Pubdate: Mon, 20 Sep 2004 Source: National Business Review (New Zealand) Copyright: 2004 National Business Review. Contact: http://www.nbr.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2913 Author: John Smythe Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) DANCE-THEATRE MAKES KIDS TALK ABOUT DRUGS Raewyn Hill's long-awaited larger cast dance-theatre work, Angels with Dirty Feet, has premiered at Downstage before touring to Dunedin, Auckland and Christchurch. It explores the realm of drug addiction and is inspired by Australian author Luke Davies' 2001 book Candy. Hill describes herself as a child whose education included nothing about drugs. She believes works like hers should tour small towns and schools, funded from the $3 million recently allocated for drug education. Children "need to be treated like adults by adults," she writes in her programme note. "If they are smart enough to understand and access drugs then they need to be outsmarted, not lectured ... Give them something that will encourage them to feel, think and talk about" the issue. This, then, is a work with a social purpose. Extensive research, a collaborative workshopping process involving dancers, actors and dramaturg Duncan Sarkies, and a further period of rehearsal and production have generated a compelling work. It treads a fine line between the twin pitfalls of demonising or romanticising a real problem that touches almost everyone regardless of their age or social standing. The audience arrives to see six cast members standing on stage, clad in grey tops and black trousers, while a flame-haired seventh (Gabrielle Thomas) hammers and saws at bits of wood, making crosses. There is quite a pile beside her and throughout the show it keeps on growing. Gabrielle, Edwin Wright, Claire Lissman, Paora Taurima, Sarah Sproull, Craig Bary and Nathan Meister introduce themselves, at a microphone, with quirky and personable insights. A cheesy rendition of Welcome to Our World follows, complete with obvious mimetic gestures, then metamorphoses thankfully into an energetic dance full of ups and downs and flinging from slings. Dance sequences that variously represent states of being related to drug use are interspersed with narrated segments. Nathan shares information from an official pamphlet entitled "So you want to inject drugs!" that details the relatively safe use of the paraphernalia, not to mention of your body. Addicts in recovery meet and share. The demands and pressures of life take intense verbal form. A mastermind quiz sequence disintegrates into a challenging reinforcing of stereotypes. The "last race of the day" at a race meeting uses line-dancing motifs to epitomise the social demands for conformity. An especially searing phone call between an addict daughter (Sarah) in the North Island and her doting father in the South (Edwin) ends with him singing the lullaby "Hush little baby." The question, if not the answer, is clear: has he offered true fatherly love or over-protection and over-indulgence? This alone will provoke useful discussion on issues of responsibility. The ensemble work is impeccable and in the solo and duo sequences, Sarah, Craig, Paora (the three who danced Night for Raewyn last year) and Claire are exceptional. The cast and roles may change as the tour progresses. A useful insert in the programme gives titles to the 18 episodes that comprise the 75-minute performance. Angels with Dirty Feet is a welcome addition to Raewyn Hill's impressive body of work. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek