Fans of flamenco can experience a different spin on the art form on Sept. 26 at Glenlyon Norfolk SchoolB次元官网网址檚 Denford Hall.
Bordeaux, France-based La Caramelita Flamenco Company presents Nritya, an intimate, powerful production that explores the mysteries, origins and nuances of flamenco as they relate to its early history in India.
La Caramelita artistic director and dancer Deborah Dawson, a native Vancouverite who now lives in Bordeaux with her husband, flamenco singer Alejandro Mend铆a, calls Nritya a B次元官网网址渕usical tapestry that showcases both multiculturalism and the power of plurality.B次元官网网址
B次元官网网址淲e have used existing parallels between two cultures to tell the story of an immigrant family and an artist connected to a seemingly distant art form,B次元官网网址 she says.
B次元官网网址淎s a first generation Canadian, born to Malaysian parents of Indian descent, it was a struggle to find my identity. I stumbled upon flamenco in my early teens and soon found out it has some of its roots in India. The idea that I had come full circle, studying an art form that shared the same background as my family, fueled me to move to Spain, the birthplace of flamenco.B次元官网网址
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The 8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 26 stop at Glenlyon opens a six-show tour in B.C. and Alberta for the company. Tickets, $35 and $30 in advance, can be purchased online at , in person at MunroB次元官网网址檚 or IvyB次元官网网址檚 bookstores or by calling 1-604-241-7292. If available, tickets at the door will be $5 more.
Find more information on the company at .
editor@mondaymag.com
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