Showing posts with label Dance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dance. Show all posts

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Big toe crew bags Asian hip-hop competition prize

Big toe crew bags Asian hip-hop competition prize

A Vietnamese hip-hop dance crew has bagged the first prize at Southeast
Asia's Battle of the Year (BOTY) contest in Singapore


The 11-member crew, which belong to the top hip-hop dance group in Viet
Nam , Big Toe, vied with five other hip-hop crews from Thailand ,
Malaysia , Laos , Singapore , and Indonesia for the prize.


The crew will now have the chance to compete at the World BOTY, which
will take place in Montpellier , France , next month.


"Although we have sent our members to compete at BOTY every year since
2005, this is the first time a Big Toe crew has won the contest," said
Big Toe's leader, Nguyen Viet Thanh.


The nine-day contest
in France will draw 19 crews from five continents, including
representatives from the Republic of Korea , France , Brazil , and
Taiwan , who are considered to be Big Toe's closest competitors.


Founded in 1992 with seven original members, Big Toe currently has 60
members, divided into four dance groups. They are widely recognised as
Vietnam 's first hip hop dance troupe.


With a number of
top prizes won at a variety of international competitions, Big Toe were
awarded the Certificate of Merit on Oct. 12 by the Vietnam Electronic
Sport and Recreational Sport Association under the Ministry of Culture,
Sport and Tourism.


Big Toe are planning to tour around
France and Germany next year to present their hip-hop theatre
production, Cam Xuc Thay Doi (Change of Emotion)./.

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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Citadel dances show value of preservation

Citadel dances show value of preservation

The striking performance of ancient citadel dances at Hanoi 's Ly
Thai To Garden last night was a stark reminder of the need to research
and preserve the nation's cultural heritage.


he dances from the Thang Long (former name of Hanoi ) era were
presented at the garden, near the post office on Hoan Kiem Lake ,
to celebrate the city's 1,000th anniversary.


Performed by members of the Hanoi Dancers' Association, they have stood
the test of time thanks to a project led by People's Artist Le Ngoc Canh
in the 1980s to collect 54 ancient dances and recorded and revive them.


Canh said the collection included spiritual Buddhist dances like Luc Cung Dance, Giai Oan Thich Ket Dance.


"However, I regret that many ancient dances have died out," he said.


For instance, he remembered watching a Light Dance at Dong Nhan
village in today's Hai Ba Trung district in 1954, but when he conducted
his study, nobody could remember the dance.


The same fate had befallen the Cup Dance of Moc village, in today's Thanh Xuan district.


Canh said the nation risked losing other historic cultural activities
with the passage of time unless moves were made to record them.


For example, former Ha Tay province still contained ancient cultural
traces which had not been studied properly and documented.


Nevertheless, the dance research that had been carried out in the past
25 years and been very fruitful and had recorded genres in Hanoi
including folk, worship, religious and royal dances and had underpinned
revival performances, such as the one last night.


Canh said many of the royal dances in Thang Long had mingled with those
practised in the Hue citadel under the Nguyen Dynasty while many of
the others were associated with festivals.


"The old dances will live forever, together with the village culture," Canh said.


Bai Bong dance, for example, which originated in Phu Nhieu village,
Phu Xuyen district, was one among the most typical dances from the
project archives to be performed at the concert.


There are now four teams from four generations practising Bai Bong Dance in Phu Nhieu Commune, he said.


Dancer Nguyen Thi Ga, who just died a week ago aged 102, had been
performing Bai Bong since she was 10 and had helped keep the style going
until she got too old.


Canh said that following on
from the archive project, a documentary to record 30 of the dances was
being made and modern choreographers were hoping to use the old dances
to compose modern versions.


"The central matter is
budget," Canh said. "Old dancers have joined the documentary project for
the past five years through their own enthusiasm and got no pay at
all."


The budget for organising old-style dance
festivals in the traditional Lunar New Year periods between 2008-10 had
been limited. Each dancer had received only 10,000 VND (0.5 USD) for
their performance plus a transport subsidy./.

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