Terpsichore: Voices in Dance
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.
Episodes
Wednesday May 05, 2021
Wednesday May 05, 2021
London-based choreographer Holly Blakey has built a successful career choreographing music videos for the likes of Florence and the Machine and Coldplay, as well as on projects for art galleries and fashion houses such as Gucci and Dior. She has also created extensively for stage, premiering Cowpuncher and its sequel Cowpuncher My Ass—which both explore cowboy archetypes and the Spaghetti Western film genre—at the Southbank Centre in 2018 and 2019 respectively.
Monday Mar 15, 2021
Monday Mar 15, 2021
Northern Irish choreographer Oona Doherty was announced as this year's recipient of the Venice Dance Biennale's Silver Lion Award. Having performed across Europe before returning to Belfast to focus on creating her own work, her pieces include Hope Hunt and the Ascension into Lazarus, an exploration of masculinity, Hard to Be Soft: A Belfast Prayer, an ode to the toughness of Oona's hometown, and Lady Magma: The Birth of a Cult, an exploration of female sexuality.
Wednesday Feb 24, 2021
Wednesday Feb 24, 2021
Vidya Patel is a Birmingham-based dance artist with a background in Kathak. In 2015, she represented the South Asian Category in the Grand Finals of the inaugural BBC Young Dancer competition, and has since performed in works by the likes of Sir Richard Alston and Gary Clarke. Currently a Young Associate Artist at Sadler’s Wells, Vidya is developing her own choreographic practice, collaborating with artists including Shammi Pithia, Connor Scott, and Hetain Patel.
Friday Feb 12, 2021
Friday Feb 12, 2021
Beverley Glean MBE has been championing African and Caribbean dance in the U.K. for over 20 years. Having founded Irie Dance Theatre as a touring company back in 1985, she has more recently been focused on working in communities, schools and higher education, undertaking extensive research into how to make university courses in dance more diverse, founding Irie's BA (Hons) Diverse Dance Styles course, the first of its kind in Europe.
Friday Jan 15, 2021
Friday Jan 15, 2021
Alla Kovgan is a Moscow-born, New York-based dance film director. Recently renowned for directing the acclaimed Cunningham 3D documentary, Alla is currently working on a feature film in collaboration with Korean choreographer Eun Me Anh, who is widely known as the Pina Bausch of Asia. As audiences' only current access to dance is through a screen due to the global pandemic, I thought it was a perfect time to talk to Alla about the specificities of dance film as an art form.
Wednesday Dec 30, 2020
Wednesday Dec 30, 2020
Rosie Kay is an acclaimed Birmingham-based choreographer known for using dance to tackle difficult topics including war, religion, and politics. In this episode, we talk about her incredible career, from her early days touring European opera house stages with Polish Dance Theatre to championing female perspectives on stage, and the creation of her latest triple bill of solos, Absolute Solo II, which marks 5 years since she last performed and 21 years since her first ever solo show.
Friday Dec 04, 2020
Friday Dec 04, 2020
Ellen van Schuylenburch is a legendary contemporary dance artist best known as a founding member of Michael Clark Company. In line with Clark's current retrospective at The Barbican, I thought it was the perfect time to speak with Ellen about her fascinating career, from dancing with Netherlands Dance Theatre 2 to training under Merce Cunningham, being part of Cindy Lauper's "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" music video to performing bare bottomed alongside Michael Clark and post punk band The Fall.
Friday Nov 27, 2020
Friday Nov 27, 2020
Paris-based journalist Laura Cappelle writes about dance for The Guardian, The Financial Times, and The New York Times. Having attained her PhD in sociology last year, she’s recently edited her first book, A New History of Dance in the West. We spoke to her about dance writing, the relationship between critics and artists, and overlooked female dance practitioners.