Photo by Ewa Figazewska
Dance Limerick is delighted to present John Scott’s Divine Madness.
After its success at Project Arts Centre, Five Lamps Festival and Clonmel Junction Arts Festival, this special dance-opera piece comes to Dance Limerick for the first time.
Divine Madness is a dance-opera study of grief, revenge and love built around a soprano, three dancers and a live pianist.
Divine Madness explores the physicality of the soprano in the context of dance; the singer explores her practice beyond the concert recital.
The sound score centres on using fragmented operatic extracts from arias in a context of exile, loss and revenge, including Ave Maria from Verdi’s Otello, Vissi d'Arte from Puccini’s Tosca, Morgen by Richard Strauss, O Mio Babbino Caro from Gianni Schicchi by Puccini, and None but the Lonely Heart (Op 6 No 6) by Tchaikovsky, among others.
The piece is choreographed by Founder and Director of Irish Modern Dance Theatre John Scott.
The Dublin-born choreographer, dancer and singer trained with the Irish National College of Dance / Dublin City Ballet, later studying with Pablo Vela, Meredith Monk and Susan Buirge.
Some of his key choreographic works include ‘Othello-maybe a dance’, ‘Cloud Study’, ‘Lear’, ‘Fall and Recover’ and ‘Actions’.
He is the founder and curator of Dancer from the Dance Festival of Irish Choreography in New York and Dublin.
In Divine Madness, Scott brings together soprano Mairéad Buicke, dancers Magdalena Hylak, Isabella Oberländer, Mufutau Yusuf and pianist Aoife O’Sullivan.
Born in Limerick, Mairéad Buicke is an award-winning Irish operatic soprano. She has performed major roles with English National Opera, Grange Park Opera, Opera Theatre Company, and Mid Whales Opera.
She has performed with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, the RTÉ Concert Orchestra, the Orchestra of St Cecilia, the Ulster Chamber Orchestra, the English National Opera Orchestra, and the English Northern Philharmonia.
Divine Madness has been described as "Visually striking and infused with an exuberant energy (…) something of a wild, bittersweet joy"- Chris O'Rourke, The Arts Review
"A full-throated and full-bodied exploration of the physicality of the operatic soprano" - Michael Seaver, The Irish Times
With a unique blend of opera and dance, Divine Madness is sure to leave no one indifferent. Don’t miss your chance to see it in Limerick on March 15.
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