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Sao Paulo Dance Company, Goyo Montero's Anthem, photo Iari Davies
Sao Paulo Dance Company, Goyo Montero's Anthem, photo Iari Davies

São Paulo Dance Company visit The Lowry on first ever UK tour

Home » To do & see » São Paulo Dance Company visit The Lowry on first ever UK tour

Theatre audiences can look forward to some Brazilian sunshine this spring when São Paulo Dance Company tours the UK and Ireland for the first time.

The company comes to The Lowry, Salford with a triple bill of contemporary works by some of the world’s leading Spanish and Latin American choreographers – and artistic director Inês Bogéa is keen to share São Paulo’s electric energy.

Founded in 2008, São Paulo Dance Company has produced more than 100 classical and contemporary works, toured nearly 20 countries and performed to more than 900,000 people. And now local audiences can enjoy their expertise.

Artistic director Inês Bogéa, photo by Wilian Aguiar
Artistic director Inês Bogéa, photo by Wilian Aguiar

“São Paulo is a dance company with a very special Brazilian accent,” Inês says. “We have the passion for dance, we have the energy of Brazil and we love to share that with audiences around the world.”

Inés, who was the founding director when the company was created by the Brazilian state government 15 years ago, says music and dance are integral to life in her country.

“Movement and the sensation of dance is so much a part of our culture, we celebrate life through dance,” she says. “We dance around the kitchen when we are cooking, we dance at a party with our friends, we dance because we are happy and we also dance when sometimes we are sad.

“We have a temperature which is hot, we have sun for most parts of the year, and I think this affects our emotions.”

The tour features a triple bill – Anthem by Spanish choreographer Goyo Montero, Gnawa by Spain’s Nacho Duato and Agora by Cassi Abranches, who was born in São Paulo and has recently choreographed part of Birmingham Royal Ballet’s Black Sabbath – The Ballet.

“The three works talk about rituals in different ways,” says Inês. “Anthem looks at how we are connected through a common purpose that leads us to recognise ourselves as the same group. Gnawa talks about the rituals of people who live in the North of Africa and their connections with the natural world. And in Agora we are talking about time, memories and the reverberation of Brazilian dance.”

Sao Paulo Dance Company, Cassi Abranches's Agora, photo Camilo Munoz + Iari Davies 7, brighter
Sao Paulo Dance Company, Cassi Abranches’s Agora, photo Camilo Munoz + Iari Davies 7, brighter

The tour of 14 towns and cities is presented by Dance Consortium, a group of 19 venues across the UK and Ireland who have come together to bring leading contemporary dance companies from across the globe to local audiences.

“I hope that on this tour the audiences enjoy themselves and feel connected with the energy, emotions and beauty of the dancers,” Inês says. “An audience is a very important part of a performance.

“We are looking forward to showing audiences a little bit of our culture and, through the dance, we will all feel the energy of Brazil.”

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Sao Paulo Dance Company is at The Lowry, Salford on 12 and 13 March 2024.

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Written by
Carmel Thomason
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Avatar photo Written by Carmel Thomason