(Above: Martin Ricky aka Lisa
Bobbert and Cast - pic by Val Adamson)
31 Years of Shall We Dance - A glittering, Joyous celebration! (Review by Shannon Kenny)
What better way to usher in springtime in Durban than the 31st anniversary of Shall We Dance, the annual showcase that has dance enthusiasts returning to The Playhouse Opera each year. This year, international guest stars and seven dance schools from Durban take to the stage performing Ballroom, Latin, Indian, Modern, Hip Hop and Ballet.
The fabulous Lisa Bobbert brings extra sparkle and all the laughs as our genial MC - first appearing as kindly car-guard Delphine - with a few more surprises for the audience throughout the show, featuring the supremely-talented students of the International School of Performing Arts (ISPA), of which Bobbert is a director and tutor.
The individual numbers in each half - where each company had their moment to sparkle and shine - were bookended by glittering cast numbers that had the thrilled audience whooping and clapping and singing along.
(Right: Khulu and Sthe – pic by Val Adamson)
Khulu and Sthe’s opening waltz, to Billie Eilish’s Hostage was elegance personified, eliciting wistful “aah’s” from the audience members in the seats behind me, while it was their quickstep in the second half that clearly won them fans for life.
Mark Wilson Dance Studio’s mellow rhumba contrasted the fast-paced Latin energy that international stars Darren and Marina brought with their number, Magalenha and the contemporary punchiness of Abracadabra by the Young Dancers’ Project.
The Young Dancers’ Project tap and Hip Hop fusion We Found Love was a crowd-pleaser, as was Mark Wilson Studio’s sultry samba Slo Mo in the second half.
What would a dance extravaganza be without a little bit of Bob Fosse?
Razzmatazz’s I Wanna Be a Dancing Man and Nowadays and the ISPA’s They Both Reached for the Gun were a fitting tribute.
The ISPA’s first and second year students brought a wonderfully characterised and timed theatricality to their performance, putting firmly in the spotlight their triple threat singing-dancing-acting chops, with James Armstrong featuring as Billy Flynn, Grace McIlroy as Roxie and Jenna van Eyssen as Mary Sunshine.
Strictly Ballroom wrapped their Le Jazz Hot performance in a swirl of pink candy and later, their graceful celebration of The Sound of Music came to the stage in emerald shimmer.
Rudra Dance Theatre brought classical and contemporary Indian dance in an explosion of colour, energy and amazing grace, led by the dynamic Pavishen Paideya in Garaj Garaj and Punjabi.
Dance Basic’s Conga chacha in the first half and Love Don’t Love Nobody jive kept their audience firmly onside with their joy and hips that didn’t lie.
(Above: Creative HeArts – pic by Val Adamson)
Young choreographer, Darren Lee Hutchinson and his Creative HeArts dancers are new to Shall We Dance – and a clear crowd favourite. Their effortlessly fun, humorous and skilful classic Hip Hop in Modern Nostalgia with a dash of Amapiano in Project: Dynamite in the second half have made me a fan of theirs. I certainly I look forward to seeing more of them in future.
International dance champions and Hong Kong-based guest artists, Darren Hammond (South Africa) and Marina Steshenko (Ukraine), brought every ounce of talent and energy to the stage, spinning, charming, and enchanting at every turn and flourish. As one patron, in awe of Marina put it, “she dances from the tips of her fingers to her toes.” From the fast-paced Penny Whistle in the first half to the cheeky chacha and sensual rhumba in the second, they’ve certainly left Durban audiences wanting more of their artistry and inexorable verve.
MC, Lisa, is a consummate and generous performer, whose bang-on Girl on Fire and Proud Mary included the ISPA students as backing vocalists and dancers.
One of my favourite aspects of a trip to the theatre is the planned and unplanned meet-ups with friends and the shared delight of being transported for an hour or two to another world. This night delivered in spades.
Playhouse CEO, Linda Bukhosini’s programme notes are a reminder of Neville Letard’s decades-long legacy as teacher, inspirer and promoter of Latin and ballroom dancing, even during a time in our history when diversity, equity and inclusion were actively suppressed.
Neville, together with Caryl Cusens and their team of choreographers, Ryan and Janelle Yunnie (Dance Basics); Mark Wilson (Mark Wilson Dance Studio); Minette De Klerk-Weir (Young Dancers’ Project); Pam Gandy (Razzmatazz); Pavishen Paideya (Rudra Dance Company) and Farren Lee Hutchinson (Creative HeArts); and the entire production team gave us another dazzling, joyous show and we look forward to the 32nd edition in 2026! – Shannon Kenny.