising question. Sound design and composition by Jethro Cooke incorporated additional music by Massive Attack, David Tudor, Philip Selway and Claude Debussy.

Where Lyre Liar embraced the whimsical, A Body of Rumours committed fully to the physical. Four dancers shared the stage: Francis, Eloy Cojal Mestre, Jacob Wye and Stephen Quildan. Francis’s choreography drew on ballet, hip hop and contemporary forms, skilfully showcasing the distinct performance styles of the quartet. The movement language was fluid and grounded, at times competitive, at others unexpectedly tender. The dancers mirrored one another, folded into and lifted each other, moving with impressive assurance as they shifted seamlessly between tightly synchronised unison and looser, improvisatory exchanges. Their physical strength was matched by sensitivity, particularly in the weight-sharing passages where trust had to be visibly earned.

Set to live electronic music composed and performed by Chloe Mason, the score operated like a film soundtrack, mixed in the moment and closely tracking the dancers’ emotional trajectory. It sharpened moments of confrontation before opening into something more expansive.

Production design by Zoé Ritchie kept the stage largely open, allowing the dancers’ relationships to dominate, while the lighting design sculpted the space through shifting pools of brightness and shadow. In Lyre Liar a particularly effective sequence combined mirrors and lighting to create four versions of Francis: the real body, its reflection, a shadow and a silhouette. In A Body of Rumours, broader washes and sharper contrasts emphasised the collective dynamic.

The evening opened with a ten-minute curtain-raiser, I.M.I.T.I.L., created by Francis in conjunction with fourteen dancers from Brighton, Hove & Sussex Sixth Form College. This brief piece echoed the programme’s wider concerns with community, as the dancers performed shared sequences that rippled across the stage like a wave.

With two very different works, Alchemy offered something immediate: highly skilled bodies in dialogue with their histories and with one another. For all the physical dynamism of the second half, it was the playful self-interrogation of Lyre Liar that lingered longest.



ALCHEMY

Brighton Dome

Reviewed on 4th March 2026

by Ellen Cheshire

Photography by Danny Fitzpatrick


 

 

 

 

ALCHEMY

ALCHEMY

ALCHEMY

Reunion

★★★★★

Sadler’s Wells Theatre

Reunion

Reunion

Sadler’s Well Theatre

Reviewed – 18th May 2021

★★★★★

 

“a thrilling showcase of elegance, talent and so much vivacity, it is genuinely breath-taking”

 

By god, how awful must a show have had to seem, how incredibly dull, how acutely offensive, for me not to have leapt at the chance to escape my ever-shrinking living room for an evening. Even the schizophrenic weather- now sunny, now hailing, now lashing rain- couldn’t have stopped me from skipping out of my front door, mask and sanitiser in hand.

So it goes, I arrive an hour early (a little too keen perhaps), drenched to the skin and grinning like a mad person who hasn’t spoken to any strangers in fourteen months. Luckily ‘Reunion’ is the perfect show to start the year (in May!)

Bringing together five pieces from five eminent choreographers, the English National Ballet delivers a thrilling showcase of elegance, talent and so much vivacity, it is genuinely breath-taking.

Some are simply beautiful. Yuri Possokhov’s ‘Senseless Kindness’, for example, is set bravely to Shostakovich’s Piano Trio No1, and sees four dancers slipping exquisitely in and out of synchronicity, vacillating with the music between romance and pugnacity.

Others are a quaking reminder of how gloriously exciting and invigorating live performance can be. ‘Take Five Blues’, choreographed by Stina Quagebar, is something like if the Jets and the Sharks actually got on really well. At times bordering on the chaotic, these eight dancers seem like they’re having just the best time, expressing playfulness and glee with every bounding leap, every meteoric pirouette.

There are occasions, however, when the accoutrements are in danger of overshadowing. For the first two performances we are graced with the English National Ballet Philharmonic, and there is more than one moment when I find my eye drawn, not to the dancers, but to the violinist bowing low, husky harmonics, or the mezzo soprano (Catherine Backhouse) singing Purcell’s ‘When I Am Laid’ with boundless pathos.

The lighting too is artfully crafted, and nearly the only design aspect throughout. That being said, there’d hardly be any room for anything else. Russell Maliphant’s work could even be described as a dance-light collaboration, rather than one accompanying the other. Video artist Panagiotis Tomaras creates a spectacular of frantic, dappling speckles, aqueous pools and dizzying stripes racing across the stage, coalescing with the dancers’ movements and creating entirely new shapes and effects.

Never was an audience so ready for a show, and even at half-capacity as necessitated by covid, we’re applauding, whooping, even foot-stomping with such ardour at any given opportunity, it feels like a heaving full house. Are we a little more enthused because it’s the first show back? Is this review a little more glowing? Does a man enjoy a meal more if he’s starving? Who’s to say? Who cares? I was ravenous. Who isn’t right now.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

 

Image: Fernanda Oliveira and Fabian Reimair in Echoes, a film by Michael Nunn and William Trevitt, choreographed by Russell Maliphant © English National Ballet

 


Reunion

Sadler’s Well Theatre until 30th May

 

Reviewed by Miriam this year:
Tarantula | ★★★★ | Online | April 2021

 

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