dance empowerment.

September 3, 2007 at 4:59 pm (Cape Town, South Africa, africa, art, dance, human rights)

Friday night, after a full day of school, volunteering, rain and dinner, we walked over to the Baxter theatre to see the Cape Town Dance Festival.  The festival was advertised as a dance show full of different types of dance from modern to ballet to meringue.  The show was not just a dance recital or even just a dance show, it was a political, social commentary that transcended “art for art’s sake.”

The show began with a video screen of a news broadcast, spitting out statistics of rape and domestic violence in South Africa, with are very high statistics.  A very intense and moving modern dance followed.  It was effective in sending a message because it was not too explicit or graphically about rape, but the choreography and attitude of the dancers made their point very clear. 

Another dance that was very powerful was about Long St., which is the street in Cape Town comparable to Adams Morgan of Washington D.C., or Boylston St. in Boston, completely lined with bars and young people at night.  The dance was accompanied with a speaker, who told a story about girls on Long St, which involved, fun and dancing, but also violence and drugs.  Not only did the dancers and speaker make some other important points about the problems and dangers of South Africa, but the dancers were almost inhuman.  The way they moved their bodies with such precision and synchrony was hectic, as a South African might put it. 

Along with the pieces with messages, there were also dances purely for fun and show: including a group of curvy women with huge smiles dancing a meringue type dance, and a group of young women and men in all black dancing a slinky routine to an Edith Piaf song.

Overall, I thought the show was very empowering to women.  News casters reading off statistics to not show the true nature of the dangers that women face in Cape Town.  Dance is a way for women not only to be empowered, but to use art to comment on and inform others of the terrible social situations that will not get into some people’s minds in other ways but to see it through art.

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