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Did your mother come from Ireland? Or perhaps your second cousin twice removed by marriage? Whatever, as anyone who has ever been in New York on St. Patrick's Day will agree, there's something Irish about everyone, and it is that something which is sharply captured in 'Riverdance,' the spectacular dance show, where its very face is the map of Ireland. As everyone now knows 'Riverdance' started in Dublin in 1995, remarkably as a brilliantly conceived spin-off from a seven-minute intermission piece in the 1994 Eurovision Song Contest. It has danced a long way since then, developing into an international phenomenon, with troupes careening and criss-crossing the world; not so long ago there was even one 'Riverdance' company installed for well over a year in New York.
The concept of 'Riverdance' is both simple and adroit. A Celtic-looking rock-like setting (actually it seems more Druidically Stonehenge than anything else) with highly coloured projections to vary the look, a load of Irish music and a lot of Irish dancing. The huge popular success of the show derives in part from Moya Doherty's canny producing - all pieces are put together with breathtaking theatricality - and John McColgan's swift, deft staging, which works like a computer but still manages to pervade an unexpected but not unpleasant impression of homespun charm over-riding, or perhaps over-dancing, its awe-inspiring efficiency, and its sweet and sure ability to deliver on every promise, implicit and explicit, suggested by the very idea of an Irish dance spectacular.
For, yes, in the final count, you do indeed go to 'Riverdance' primarily for the Irish dancing, always the matrix of the show, and for Bill Whelan's wonderful score and the Irish musicians - who are indeed always splendid. Yet, there could well have been a snag here. The problem is that it is difficult to create and maintain a lively choreographic form out of Irish step dancing, which has a limited vocabulary, rigid arms, a stiff upper-body and an overall tendency towards exuberance rather than emotion. It is something like an Irish stew - awfully good in itself but as a constant diet it could get monotonous, which is why it was so smart to introduce into the mix Spanish flamenco and American tap dance, two dance forms with which the Irish steps have much in common, even to the extent of actual historic links.
I first saw 'Riverdance' in London, the year before its shattering entry into New York's Radio City Music Hall, and it was obvious to me that this was something fresh and new, and something moreover that America would take to its heart. It was a natural - given the Irish ethnic heritage rooted in the United States from sea to shining sea. Yet even I was surprised at the warmth of that first Radio City welcome. The audience roared. For myself I embraced the memory of my Irish grandfather, but it was just one of those New York nights when everyone's mother came from Ireland - or, at the very least, there was something in them Irish.
For information about Riverdance's Journey over the last 13 years and the people responsible for its success - click here.
ACT 1 |
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Scene 1 - Reel Around the Sun
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The sun brings life and light and fire, the opening dance sequence celebrates this benevolent masculine power. The sun is the light of the morning, exuberant and clear.
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Scene 2 - The Heart's Cry
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There is also that other primeval mystery, the salmon swimming upstream, the blind urgings of nature, heart yearning to heart. We need to sustain each other; we keep this knowledge in song since the beginning of time. Click here to see the full wording for 'The Heart's Cry'. |
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Scene 3 - The Countess Cathleen
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Sensual, nurturing, independent and fierce, the power of women as they celebrate themselves, as they challenge men in a dance of empowerment. |
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Scene 4 - Caoineadh Chu Chulainn (Lament)
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A lone piper mourns Chu Chulainn, the implacable Bronze Age warrior, the great hero of Celtic myth. |
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The brute power of elemental forces, beyond human control, beyond human understanding. The defiant courage of those who stand out against these forces, who will not be beaten down. |
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The myth of Mad Sweeney, Suibhne or Shivna, haunts Ireland since mediaeval times. Driven by forces inside of himself, outside himself, a man dances desperately in the power of the moon. The powers are cruel and arbitrary, female and savage. Click here to see the full wording of 'Shivna'. |
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In ancient Ireland fire and pride and beauty come out of the south, from the land of the sun. The power of the sun invests itself in the passion of the dancer. |
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Scene 8 - Slip Into Spring - The Harvest
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The wheel of the seasons turns slowly, from harvest through dormant winter into the miracle of spring. New growth, exhilaration, the world turns and is made new again. |
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Our story begins in the evocation of the Riverwoman, it moves through the dawn of history as the river moves through the land. As the power of the river grows, as the barren earth becomes fertile, as men and women grow in their sense of themselves, our story rises until it floods the world in a vital, joyous riot of celebration. Click here to see the full wording of 'Riverdance'. |
Act 2 |
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From the mid-19th century, hunger and famine and ambition drove the Irish out of their home island, across the Atlantic to a New World. Lover parted from lover, families and communities were split apart. |
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Scene 11 - Lift the Wings
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While those souls who were forced to emigrate were faced with the heartbreak of separation, their human spirit was often lifted by a defiant hope at the prospect of a new life. Click here to see the full wording of 'Lift the Wings'. |
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Scene 12 - Harbour of the New World
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The music and dance that forged a sense of identity are now exposed to new and unfamiliar cultures. Ultimately, in the blending and fusion that follows, the emigrants find that the totality of human experience and expression is greater even than the sum of its many diverse parts.
I) Heal their Hearts - Freedom: From the darkness, a lone voice sings and is joined by other immigrants, reflecting on the universal yearning of the dispossessed wherever they make their home. Click here to see the full wording of 'Heal their Hearts'.
II) Trading Taps: The wealth of the poor is in song, dance and story. Under street-lamps in the new cities the dancers perform with pride in their heritage, curious to see what other traditions bring, struggling to bridge the gap between old dreams and new realities.
III) Morning in Macedonia/The Russian Dervish: Meeting the new, what we learn first is that there is something familiar in what is strange, something strange in what we had thought familiar. A tune from another place, another lifetime, can turn and haunt in the heart.
IV) Heartbeat of the World - Andalucia: The beat of the mother's heart in the womb is the first rhythm we hear, the beat that grounds us. The world is that heartbeat, amplified, made rich and always new.
V) Ri Ra: In the great dance of the world, songs and stories whirl and blend as the old game plays out again; the human family flirting and charming, learning and singing and teaching. Joy in life, in the great, brash party of life. Unquenchable, unstoppable.
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Scene 13 - Home and the Heartland
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Always the child of the emigrant feels the tug of the homeplace; always the child feels the urge to return. What she or he brings there is a sustaining knowledge: we are who we once were; we are who we have become. With newfound confidence and pride, the child of the emigrant carries treasured memories home to their birthplace. A long journey ends under a native sky, a new and richer journey has taken its place. Click here for full wording of 'Home and the Heartland'. |
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We are one kind. We are one people now, our voices blended, our music a great world in which we can feel everywhere at home. Ni Neart go chur le cheile, together we are strong. |
Leads |
Craig Ashurst; Liam Ayres; Maria Buffini; Marty Dowds (Dance Captain); Alana Mallon |
Dance Troupe |
Patrick Barnett; Stephen Brennan; Karl Callaghan; Zeph Caissie; Brendan Campbell; Mary Jo Cange; Maeve Croke (Dance Captain); Jillian Farmer; Mark Gorman; Deidre Hamilton; Meghan Lucey; Yvonne Lynch; Marcus Maloney; Mairead Masuda; Fiona McCabe; Ryan McCarthy; Claire McCole; Ciara McGillan; Christina McGrath; Brian Mullane; Damian Murphy; Lisa Murphy; Anne Reilly; Anne Toner |
Band |
Matt Bashford (Uillean Pipes/Low Whistle/Tin Whistle); Steve Holloway (Drums/Percussion/Bodhran); Toby Kelly (Saxophone); Pat Mangan (Fiddle); Cathal Synnott (Musical Director/Keyboards) |
Singers |
Laura Yanez (Soloist) and members of the Company |
Flamenco |
Carmen Armengou |
Moscow Folk Ballet Company |
Anna Brovkina (Dance Captain); Sergey Bukreev; Andrij Cybyk; Natalia Ejova; Igor Karpenko; Natia Rtveliashvili; Evgeniya Starodubova; Iouri Zhivoglotov |
Tappers |
Jason E. Bernard; Parker Hall |
Baritone Solo |
Michael Samuels |
Leads |
Caterina Coyne; Josephy Moriarty; Carla O'Brien; Jason Oremus; Aislinn Ryan; Alan Scariff |
Dance Troupe |
Donna Marie Boyle; Nina Burke; Cara Casey; Patrick Coyne; Damian Doherty; Niamh Eustace; Anthony Fallon; Orla Griffin; Kieran Hardiman; Christina Havlin; Patricia Henry; Alan Kenefick; Ellie Maguire; Siobhan Manson; Niamh McDarby; Laura Minogue; Padraic Moyles; Rachel Mulvihill; Sarah Murray; Chris Naish; Niamh O'Connor; Mark O'Loughlin; Damian O'Neill; Andrew O'Reilly; Kelly Stephens |
Band |
Zoe Conway (Fiddle); Ken Edge (Saxophone); Martin McCormack (Uillean Pipes/Tin Whistle/Low Whistle); Guy Rickarby (Drums/Percussion/Bodhran) |
Singers |
Hayley Griffiths (Soloist) and members of the Company |
Flamenco |
Rocio Montoya |
Moscow Folk Ballet Company |
Liubov Marchukova; Kirill Nikitin; Elena Shibaeva; Alexey Sukharev (Dance Captain); Margarita Trotsenko; Oleg Vasiliev |
Tappers |
Corey Hutchins; Kelly Isaac |
Baritone Solo |
Mark Hall |
No troupe details available at the present time. Details will be posted as soon as they become available.
The Flying Squad was launched in 1997 and has performed around the world for a wide range of clients including Ernst and Young; L'Oreal; The Red Cross; Armani and The Grammy Awards. For more details about the Flying Squad click here.
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