Urban by CIRCOLOMBIA. Presented by Sydney Festival in
association with Arts Projects Australia. Artistic Director, Felicity
Simpson; directed by Mark Storer; original theatre director, Jean-Yves
Penafiel; Company Captain, José Henry Caycedo Cassierra. Riverside
Theatre, Parramatta, January 15-27, 2013.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
January 16
If you think of Circus Oz as quintessentially Australian (see my review of From the Ground Up
in Canberra Critics’ Circle, October 5, 2012), then you can see
Circolombia as playing a similar role for Colombia. The origin of the
company lies in the Foundation Circo Para Todos, founded by Felicity
Simpson in Cali, Colombia in 1995; the establishment of a professional
circus school specifically dedicated to underprivileged children; and
its development into Circolombia producing shows and providing jobs for
the graduates of Circo Para Todos – and spreading Columbian culture
around the globe.
I contrasted From the Ground Up
against the Cirque du Soleil as “no-bullshit Australian culture, which
grabs our audience by the throat and makes us cheer the daredevils on,
laugh, and be made aware of social justice all at once. This is the art
of Circus Oz”. The same can be said of Circolombia in Urban. Just change the culture.
Cali is a city very unlike Melbourne, and Colombia quite unlike Australia. Before Urban
gets the exciting daredevil circus action under way, while we wait for
rather too many latecomers to be settled in their seats, a continuous
video is shown taken through the back window of a bus on its route
around Cali. At a stop, a young boy – maybe 8 or 9 – jumps up on the
rear bumper and hangs onto a rope, obviously permanently attached for
people to travel on the outside. Looking in, he notices the camera on
the inside looking out, giving us the steady gaze of the already
worldly-wise, rather than the cheeky grin of a child that we might
expect.
The action begins with a white figure lying
dormant in a dim spotlight, brought to life in stages by puffs of breath
from a dark mysterious figure who disappears in the gloom. The silvery
white figure rises to find herself alone, leaving the stage apparently
in search of something. There is a pause, in blackout, then a great
explosion of a dozen men, of racial backgrounds from almost effete
whites in street-wise hip-hop gear, as you might see in New York,
through to tall startlingly muscular Afro-Americans. And they dance –
do they ever dance! – to the ever-present reggae rhythm of South
American hip-hop, in Spanish rhyme, with all the athleticism of that
urban counter-culture. Circus Oz looks rather sedate in comparison!
The
men’s circus work was focussed on floor and tightrope tumbling and
somersaulting, often up to heights where I was afraid they would hit the
lighting rig, while the two women concentrated on aerial work. I can’t
tell from the program which of Diana Valentina Ramirez Londono and
Julia Alejandra Sanchez Aja did which solo, but one was original,
beautiful and scary on a high suspended ring and the other equally so on
a slack rope trapeze which swung over the audience. At least she was
attached to a safety harness, but there was nothing to save the ring
performer if she had come off many metres above the stage.
As
in Circus Oz, where Ghenoa Gela, a Torres Strait Islander from
Rockhampton, told some of his story as an Indigenous person in
Australia, we were told the story of poverty in Columbia by one of the
men, whose Spanish name passed me by too quickly, but whose story was
displayed in English on the screen, which was also used throughout the
show as a backdrop. Mind you, I didn’t often notice what was on the
screen when people were flying through space, always with the threat of
an injurious landing.
In the end, for me, Urban
works because the danger and risk inherent in the circus represented the
danger and risks that these performers grew up with in Cali, Colombia.
Here is where Urban diverged from Circus Oz. From the Ground Up
was an artistic metaphor with a highly positive view of multicultural
Australian life. I’m sure there must be aspects of Colombian culture
which could be viewed in this light. But Urban is about the
underbelly of city life – which could also be shown about Melbourne, of
course – and the endemic poverty out of which has grown the success, at
least for these performers, of creating a show, as Felicity Simpson
describes it, “at the forefront of a revolutionary new style of circus”.
And, to conclude, watch for the man (again whose name
I can’t distinguish from the program) who gyrates as the hub of a large
hoop, becoming a spinning and rolling human wheel. This scene, his
solo piece in the dance of life, almost in darkness as if the twirling
of his body is an existential force, was not only powerful dramatically,
but was so much more significant artistically than the equivalent
physical exercise I have seen in Cirque du Soleil.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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