Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
ISPA OUT ON THE TOWN 1 ISPA OUT ON THE TOWN SCHEDULE Melbourne is Australia’s most culturally vibrant city and all year round audiences can experience an incredible diversity of live performances. Saturday 28 May Whilst you are in Melbourne for the 98th ISPA Congress, REIMAGINING, we encourage you to see as much as you can – you never know what gem you might discover. The following list of events captures some performances that are happening over the week of the Congress. From work-indevelopment showings to parties, meet-andgreets to world-class theatre, it certainly gives you a snapshot of live performance in our vibrant and inspiring city. To find out more about any of the events or companies, speak to the team at the Congress Registration and Information desk throughout the week. 13:00 – 15:00 The Pearlfishers Opera Australia Arts Centre Melbourne 13:00 – 15:45 The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse 14:00 – 15:40 Brahms’ Fourth Symphony Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Arts Centre Melbourne 16:00 – 17:15 Heart is Racing The Letter String Quartet Melbourne Recital Centre 16:00 – 17:30 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 18:00 – 21:30 Pasifika Showcase Multicultural Arts Victoria Eastbank Centre, Shepparton 19:00 – 20:15 Heart is Racing The Letter String Quartet Melbourne Recital Centre 19:30 – 20:30 L U C I D Chunky Move Chunky Move Studio 19:30 – 21:45 La Bohème Opera Australia Arts Centre Melbourne 19:30 – 22:15 The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse 20:00 – 21:30 CounterMove Sydney Dance Company Southbank Theatre 20:30 – 22:00 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 18:00 – 19:00 Joe Chindamo & Zoë Black Melbourne Recital Centre 18:30 – 20:00 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 20:00 – 21:45 Double Indemnity Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne Monday 30 May This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body. Cover image from Chunky Move’s AORTA (2013) Photo: Jeff Busby 2 All information is correct at the time of publication. 1 Tuesday 31 May Wednesday 1 June 18:00 – 19:10 Rhapsody Southern Cross Soloists Melbourne Recital Centre 10:00 – 11:10 en route one step at a time like this Outside Melbourne Central 18:30 – 20:00 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 10:30 – 12:05 Back at the Dojo Stuck Pigs Squealing/Belvoir Theatre Arena Theatre Company rehearsal room 18:30 – 21:15 The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse 10:30 – 12:30 Footscray Train Station 19:00 – 20:00 Out of Earshot (development showing) KAGE Abbotsford Convent Weekly Ticket: the artist at the station Madeleine Flynn and Tim Humphrey Art Projects 12:15 – 13:25 L U C I D Chunky Move Chunky Move Studio en route one step at a time like this Outside Melbourne Central 19:30 – 20:30 18:30 – 20:15 Resident Alien by Tim Fountainfortyfivedownstairs Cameron Lukey Presents The Magic Hour Cicero’s Circle Theatre Company La Mama Courthouse 19:30 – 20:40 19:00 – 20:00 CounterMove Sydney Dance Company Southbank Theatre Blood on the Dance Floor ILBIJERRI Theatre Company Arts House 20:00 – 21:30 19:00 – 21:00 Double Indemnity Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne For Heaven’s Sake Born in a Taxi City Square 20:00 – 21:45 19:30 – 20:30 A Taste of Circus Oz & TWENTYSIXTEEN Circus Oz Circus Oz Collingwood 19:30 – 20:30 L U C I D Chunky Move Chunky Move Studio 19:30 – 20:40 Resident Alien by Tim Fountainfortyfivedownstairs Cameron Lukey Presents 19:30 – 21:30 Gasworks Circus Showdown Various Artists Gasworks Arts Park 19:30 – 22:15 The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse 19:30 – 20:30 Three Short Works Lloyd Jones La Mama 20:00 – 21:30 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 20:00 – 21:30 CounterMove Sydney Dance Company Southbank Theatre 20:00 – 21:45 Double Indemnity Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 2 3 Thursday 2 June Friday 3 June 17:00 – 19:15 Opening Ceremony The Light In Winter Federation Square 18:00 – 18:45 Lucy Guerin Inc: Meet and Greet Lucy Guerin Inc The Coopers Malthouse, Hoopla Room 19:00 – 20:00 Blood on the Dance Floor ILBIJERRI Theatre Company Arts House 19:00 – 19:45 Confusion for Three Jo Lloyd The Coopers Malthouse, Hoopla Room 19:30 – 20:30 L U C I D Chunky Move Chunky Move Studio 19:00 – 20:00 Arts House Resident Alien by Tim Fountainfortyfivedownstairs Cameron Lukey Presents Blood on the Dance Floor ILBIJERRI Theatre Company 19:30 – 20:40 19:30 – 20:30 Chunky Move Studio 19:30 – 21:15 The Magic Hour Cicero’s Circle Theatre Company La Mama Courthouse L U C I D Chunky Move 19:30 – 20:30 La Mama 19:30 – 21:30 Gasworks Circus Showdown Various Artists Gasworks Arts Park Three Short Works Lloyd Jones 19:30 – 20:40 19:30 – 20:30 Three Short Works Lloyd Jones La Mama Resident Alien by Tim Fountainfortyfivedownstairs Cameron Lukey Presents 19:30 – 20:45 Bennetts Lane Jazz Club 19:30 – 22:15 The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse Confrontations: PBS Young Elder of Jazz Melbourne International Jazz Festival 19:30 – 21:15 La Mama Courthouse 20:00 – 21:30 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne The Magic Hour Cicero’s Circle Theatre Company 19:30 – 21:30 NICA National Circus Centre 20:00 – 21:30 CounterMove Sydney Dance Company Southbank Theatre Things NOT of this EARTH Circus Showcase 2016: Dress Rehearsal 19:30 – 21:40 Melbourne Recital Centre 20:00 – 21:45 Double Indemnity Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne Gary Bartz Quartet (USA) Melbourne International Jazz Festival 19:30 – 22:15 The Coopers Malthouse 20:30 – 21:40 MIRA FUCHS Melanie Jame Wolf/Savage Amusement Arts House The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre 20:00 – 21:30 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 20:00 – 21:30 CounterMove Sydney Dance Company Southbank Theatre 20:00 – 21:50 Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Arts Centre Melbourne 20:30 – 21:40 MIRA FUCHS Melanie Jame Wolf/Savage Amusement Arts House 20:30 – 22:00 Edmund. The Beginning Brian Lipson/Antechamber Productions Arts House 20:30 – 00:00 Arts House Party Arts House 23:00 – late Late Night Jams with the Hue Blanes Trio Melbourne International Jazz Festival Bennetts Lane Jazz Club 4 5 Saturday 4 June 13:00 – 15:45 The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse 13:30 – 14:40 en route one step at a time like this Outside Melbourne Central 14:00 – 15:00 Blood on the Dance Floor ILBIJERRI Theatre Company Arts House 14:00 – 15:10 The Walking Neighbourhood Lenine Burke Arts Centre Melbourne 14:00 – 15:30 CounterMove Sydney Dance Company Southbank Theatre 15:30 – 17:00 Edmund. The Beginning Brian Lipson/Antechamber Productions Arts House 15:45 – 16:55 en route one step at a time like this Outside Melbourne Central 16:00 – 17:30 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 16:00 – 17:45 Double Indemnity Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 17:30 – 18:40 MIRA FUCHS Melanie Jame Wolf/Savage Amusement Arts House 19:00 – 20:00 Blood on the Dance Floor ILBIJERRI Theatre Company Arts House 19:00 – 20:15 Lionel Loueke + the Vampires Melbourne International Jazz Festival Bennetts Lane Jazz Club 19:30 – 20:30 L U C I D Chunky Move Chunky Move Studio 19:30 – 20:30 Three Short Works Lloyd Jones La Mama 19:30 – 20:40 Resident Alien by Tim Fountainfortyfivedownstairs Cameron Lukey Presents 19:30 – 21:15 The Magic Hour Cicero’s Circle Theatre Company La Mama Courthouse 19:30 – 21:30 Gasworks Circus Showdown Various Artists Gasworks Arts Park 19:30 – 21:40 Robert Glasper Trio Melbourne International Jazz Festival Melbourne Recital Centre 19:30 – 22:15 The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse 20:00 – 21:30 CounterMove Sydney Dance Company Southbank Theatre 20:00 – 21:50 Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Arts Centre Melbourne 6 20:30 – 21:40 MIRA FUCHS Melanie Jame Wolfe/Savage Amusement Arts House 20:30 – 22:00 Straight White Men Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 20:30 – 22:15 Double Indemnity Melbourne Theatre Company Arts Centre Melbourne 21:30 – 22:45 Lionel Loueke + the Vampires Melbourne International Jazz Festival Bennetts Lane Jazz Club 23:00 – late Late Night Jams with the Hue Blanes Trio Melbourne International Jazz Festival Bennetts Lane Jazz Club 10:00 – 11:10 The Walking Neighbourhood Lenine Burke Arts Centre Melbourne 14:00 – 15:10 The Walking Neighbourhood Lenine Burke Arts Centre Melbourne 15:00 – 16:00 Blood on the Dance Floor ILBIJERRI Theatre Company Arts House 15:00 – 17:00 Jazz High Tea – Chelsea Wilson Arts Centre Melbourne Arts Centre Melbourne 16:00 – 17:45 The Magic Hour Cicero’s Circle Theatre La Mama Courthouse 17:00 – 18:00 L U C I D Chunky Move Chunky Move Studio 17:00 – 19:45 The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse 17:30 –18:40 MIRA FUCHS Melanie Jame Wolf/Savage Amusement Arts House 18:00 – 19:10 Resident Alien by Tim Fountainfortyfivedownstairs Cameron Lukey Presents 19:30 – 20:30 Three Short Works Lloyd Jones La Mama 23:00 – late Late Night Jams with the Hue Blanes Trio Melbourne International Jazz Festival Bennetts Lane Jazz Club Sunday 5 June 7 A Taste of Circus Oz and TWENTYSIXTEEN Circus Oz Circus Oz: 50 Perry Street, Collingwood Circus and meet and greet new Artistic Director, Rob Tannion 1 June | 7:30pm | 60 minutes Booking Details: email Teena Munn [email protected] for transport and catering purposes. Getting There: a bus will depart from Arts Centre Melbourne at 6:45pm and return post event. www.circusoz.com THEATRE CIRCUS EVENTS After nearly losing his mind in the abandon of 1960s America, young Danny (who happens to share a name with Lally’s father) finds his way again with the help of an enigmatic sensei. At a New Jersey karate dojo, he and other mislaid souls make their way back into the world, and Danny bumps into a woman called Lois… Meanwhile, in present-day Australia, Danny’s long-lost grandson has decided to become Patti Smith… Come meet our new Artistic Director, internationally acclaimed Rob Tannion, see our almost brand-new home, watch an excerpt from our upcoming big top show, TWENTYSIXTEEN (opening 15 June) and share some drinks and nibbles with us afterwards. Inspired by the true events that brought Dan and Lois Katz together, Back at the Dojo features a Hogarthian parade of characters, two real-life karate masters, and the incomparable Luke Mullins (Angels in America, The Glass Menagerie). Belvoir joins forces with legendary Melbourne company Stuck Pigs Squealing for this ravishing, nourishing story about the myths families live by. PARTY Arts House Party Arts House: 521 Queensberry Street, North Melbourne Party 3 June | 8:30pm | 210 minutes Booking Details: a free event for ISPA delegates. RSVP encouraged – [email protected]. Getting There: taxi/walk or #57 tram from Elizabeth Street to stop #12. www.artshouse.com.au Join Melbourne’s independent artists and the team at Arts House for a not-to-be-missed party during this year’s ISPA Congress. We’ll provide the food, drinks and DJs, so all you need to do is turn up and wear your best pair of dancing shoes. Attend one of the performances that are on at Arts House before the party, stay for a drink and kick on into the night. We look forward to having you as our guest. 8 Interdisciplinary TWENTYSIXTEEN is a refreshing cocktail of new and old, innovation and tradition. Our turbocharged acrobats will be bringing amazing new skill and wizardry to the flying trapeze, the Chinese pole and unicycle adagio, as well as a brand new group-juggling act, and so much more. With two hours of high-voltage acrobatics and explosive aerial antics all accompanied by the sensational Circus Oz band, TWENTYSIXTEEN is classic Circus Oz: absurd Australian larrikins pushing the boundaries of possibility and defying the laws of physics. Back at the Dojo Stuck Pigs Squealing and Belvoir Theatre Arena Theatre Company Rehearsal Room: 130 Dryburgh Street, North Melbourne Theatre: New work, contemporary text based 1 June | 10:30am | 95 minutes Booking Details: Reservation required – email Nina Bonacci [email protected]. Getting There: train to North Melbourne Station or taxi. www.belvoir.com.au/productions/back-at-the-dojo From the utterly marvellous mind of Lally Katz comes a modern romance about wanderlust, love and karate. Lally has spent the past decade turning her life into a series of hilarious and theatrically gorgeous plays. This time it’s her parents’ turn. Blood on the Dance Floor ILBIJERRI Theatre Company and Jacob Boehme Arts House: 521 Queensberry Street, North Melbourne Interdisciplinary: Theatre, projection, text and choreography 1 – 5 June | Wednesday – Saturday 7pm, Saturday 2pm, Sunday 3pm | 60 minutes Booking Details: Tickets available through www.artshouse.com.au – use ISPA code when booking for discount. Tickets can also be purchased on the door subject to availability. Arts House box office opens one hour before the show. Getting There: taxi/walk or #57 tram from Elizabeth St to stop #12. www.artshouse.com.au Blood on the Dance Floor explores the legacies and memories of our bloodlines, our need for community and what blood means to each of us, questioning how this most precious fluid unites and divides us. A choreographer, dancer and writer from the Narangga and Kaurna nations of South Australia, Jacob Boehme was diagnosed with HIV in 1998. In search of answers, he reached out to his ancestors. Through a powerful blend of theatre, image, text and choreography, Jacob pays homage to their ceremonies whilst dissecting the politics of gay, Blak and poz identities. Blood on the Dance Floor is an unapologetic, passionate and visceral narrative that traverses time, space and characters. A story of our need to love and be loved, Jacob’s striking monologue reveals our secret identities and our deepest fears, seeking to invoke ancestral lineage in a contemporary quest for courage and hope. 9 dance MUSIC Brahms’ Fourth Symphony Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Hamer Hall, Arts Centre Melbourne: 100 St Kilda Road, Melbourne Music: Classical 28 May | 2pm | 100 minutes Booking Details: www.mso.com.au/whats-on/2016-season/brahms-fourth-symphony Getting There: Arts Centre Melbourne is the host and hub of the ISPA Congress. www.mso.com.au The young Dresden-born conductor Christoph König directs this intriguing program of Ravel, Bartók and Brahms. Maurice Ravel’s Le tombeau de Couperin is an homage to the composer’s courtly forebear, François Couperin. Originally a six-movement suite for piano, Le tombeau is more frequently heard in its orchestrated version, completed (minus two movements) in 1919. Confrontations: PBS Young Elder of Jazz Melbourne International Jazz Festival Bennetts Lane Jazz Club: 25 Bennetts Lane, Melbourne Music: Jazz 3 June | 7:30pm (doors open at 7pm) | 75 minutes Booking Details: www.melbournejazz.com/program/confrontations-pbs-young-elder-of-jazz Getting There: train to Melbourne Central Station, walk, or any Swanston Street tram. melbournejazz.com Wheelchair access: additional assistance from venue staff may be required at Bennetts Lane Jazz Club (please call +61 (0)3 9663 2856). World premiere of the 2016 PBS Young Elder of Jazz Commission. Multi-award winning pianist and composer Joe O’Connor has created Confrontations, a stunning set of six dialogues exploring conflict and multiplicity in improvisation. Inspired by and performed in collaboration with Australian jazz luminary Scott Tinkler, Confrontations balances tonal and non-tonal harmony, regular and irregular rhythm, delicate lyricism and impressive density. The PBS Young Elder of Jazz Commission is generously supported by Mark Newman. 10 Hypnotic tension is generated by three dancers as they negotiate a progressively unravelling system of choreography. Navigating their physical histories, both recent and distant – from traces of folk dance to idiosyncratic body rhythms – the performers reveal a series of desperate encounters, in a destabilising flood of movement. The questions remain: can this confusion be sustained, and where does it lead us? Dance MUSIC Bela Bartók’s Viola Concerto (1945) was among his last pieces, but existed only in sketch form. When asked if this was his Viola Concerto, the dying composer said, ‘Yes and no’. Completed by one of Bartók’s colleagues, the work was given its world premiere in 1949, played by its commissioner, violist William Primrose. Years later, Primrose recalled, ‘I paid [Bartók] what he asked — $1,000 — and I played the concerto well over 100 times for fairly respectable fees. So it was almost like getting in on the ground floor in investing in Xerox or the Polaroid camera.’ Confusion for Three Jo Lloyd The Coopers Malthouse, Hoopla Room: 113 Sturt Street, Southbank Dance: Contemporary 3 June | 7pm | 45 minutes Booking details: Free event for ISPA delegates. To book email [email protected] by 2 June at 5pm. Getting There: walk, or any tram travelling up St Kilda Road to stop #17, or tram #1 to stop #18. www.jolloyd.com Independent Choreographer Jo Lloyd (current Resident Director of Lucy Guerin Inc) will introduce and show an excerpt of her recent work, Confusion For Three, which premiered at Arts House in August 2015. Jo’s work explores choreography as a social encounter, revealing behaviour over specific durations, under particular circumstances. CounterMove Sydney Dance Company Southbank Theatre: The Sumner Contemporary Dance 25 May - 4 June | Tuesday – Saturday 8:00pm, Saturday 2:00pm | 90 minutes Booking Details: save 20% off tickets when you quote SDCEXCLUSIVE online or via 03 8688 0800 www.mtc.com.au/countermove. Getting There: walk or #1 tram. www.sydneydancecompany.com Sydney Dance Company opens 2016 with CounterMove — an exhilarating double bill that will intrigue, move and entertain you. Alexander Ekman’s Cacti is a brilliantly conceived, laugh-outloud funny piece that dares to poke fun at contemporary dance. Featuring a string quartet live on stage, Ekman’s witty and energetic choreography makes its Melbourne debut having left a global trail of rapturous reviews. While Rafael Bonachela’s world premiere, Lux Tenebris explores light and darkness with fiercely physical movement and deep, electronic beats by composer Nick Wales (long-term collaborator of Sarah Blasko). 11 Experimental THEATRE Double Indemnity Melbourne Theatre Company Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne: 100 St Kilda Road, Melbourne Theatre: Period thriller 30 May – 4 June | Monday – Thursady 8pm, Saturday 4pm and 8:30pm | 105 minutes Booking Details: book online at mtc.com.au using booking code ISPAMTC or call the MTC box office direct on +61 (0)3 8688 0800. Tickets also available at the door, subject to availability. Getting There: Arts Centre Melbourne is the host and hub of the ISPA Congress. www.mtc.com.au/doubleindemnity en route is a multi-award-winning pedestrian-based theatre experience. It is also a placemaking project that utilises audio, mobile phone communication, urban streetscapes, walking, passers-by and cafés. Each production is uniquely created for the city space that it inhabits, with its own soundtrack drawn from local musicians. en route has enjoyed sell-out seasons in Chicago (Chicago Tribune Top Ten Shows of 2011), London (2012 Cultural Olympiad commission) and five Australian cities (Winner of Adelaide Fringe Award for Best Theatre Production and two Green Room Awards), Edinburgh (Traverse Theatre), Seoul (translated version) and New Zealand. Edmund. The Beginning is both an exercise in distorted biography and a confessional torrent. Brian Lipson summons a disordered array of characters from the impatient past and the murky present: some are familiar, some are famous, some are known only to Brian. None are comfortable. Fifteen years ago Brian Lipson’s acclaimed solo show, A Large Attendance in the Antechamber, won two Green Room Awards before touring the world for the next seven years. Brian is now considerably older and considerably less wise, but he can still talk very fast. Edmund. The Beginning is even more complex than its predecessor, and each of its many characters is both a real person and an imaginary figure. But who imagines whom? Who is whom? Who is alive? Who is dead? And why? In Edmund. The Beginning, literary giants, sirens, reprobates and infants cavort in existential quadrille. A few you will recognise, others you won’t. 12 en route is also a love song to a city. Part traveller, witness and voyeur, the audienceparticipants are able to view a world in the process of making itself – en route – emerging, dissolving, as perceptions, insights, senses, make and remake the city they inhabit. With en route you’re seeing the city as if for the first time. Experimental THEATRE One of the greatest crime novels of our times is given a brilliant stage adaptation by Tom Holloway with direction by Sam Strong. Insurance agent Walter Huff has nosed around the business long enough to smell a scam, so when he meets Phyllis Nirdlinger to talk about her husband’s insurance coverage he gets a perfumed whiff of trouble. But she has a persuasive way of putting things. Can’t a wife fix a little security for herself? After all, a beloved husband can suffer a fatal accident just as easily as an honest guy can fall hard for a dame who’s no good. The LA sunshine throws plenty of dark shadows in James M Cain’s sensational thriller novels of the thirties and forties, of which this steamy tale of murder and desire is the undoubted masterpiece. Edmund. The Beginning Brian Lipson/Antechamber Productions Arts House: 521 Queensberry Street, North Melbourne Theatre: New work, solo 3 and 4 June | Friday 8:30pm, Saturday 3:30pm | 90 minutes Booking Details: This is a free event for ISPA members. Tickets available through http://bit.do/edmund2, use booking code ISPA when booking or email [email protected] to book your tickets. Getting There: taxi/walk or #57 tram from Elizabeth St to stop #12. www.artshouse.com.au en route one step at a time like this Melbourne CBD: Starting location outside Melbourne Central Station Experimental: Extended notion of theatre 1 and 4 June | Wednesday 10am and 12:15pm, Saturday 1:30pm and 3:45pm | 70 minutes Booking details: please email [email protected] to secure your booking. Getting There: details will be provided when booking. www.onestepatatimelikethis.com/enroute.html For Heaven’s Sake Born in a Taxi City Square: 44–86 Swanston Street, Melbourne Experimental: New work created for outdoor public spaces. Non-verbal with playful audience participation. 1 June | 7pm | 120 minutes Booking Details: Free outdoor event. No bookings required. Getting There: walk or any tram down Swanston Street/St Kilda Road. www.borninataxi.com.au Set inside a transparent CUBE, For Heaven’s Sake is a playful, participatory outdoor performance. Stunningly visual, beautifully poetic and often absurd, For Heaven’s Sake connects community in the spirit of play. Trapped in the “Institute of Heaven” three Angels go about their business sending messages between the divine and the mortal. An apparition of compassionate souls, the mysterious unveiled. Mortals can observe from afar, come for a blessing or cross over briefly into the heavenly realm! From within the illuminated walls of Nirvana, the Angels conduct a series of events designed to unify an audience of strangers – from the genesis of an audience Deity, to a Mass Baptism, to a spontaneous collective dance. The work swings between the profound, the kitsch and the joyful. For Heaven’s Sake is an opportunity to slow down, take a breath and reflect on how we engage with each other and what is sacred. 13 music music Gary Bartz Quartet (USA) Melbourne International Jazz Festival Opening Night Melbourne Recital Centre: Corner Southbank Boulevard & Sturt Street, Melbourne Music: Jazz 3 June | 7.30pm | 130 minutes Booking Details: www.melbournerecital.com.au/events/2016/gary-bartz-quartet-usa Tickets also available at the door. Getting There: walk or #1 tram. www.melbournerecital.com.au ‘Songwriters strike a chord with string quartet.’ The Age An unmissable Opening Night event honouring an icon of jazz. The Letter String Quartet launches its 2016 concert series with Heart Is Racing, an exciting amalgamation of the musical musings of two continents. Having not only witnessed but helped create jazz as we know it today, Gary Bartz has been at the forefront of jazz for nearly six decades. With a career ranging across post-bop, jazz-funk and free jazz, Bartz is counted amongst the pantheon of jazz greats, having shared the stage with Art Blakey, Miles Davis, McCoy Tyner, Pharaoh Sanders, Charles Mingus, Max Roach and many more. Renowned for his legendary, non-stop live performances, Bartz’s compelling blend of earthiness and elegance infuses decades of experience into every note, creating a ‘furnace of power and passion’. Gasworks Circus Showdown Various Artists Gasworks Arts Park: 21 Graham Street, Albert Park Circus and physical theatre 1, 2 and 4 June | 7:30pm | 120 minutes Booking Details: Can purchase on the door but booking recommended: www.gasworks.org.au/event/gasworks-circus-showdown. Getting There: www.gasworks.org.au/visit-us/find-us www.gasworks.org.au Gasworks Circus Showdown is the only performance opportunity of its kind in Australia. A festival of circus performance, it is one-part competition, one-part showcase, and spotlights a selection of exceptional circus and physical theatre talent from Melbourne and beyond. Gasworks Circus Showdown culminates in the Gasworks Circus Showdown Spectacular… and who will be crowned the Gasworks Circus Showdown champion! Eight acts will battle it out across two nights (Wednesday 1 and Thursday 2 June), and four acts will proceed to the Gasworks Circus Showdown Spectacular on Saturday 4 June. A panel of industry experts and you, the audience, will have your say on who will be crowned the Gasworks Circus Showdown Champion! Central to the performance will be the world premiere of Australian/American composer Wally Gunn’s latest string quartet commissioned by The Letter String Quartet, Blood, an aural mapping of the circulatory system of the body. Also featuring the works of renown American composers Erik DeLuca and Caroline Shaw (2013 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for music), and Australia’s award-winning pianist/composer Andrea Keller, this concert will captivate the quartet’s growing cult audience and introduce new listeners to the quartet’s wild music highs, unique fusing of strings and voices and love of improvisation. music circus For the Opening Night of the 2016 Melbourne International Jazz Festival, Bartz is joined by his long-standing Quartet, comprising Greg Bandy, one of the original drum stylists, bassist James King, and Melbourne’s very own Barney McAll, to perform their latest project – Coltrane Rules, Tao of a Music Warrior – honouring the icon with classic Coltrane renditions that would make him proud. Heart is Racing The Letter String Quartet Melbourne Recital Centre: Corner Southbank Boulevard & Sturt Street, Melbourne Music: Contemporary Classical 28 May | 4pm and 7pm | 75 minutes Booking Details: melbournerecital.com.au/events/2016/heart-is-racing. Tickets also available at the door. Getting There: walk or #1 tram. www.melbournerecital.com.au Jazz High Tea Chelsea Wilson The Pavilion, Arts Centre Melbourne: 100 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne Music: Jazz 5 June | 3pm | 120 minutes Booking Details: must be booked by 3pm Friday 3 June at www.artscentremelbourne.com.au/whats-on/2016/world-jazz-folk/jazz-high-tea- chelsea-wilson?m=performances. Getting There: Arts Centre Melbourne is the host and hub of the ISPA Congress. www.artscentremelbourne.com.au Melbourne’s two great loves, food and culture, converge in an afternoon of high tea and Australia’s finest jazz talent. The June edition of this elegant high tea experience welcomes Chelsea Wilson, a Melbournebased jazz and soul vocalist who has performed in Japan, France, Indonesia, Thailand, the Caribbean and UAE and made her UK debut at the iconic Glastonbury Festival 2015. Enjoy your jazz in style, with a glass of Katnook sparkling wine on arrival, before an indulgent spread of house-made cakes, pastries and savoury treats, and freshly brewed tea. The winning act will receive a professional development prize valued at more than $4,000. 14 15 music Wheelchair access: additional assistance from venue staff may be required. Please call +61(0)3 96632856. Joe Chindamo and Zoë Black continue their trailblazing commitment to new music. Interspersed in this program will be world premieres from Joe’s pen and innovative reimaginings of well-loved classics, as you’ve never heard them before. ‘Hue Blanes has a transcendent voice, perfect timing and an angelic touch on the piano, he’s a star.’ Deborah Conway Join us at Bennetts Lane for Melbourne International Jazz Festival’s late night jam sessions. Led by the remarkable Hue Blanes Trio, Late Night Jams are all about losing yourself in the spontaneity and excitement of these improvised sessions. In September 2015 Zoë and Joe made their Carnegie Hall debut with their latest release, The New Goldberg Variations, which met with critical acclaim. ‘They give you a fine new look at what can go with [Bach’s Goldberg Variations] a second work that can take its place proudly next to the original. It is a must for all Bachaholics as well as anybody looking for a new sonic experience. Bravo!’ – Grego Applegate Edwards, Classical-Modern Music Review (New York). opera Late Night Jams with the Hue Blanes Trio Melbourne International Jazz Festival Bennetts Lane Jazz Club: 25 Bennetts Lane, Melbourne Music: Jazz 3 – 5 June | 11pm – late Booking Details: tickets at the door. Getting There: train to Melbourne Central, walk, or any Swanston Street tram. www.melbournejazz.com World premieres and reimagining classics. La Bohème (Puccini) Opera Australia Opera Australia, State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne: 100 St Kilda Road, Melbourne Opera 28 May | 7:30pm | 135 minutes Booking Details: www.artscentremelbourne.com.au/whats-on/opera/la-boheme Getting There: Arts Centre Melbourne is the host and hub of the ISPA Congress. www.opera.org.au La Bohème is a celebration of first loves. Cafe Momus is beckoning, with its glittering lights, bohemian spirit and fishnet stocking-clad ladies. Rodolfo is mooning over Mimì, Marcello is fuming over Musetta and the stage is set for first loves, first heartbreaks and a grief that’s all too real. It’s La Bohème, one of the world’s favourite operas. music music Joe Chindamo & Zoë Black Melbourne Recital Centre: Corner Southbank Boulevard & Sturt Street, Melbourne Music: Contemporary Classical 30 May | 6pm | 60 minutes Booking Details: melbournerecital.com.au/events/2016/joe-chindamo-and-zoe- black-i. Tickets also available at the door. Getting There: walk or #1 tram. www.melbournerecital.com.au Lionel Loueke + The Vampires Melbourne International Jazz Festival Bennetts Lane Jazz Club: 25 Bennetts Lane, Melbourne Music: Jazz 4 June | 7pm and 9:30pm (doors open 30 minutes prior) | 75 minutes Booking Details: www.melbournejazz.com/program/lionel-loueke-the-vampires Getting There: train to Melbourne Central Station, walk, or any Swanston Street tram. www.melbournejazz.com Wheelchair access: additional assistance from venue staff may be required. Please call +61(0)3 96632856. Guitarist Lionel Loueke has enjoyed a meteoric rise in the jazz world, collaborating with seminal jazz figures including Wayne Shorter, Esperanza Spalding and Herbie Hancock, who has praised Loueke as “a musical painter”. Sydney’s The Vampires are renowned for their blend of soulful jazz, old-school reggae, exotic Balkan melodies and all-out funk-laden Afrobeat. Their risk-taking improvisational style and exhilarating interplay meet Lionel Loueke’s musical mastery and deep knowledge of African folk forms in a must-see collaboration. Nearly 120 years after Puccini wrote his smash-hit La Bohème, this story of first love still tops the list of favourite operas around the world. La Bohème is a story we understand. It’s about friendship and falling in love. It’s about sacrifice and never giving up, even if it means parting with your lover – or your favourite coat. Gale Edwards’ glittering production, set in the bohemian streets of 1930s Berlin, returns to Melbourne with international stars Lianna Haroutounian and Gianluca Terranova, conducted by Andrea Molino. 16 17 THEATRE dance LUCID Chunky Move Chunky Move Studios: 111 Sturt Street, Southbank Dance: Contemporary 28 May – 5 June | Tuesday – Saturday 7:30pm, Sunday 5pm | 60 minutes Booking Details: book tickets through www.trybooking.com/KTUC. Use booking code CHUNKISPA to access discounted tickets or email [email protected]. Getting There: walk, or any tram travelling up St Kilda Road to stop #17, or tram #1 to stop #18. www.chunkymove.com.au Heroes, icons, imagined worlds and censored dreams. We relentlessly create, monitor and edit our own image in response to an abundance of references and influences. In a hyperconscious world, how do we define ourselves? Mira Fuchs is an expert. An expert private dancer. She’s also the public face of artist Melanie Jame Wolf’s eight-year private life as a stripper in a gentleman’s club. Mira wants to dance you through the myriad questions and contradictions of her work, that time and her world. In an intimate, in-the-round work, Melanie speaks, prances and twists her way through an abstracted memoir that trips between lap-dance and body politics. With humour, high heels and deep insight, she fashions a looking glass for our own reflections on the work of stripping. Chunky Move – Victoria’s flagship contemporary dance company – presents the world premiere of L U C I D, an intimate work for two performers, multiple cameras and a screen, which interrogates how we imagine and reconstruct our identities. Motion Picture is Lucy Guerin’s 11th full-length work for her Melbourne-based company, and premiered at Arts House, Melbourne during Dance Massive in March 2015. It is now scheduled to tour in January 2017 to Theatre de la Ville in Paris and other venues in France and Belgium. Artistic Director Lucy Guerin will provide delegates with insights into the company’s rich history and future projects, which will be followed by a Q&A session. We invite you to join Lucy and the dancers for wine and cheese after the performance. 18 Leave your preconceptions with the coat-check and step into an oft-hidden economy of desire and exchange. Both entertaining and unflinchingly personal, MIRA FUCHS tantalisingly explores sexuality, gender, performance, intimacy, dance-as-labour, looking and being looked at, and pleasure, in a world where money is time and timing is everything. OPENING CEREMONY dance Following Chunky Move Artistic Director Anouk van Dijk’s latest critically acclaimed works Complexity of Belonging (2014) and Depth of Field (2015), L U C I D sees two performers travel to places where they can be all that they desire, fear or censor. Shapeshifting in and out of other people’s skins, they confront themselves in reflections of others. L U C I D reveals the many faces we present to the world; a culmination of the carefully crafted or those released by fearless abandon. Lucy Guerin Inc: Meet and Greet Lucy Guerin Inc The Coopers Malthouse, Hoopla Room: 113 Sturt St, Southbank Dance: Contemporary 3 June | 6pm | 45 minutes Booking Details: RSVP essential via email [email protected] by 2 June at 5pm. Getting There: walk, or any tram travelling up St Kilda Road to stop #17, or tram #1 to stop #18. www.LucyGuerinInc.com Acclaimed contemporary dance company Lucy Guerin Inc invites ISPA delegates to an informal “meet and greet” event that will feature a short excerpt of the company’s most recent work, Motion Picture. MIRA FUCHS Melanie Jame Wolf/Savage Amusement Arts House: 521 Queensberry Street, North Melbourne Theatre: Interdisciplinary 2 – 5 June | Thursday – Friday 8:30pm, Saturday 5:30pm and 8:30pm, Sunday 5:30pm | 70 minutes Booking Details: tickets available www.artshouse.com.au. Tickets can also be purchased on the door subject to availability. Box office opens one hour before the show. Getting There: taxi/walk or #57 tram from Elizabeth Street to stop #12. www.artshouse.com.au Opening Ceremony The Light In Winter Federation Square, Corner Flinders and Swanston Streets, Melbourne Opening Ceremony 2 June | 5pm | 135 minutes Booking Details: bookings not required. Getting There: walk from Deakin Edge, Federation Square to the ceremony. www.fedsquare.com/umbrellas/the-light-in-winter This year The Light in Winter celebrates its tenth anniversary, marking ten years of warming up the heart of Melbourne at Fed Square through a combination of major light-art commissions with hearty community participation. The opening ceremony will acknowledge the ten years of the festival and its community participants, as they are welcomed once again to Leempeeyt Weeyn’, the Indigenous Campfire which artist Vicki Couzens created for the very first The Light in Winter. The fire will be lit that night, in the presence of delegates to the ISPA Congress, and will remain burning at the front of Federation Square for the whole of the winter season: the sight and smell of the smoke has become a beautiful marker of the coldest months. 19 music dance Out of Earshot (development showing) KAGE Oratory, The Abbotsford Convent: 1 St Heliers Street, Abbotsford Dance: Contemporary dance theatre 31 May | 7pm | 20-minute performance followed by discussion of work and chance to have a drink with artistic team. Total duration 60 minutes. Booking Details: email [email protected] to confirm attendance. Some tickets will be available at the door. Getting There: taxi or train to Victoria Park Station then walk or bus #200 or #207 to Clarke Street. Information on transport options can be found on the Abbotsford Convent website: www.abbotsfordconvent.com.au/visit/visitor-information#getting-here. www.kage.com.au Audiences should prepare to be enthralled and enraptured in this program showcasing the dark side of love and life. Romeo and Juliet with a happy ending? That was the mad plan for the ballet that Sergei Prokofiev composed for the Bolshoi in 1935. Thankfully sanity intervened – or, at least, Soviet cultural officers did – and the result is far from a saccharine love story, instead delivering a violent, stormy climate for our star-cross’d lovers. Directed by Kate Denborough, Out of Earshot will feature a profoundly Deaf dancer as well as a renowned contemporary jazz musician exploring the power of non-verbal language, intense physicality and the role that sound plays within communication. The cross-artform performance will be created with KAGE’s signature style of vibrant storytelling and distinctive aesthetic, which has proved to resonate strongly with a broad audience. Also on this all-Russian program is a rare chance to hear Mussorgsky’s equally tempestuous Night on Bald Mountain, and one of Rachmaninov’s greatest works, his Piano Concerto No.2. The genesis of this concerto may in part be attributed to one Dr Nikolai Dahl: Moscow physician, amateur musician and hypnosis therapist and the name that appears as the dedicatee. It is said that Dr Dahl and his swinging pocket-watch helped the composer emerge from a crippling depression, enabling him to write the work that would go on to bring him so much glory. Following an initial one-week creative development in 2015, KAGE is beginning rehearsals on 16 May 2016 and invites ISPA delegates to attend a creative development showing on Tuesday 31 May to find out more about this bold new work. It is performed by award-winning Korean pianist Joyce Yang, who has been described by critics as an ‘astonishing artist’ and makes a welcome return to Melbourne and the MSO. The concert is conducted by Diego Matheuz. Pasifika Showcase Multicultural Arts Victoria, Know Your Roots, The Robertsons and Riverlinks Eastbank Centre: 70 Welsford Street, Shepparton Dance: Contemporary, traditional Pacific Islander Music: Hip Hop, Soul, RnB, Gospel Interdisciplinary: Traditional ceremonies and rituals and feasts 28 May | 6pm | 210 minutes Booking Details: www.riverlinksvenues.com.au Getting There: Drive, V/Line trains and buses – phone 136 196 or www.vline.com.au. www.riverlinksvenues.com.au or www.multiculturalarts.com.au Resident Alien by Tim Fountain Cameron Lukey Presents fortyfivedownstairs: 45 Flinders Lane, Melbourne Theatre 25 May – 12 June | Tuesday – Saturday 7:30pm, Sunday 6pm | 70 minutes Booking Details: +61 (0)3 9662 9966 or go to www.fortyfivedownstairs.com. Use booking code ISPA to access discounted tickets. Tickets available at the door subject to availability. Getting There: Walk or any tram down St Kilda Road/Swanston Street. www.cameronlukey.com From his early years as an androgynous nude model in 1930s London, to finding fame as the first to speak so openly about life as a gay man, there was no-one quite like Quentin Crisp. In Tim Fountain’s Resident Alien, the legendary author opens the door to his famously filthy New York apartment for an unforgettable heart-to-heart about life as only he knows it. Oprah Winfrey, Princess Diana, oral sex – no topic is off limits as Quentin explains, in his inimitable way, how to be happy. Multicultural Arts Victoria, Know Your Roots, The Robertsons and Riverlinks present Pasifika Showcase, the first major showcase in Shepparton of its rich local Pacific culture, music, dance and food on Saturday 28 May at the Eastbank Centre, Shepparton (a two-hour drive from Melbourne). The evening will feature a traditional Kava ceremony, performances by local acts The Robertsons, Mike and Cheryl, Brenda Hafoka, Generation Ignite, and Shepparton High School’s Know Your Roots Crew. There will also be a talent quest, a Samoan feast from Nana’s Little Island and Nuholani and Tama Tatau. theatre MUSIC/dance Hamer Hall, Arts Centre Melbourne: 100 St Kilda Road, Melbourne Music: Classical 3 – 4 June | 8pm | 110 minutes Booking Details: www.mso.com.au/whats-on/2016-season/prokofievs-romeo-and-juliet Getting There: Arts Centre Melbourne is the host and hub of the ISPA Congress. www.mso.com.au In KAGE’s newest work Out of Earshot, everyday language becomes both redundant and indefinable while the meaning remains unmistakable. Imagine listening with your eyes and using your heart, your hands and your instinct to voice your emotions. Imagine watching a performance where both sound and silence become unnecessary. 20 Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Starring five-time Helpmann Award winner Paul Capsis as Crisp and directed by Green Room Award-winner Gary Abrahams. 21 theatre music Rhapsody Southern Cross Soloists Melbourne Recital Centre: Corner Southbank Boulevard & Sturt Street, Melbourne Music: Classical 31 May | 6pm | 70 minutes Booking Details: www.melbournerecital.com.au/events/2016/new-zealandchamber-soloists. Tickets also available at the door. Getting There: walk or #1 tram. www.melbournerecital.com.au An enchanting program of lyrical and rhapsodic masterpieces. Southern Cross Soloists, Ensemble in Residence at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre presents Rhapsody, an enchanting program of lyrical and rhapsodic masterpieces. A prodigiously talented pianist, Glasper rose to prominence through his striking combination of acoustic jazz, hip-hop and R&B and his ground-breaking Black Radio albums. Yet, it was his desire to perpetually reinvent himself that gave rise to his Grammy-nominated record, Covered – his ode to those that have influenced him. In a long-awaited return to an acoustic trio format, Glasper has reunited with long-term collaborators Vicente Archer and Damion Reid to reconfigure the music of John Legend, Radiohead, Harry Belafonte and Joni Mitchell – alongside jazz standards and a number of Glasper originals. theatre music Experience modern jazz’s newest master. Having spent the past decade reinterpreting and reimagining modern jazz, Robert Glasper has firmly cemented himself as a master of a new generation. Melbourne Theatre Company Fairfax Studio, Arts Centre Melbourne: 100 St Kilda Road, Melbourne Theatre: Drama/Comedy 28 May – 4 June | Monday – Tuesday 6:30pm, Wednesday – Friday 8pm, Saturday 4pm and 8:30pm | 90 minutes Booking Details: book online at mtc.com.au using booking code ISPAMTC or call the MTC box office direct on +61 (0)3 8688 0800. Tickets also available at the door, subject to availability. Getting There: Arts Centre Melbourne is the host and hub of the ISPA Congress. www.mtc.com.au/swm Director Sarah Giles takes on the razor-edged new comedy from one of American theatre’s most acute observers of race and identity, Young Jean Lee. Christmas is for family, and brothers Matt, Jake and Drew gather at their Dad’s house for the usual observances of the holiday season, adding a few rituals of their own, such as playing politically-correct board games and worrying about what Mum would think. Although she’s been dead for some time now, their liberal, feminist mother still casts a vast shadow. She taught them how being heterosexual white males gives them an unfair advantage in America. But, as carefree youth gives way to mid-life anxiety, privileged is the last thing they feel. A unique chamber music ensemble comprising of leading musicians from around Australia, Southern Cross Soloists deliver exciting and uplifting performances in their signature up close and personal style. From Ravel’s fantastically twirling La Valse, to Debussy’s gem Rhapsody for clarinet to Gershwin’s revolutionary Rhapsody in Blue, tonight’s program will charm and delight. Robert Glasper Trio Melbourne International Jazz Festival Melbourne Recital Centre: Corner Southbank Boulevard & Sturt Street, Melbourne Music: Jazz 4 June | 7.30pm | 2 hrs 10 minutes (incl. interval) Booking Details: www.melbournerecital.com.au/events/2016/robert-glasper-trio-usa Tickets also available at the door. Getting There: walk or #1 tram. www.melbournerecital.com.au Straight White Men The Glass Menagerie A Belvoir production at Malthouse Theatre The Coopers Malthouse, home of Malthouse Theatre: 113 Sturt Street, Southbank Theatre 18 May – 5 June | Tuesday 6:30pm, Wednesday – Saturday 7:30pm, Saturday 1pm, Sunday 5pm | 165 minutes Booking Details: phone +61 (0)3 9685 5111, email [email protected], or in person at the venue. Getting There: walk, or any tram travelling up St Kilda Road to stop #17, or tram #1 to stop #18. www.malthousetheatre.com.au The Glass Menagerie is a story of memory, fragility, and delusion told through a fractured kaleidoscope on stage and screen. Meet the formidable Amanda Wingfield, a faded Southern Belle with delusions of grandeur. The year is 1937, and she’s trapped with her two adult children, the frustrated Tom and the cripplingly shy Laura. All three of them yearn for a brighter future but none can break free from their past. Could Laura’s “gentleman” caller be the answer? Fresh from a sold-out season in Sydney, and starring Wentworth’s Pamela Rabe as the family’s volatile matriarch, this production will have you grieving for the inevitable disintegration of a family that is a stone’s throw away from collapse. Having played alongside Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Kenny Garrett and Esperanza Spalding and contributed to the records of hip hop luminaries Kendrick Lamar, Q-Tip and Yasiin Bey, Glasper is without doubt one of the most versatile and influential artists in jazz today, with a style that is at once familiar and entirely unique. 22 23 opera The Pearlfishers (Bizet) Opera Australia State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne: 100 St Kilda Road, Melbourne Opera 28 May | 1pm | 120 minutes Booking Details: www.artscentremelbourne.com.au/whats-on/opera/the-pearlfishers Getting There: Arts Centre Melbourne is the host and hub of the ISPA Congress. www.opera.org.au The Pearlfishers paints a picture of paradise, of golden sands and colourful silks. That soulstirring, chart-topping duet is just one highlight of a beautiful score. In the hands of master storyteller Michael Gow, Bizet’s romantic opera is a compelling tale. Two men swear loyalty to each other but their love for the same woman is stronger than any vow. As the opera unfolds, temptation duels with duty, true hearts turn black with jealousy and rash choices bring regrets. Conducted by Guillaume Tourniaire, and featuring Emma Matthews, Dmitry Korchak and José Carbó, this new Pearlfishers offers audiences a chance to hear Bizet’s passionate music in a new light. Performed in French with English surtitles. children and young people At a time when the greater political landscape in Australia is moving towards an Asia/Asianinclusive vision, this work in a very genuine way is trying to locate the form, essence and spirit of Asian art forms, as embodied by Australian performers, in a performance that speaks via the English language and the works of Shakespeare to a contemporary Australian audience. The Walking Neighbourhood Lenine Burke Arts Centre Melbourne: 100 St Kilda Road, Melbourne Participatory work led by children and young people 4 and 5 June | Saturday 2pm, Sunday 10am and 2pm | 70 minutes Booking Details: www.artscentremelbourne.com.au/whats-on/2016/families/the- walking-neighbourhood Getting There: Arts Centre Melbourne is the host and hub of the ISPA Congress. www.artscentremelbourne.com.au In The Walking Neighbourhood young people take the lead and give you the opportunity to experience life through their eyes, as they take you on a unique guided walk of Melbourne’s Arts Precinct. In a series of short walks, they will take you on an exploration of the places and stories they think are the most important. Each walk is one-of-a-kind and has been carefully curated for participants to learn, reflect, create or explore something or someplace. Audiences will delight in storytelling and discovery, as they are introduced to some of the more curious, intriguing and interesting facets of our city. Expect the unexpected in each walk, with music, dance, humour and a little bit of everyone’s own experiences wrapped up into this heartwarming event. circus dance The Magic Hour Cicero’s Circle Theatre Company La Mama Courthouse: 349 Drummond Street, Carlton Dance: Modern Contemporary 1 – 12 June | Wednesday 6:30pm, Thursday – Saturday 7:30pm, Sunday 4pm | 105 minutes Booking Details: www.lamama.com.au Getting There: any tram down Swanston Street to Melbourne University, then walk. www.lamama.com.au The Magic Hour is an exciting and flamboyant evening of music, dance and theatre that brings together Kathakali and Odissi from India, Butoh from Japan, with Shakespearean theatre from Elizabethan England. Things NOT of this EARTH Circus Showcase 2016: Dress Rehearsal National Institute of Circus Arts (NICA) NICA National Circus Centre: 41 Green Street, Prahran Circus 3 June | 7:30pm | 90 – 110 minutes Booking Details: Open dress rehearsal for ISPA delegates. Email [email protected] with the subject line ISPA Congress to book. Getting There: train to Prahran Station and five-minute walk, #6 tram down St Kilda Road to stop #30, or taxi. Information on transport options can be found on the NICA website at www.nica.com.au/contacts-pm-2.html. www.nica.com.au Directed by renowned circus and theatre artist Hayden Spencer with associate direction from award winning circus artist and NICA graduate Emma Serjeant, Things NOT of this EARTH incorporates elite-level circus skills in a satirical romp towards an extra-terrestrial utopia. Distinctive circus acts will be presented against the backdrop of a sci-fi inspired “B movie”. In the tradition of all things “B movie”, the production will feature a diversity of other-worldly delights including a killer hermaphrodite from outer space, a giant foot-juggling strawberry and a soccer-ball-juggling alien. Fourteen of NICA’s final year artists will present spectacular solo acts including aerial straps and rope, Chinese pole, contortion, handstands, hula hoops, juggling, rolla bolla, roue Cyr, tightwire and trapeze. 24 25 theatre Three Short Works Lloyd Jones La Mama Theatre: 205 Faraday Street, Carlton Theatre: Experimental June 1 – June 5 | Wednesday – Friday 7:30pm, Sunday 5:00pm | 60 minutes Booking details: www.lamama.com.au Getting There: Any tram to Melbourne University down Swanston St and walk. Website: www.lamama.com.au Since 1974 Lloyd Jones has been engaged in non-text-based theatrical forms, mainly at La Mama and in this production continues his investigations into making theatre that is liberating to both performers and audience. Interdisciplinary This involves examining the outcome of three apparently disconnected and nonsensical titles and statements, to discover what unexpected ideas emerge from beneath the surface. Weekly Ticket: the artist at the station Madeleine Flynn and Tim Humphrey Art Projects Footscray Station: Footscray Train Station, Hopkins and Irving Streets, Footscray Interdisciplinary: A grand experiment 1 June | 10:30am | 120 minutes Booking Details: no booking required. Getting there: train to Footscray Station. www.weeklyticket.org What if a public artwork was an artist? Weekly Ticket installs artist David Wells at Footscray Station every week for 15 years. David begins the project aged 55 and completes it at 70, the new “retirement” age. As the artist adapts to his environment and his environment to him, extraordinary collaborations will emerge. Sometimes he will be alone. Sometimes he will be in a crowd. He will be disguised in plain sight. The typical will become surreal and the extraordinary a regular occurrence, as commuters, locals and visitors become part of a living and evolving public artwork. Over 15 years, many local, national and international artists will become part of the expanded performative conversation. Weekly Ticket begins 3 February 2016 and finishes on 2 February 2031. 26