| Called Bahok - a Bengali word meaning "carrier", is the long awaited new group choreography by Akram Khan. After the more intimate duets with Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui (Zero Degrees) and Sylvie Guillem (Sacred Monsters), Akram Khan again joins forces with Mercury Award winning composer and producer Nitin Sawney, and has brought together a new company of nine dancers. A collaboration with China's classical ballet flagship company, The National Ballet of China, the dancers come from different cultures, traditions and dance backgrounds: Chinese, Korean, Indian, South-African and Spanish. As such they resemble a present day version of the tale of Babel. Being a community that wants to create together a utopian project but speaking both with their bodies and tongues different languages.
They meet in one of this globalised world's transit zones and try to communicate, to share "the things they carry with them": their experiences, their memories of their original homes, the dreams and aspirations that made them move. They are carriers. They are bahok.
About Akram Khan Company
Founded in August 2000 by Choreographer Akram Khan and Producer Farooq Chaudhry, Akram Khan Company has established itself as one of the foremost innovative dance companies in the world, performing in leading international festivals and venues.
Among the most notable company works are Kaash (2002) a collaboration with artist Anish Kapoor and composer Nitin Sawhney, Ma (2004), created for seven dancers, four musicians and accompanied by a text by acclaimed writer Hanif Kureishi, for which he received a South Bank Show Award (2005); Zero Degrees (2005), a collaboration with dancer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, sculptor Antony Gormley and composer Nitin Sawhney, premiered at Sadler's Wells.
Often playing to sell out houses and attracting rave reviews from the international press, the company has been nominated for several prestigious honours including the recent Laurence Olivier Awards for zero degrees. In 2005, Khan won the Outstanding Artist (Modern) at the National Dance Awards, received a South Bank Show Award (Dance) for ma, and was awarded an MBE for his services to the UK dance community.
Akran Khan
Akram Khan is the most acclaimed choreographer of his generation working in Britain today. Born in London into a family of Bangladeshi origin in 1974, he began dancing at the age of seven. He studied with the great Kathak dancer and teacher Sri Pratap Pawar, later becoming his disciple. He began his stage career at the age of 14, when he was cast in Peter Brook’s legendary production of Mahabharata, touring the world between 1987 and 1989 and appearing in the televised version of the play broadcast in 1988.
Following later studies in contemporary dance and a period working with Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker’s Brussels based X-Group project, he began presenting solo performances of his work in the 1990s, maintaining his commitment to the classical kathak repertoire as well as modern work. Among his best-known solo pieces are: Polaroid Feet (2001), Ronin (2003) and Third Catalogue (2005).
In August 2000, he launched his own company, which has provided him with a platform for innovation and an increasingly diverse range of work evolved in collaboration with artists from other disciplines, ranging across theatre, film, visual arts, music and literature.
As Choreographer-in-Residence and later as an Associate Artist at the South Bank Centre, he presented a recital with Pandit Birju Maharaj and Sri Pratap Pawar; and A God of Small Tales, a piece for mature women for which he again collaborated with writer, Hanif Kureishi. He remained an Associate Artist at the South Bank Centre until April 2005, the first non-musician to be afforded this status, and is currently an Associate Artist at Sadler’s Wells.
In 2007, he will be touring to Australia, Japan, France, Hong Kong, South Korea, USA, Netherlands, Singapore, Luxembourg, Spain, Greece, Sweden, Finland, Argentina, Taiwan, Germany, Italy and Belgium.
Akram Khan was also invited by Kylie Minogue in summer 2006 to choreograph a section of her new Showgirl concert, which opened in Australia in November 2006, and toured to the UK (London and Manchester) in January 2007.
Akram Khan has been the recipient of numerous awards, including the Jerwood Foundation Choreography Award (2000); "Outstanding Newcomer to Dance Award" from both the Dance Critics' Circle (2000) and Time Out Live (2000); "Best Modern Choreography" from the Dance Critics' Circle (2002); the International Movimentos Tanzpreis (2004) for "Most Promising Newcomer in Dance", a South Bank Show Award (2005), and was nominated for a Nijinsky Award for Best Newcomer (2002). Akram also received an award for the 2005 Critics' Circle National Dance Awards for "Outstanding Male or Female Artist" (modern). zero degrees - Akram Khan/ Sidi Larbi Cherckaoui/ Antony Gormley/ Nitin Sawnhey - was nominated for the 2006 Laurence Olivier Awards (Best New Dance Production). More recently, Akram received an award for "Excellence in International Dance" by the International Theatre Institute in 2007. He was also named “Best Male Dancer in a Ballet or Dance Work” at the prestigious annual Helpmann Awards held in Sydney, Australia in August 2007, where he and Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui also won the award for "Best Choreography in a Ballet or Dance Work" for zero degrees. In 2004 he received an Honorary Doctorate of Arts from De Montfort University for his contribution to the UK arts community, and was awarded an MBE for his services to Dance in 2005. |