Patricia Beatty |
The heads in the audience, for the most part, were gray and
nodding as around them swirled pre-show chatter touching on the weather,
doctor’s appointments and 25th anniversary reunions. It was definitely an older
crowd that gathered inside Toronto’s
Winchester Street Theatre (80
Winchester Street) on Thursday night for an
evening of dance, an art form notorious for its love affair with youth. Many in
the house were ex-dancers whose own leaping days were far behind them. They had
come not entirely for nostalgia’s sake, although the event gave reason enough
for reminiscing: the program at hand promised an evening of revivals by local
dance pioneers as well as the welcome return to the stage of some beloved local
dancers, long retired. But more enticing (and worthy of a late night) was that
this modern dance show, while celebrating the past, was actually something
novel, marking as it did the debut of Toronto Heritage Dance, the new kid on
the Canadian dance block with a backpack jammed with history.
The brainchild of veteran dance producer Nenagh Leigh in
collaboration with Patricia Beatty, Toronto Heritage Dance aims to use work
from the not-so-distant past (the oldest work on the current program is just
40) to jumpstart new creations for the 21st century. The idea, elaborated Leigh
during a brief intermission chat, is to get audiences used to the idea of
preservation as a means of fostering a re-invigorated dance future. Vintage is
all the rage in fashion, film and home decor. So why not apply the trend to
locally made dance?