THE CHRONICLES
Choreographer Stephanie Lake.
Composer Robin Fox, Lighting Designer Bosco Shaw, Set Designer Charles Davis,
Costume Designer Harriet Oxley,Dancers Max Burgess, Rachel Coulson, Tra Mi
Dinh, Tyrel Dulvarie, Marni Green, Siobhan Lynch, Darci O’Rourke, Harrison
Ritchie-Jones, Robert Tinning, Georgia Van Gils, Kimball Wong, Jack Ziesing.
Solo Vocalist Oliver Mann. Children’s Choir (Adelaide Festival) Young Adelaide
Voices. Conductor Christie Anderson. Child Soloist Ethan Lourie. Producer Beth
Raywood Cross. Production Manager Lisa Osborn. Rehearsal Director and Bodywork
Therapist Paea Leach. Associate Lighting Designer and Console Programmer Rhys
Pottinger. Sound Engineer James Wilkinson. Stage Manager Rosie Osmond. Choir
Consultant Renee Heron. Costume Makers Jo Foley, Fiona Holley, Emma Ikin, Kym
Yeow. Financial Manager Bree Nurse. Additional Music: Ah Poor Bird (trad) –
Arranged by Robin Fox. Forever Young (Alphaville). The Dunstan Playhouse.
Adelaide Festival Centre. Adelaide Festival. March 12-15 2026.
Images Neil Bennett and Daniel
Boud
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Stephanie Lake’s latest work for
the Adelaide Festival attests to the extraordinary artistry of her choreography
and the athleticism, grace and energy of her dancers.
The curtain rises slowly revealing a shaft of
light and a black box that rises to reveal a foetal form upon the floor. Slowly
the figure begins to unfurl, limb by limb, rising to reach towards the sky. The
moment of birth is greeted with a forceful percussive beat and the company
burst onto the stage. Life has begun.
When composer of the electro
acoustic score Robin Fox described
The Chronicles as “from womb to tomb”
Stephanie Lake completely agreed. The opening image of a human being emerging
bit by bit from the womb to the final image of a figure being laid to eternal
rest embraces with powerful resonance the cycle of life and the inevitability
of our mortality, the inescapable end to a precious life. This is made even
more moving by the introduction of the young Adelaide singers who in a soulful
lament to the passing of time look forward with hope to a new tomorrow in the
traditional song
Ah Poor Bird. The lament comes full cycle at the end of
the work as baritone Oliver Mann stands among the greenery at the rear of the
stage to sing a song that longs to remain
Forever Young. The irony is
inescapable as a lone dancer gently lowers a companion to the ground and the
box descends to the onset of eternal darkness.
Bosco Shaw’s evocative lighting
design complements Lake’s choreography. Dancers appear entrapped within squares
of light across the stage. They struggle against Life’s challenges, their
bodies tremoring against the confinement. At another time two shafts of light
create a cross upon the floor as dancers surge towards the future intersecting
and lurching towards the unknown. From the ensemble a solitary dancer moves
into a spot or two dancers emerge mirroring each other in synchronized unison
against the dimly lit background of ferns and bushes. Nature is always there as
a constant in Life’s journey upon the stage.
It is left to the audience to
interpret the dance in terms of one’s individual life. Lake’s choreography is
mesmerizing. There is the life force in the ensemble’s herd-like traverse of
the stage. There is the intimacy of coupling in the negative spacing movement
of coming together transforming and departing. Images merge and dissolve as
Lake’s imagination takes wing.
The Chronicles is an eclectic collection
of styles- jazz and classical ballet, break dance or gymnastics as bodies are
lifted thrown and caressed. This is the essence of Life’s vicariousness,
constantly changing and coming to rest only in the final image of mortality’s
inevitable destiny. In a meticulous sequence of dance movements and patterns
Lake carries us along through metaphor and image. A dancer enters dragging a
load across the stage. Dancers slide along the floor each pushing their baggage
like Sysiphus before them until they are torn open and yellow hay engulfs the
stage. One dancer is smothered before breaking free to reveal a solitary dancer
rising from the burdens that have entwined her. A loud scream echoes through
the auditorium as the dancers hold the note until only one remains in a
victorious salute to survival.
The Chronicles is an
account of all our lives. The pulsating energy and constancy of the dance is
beautifully accompanied by the pure voices of the young singers of the Adelaide
Youth Choir under the direction of Christie Anderson. Dancers and children,
carrying lanterns, come together in a celebration of community. It contrasts
with Mann’s soulful baritone rendition of
Forever Young. There is a tone
of regret, of lost opportunity and longing for the past. It is a note of sombre
reflection, realized in the final image of the two dancers beneath the
descending tomb.
The Chronicles is an astounding
work of choreographic imagination. It is visceral, performed by a talented ensemble
of dancers. The Chronicles reminds us how fleeting is our life and yet
Lake’s work does not thrust us into despondency but celebrates our time with
all its trials and tribulations, joys and triumphs between our beginning and our
end. The collaborative nature of the work is instantly apparent in the
choreography by Lake, performed by her wonderful ensemble of youthful and athletic
dancers, the set design by Charles Davis, brilliantly lit by Bosco Shaw and the music
composed by Robin Fox. The Chronicles is an exciting and totally
engaging experience with the power to encourage us “to make hay while the sun
shines”.
Adelaide Festival production
photos by Andrew Beveridge.