Skip to main content
Advertise Buy the paper Contact us Shop Subscribe Support us
Needs must
TONY MILLS, artistic director of Dancebase, reveals how he assembles a festival programme in the teeth of tough economic realities

IN bygone epochs of Edinburgh Festival Fringe, dance performances could be dubious. Hemmed by cramped converted spaces and rapid turnarounds, it was vexatious to have to jump out of our improvised hutches into full physical articulation. Audiences could witness dancers’ discomfort in the glaze of an eye, a botched balance, a fumbled bit of partnering and so on. There was a sense of “getting away with it.”

The game changed when Dance Base’s premises opened on The Grassmarket. The complex is purpose-built to function year-round as Scotland’s national centre for dance. In this spacious airy building, Fringe shows are lately given by performers who will have shaken a leg beforehand in designated studio space. Whatever ensues will stem from the concentration and engagement of properly fostered agility.

There’s further upgrade in the sense of informed choices. Dance Base’s artistic director Tony Mills, himself a dancer/choreographer of note, is the selector of this year’s offering. In this he follows Morag Deyes OBE, founder of the premises (built by Malcolm Fraser Architects, for its year 2000 inauguration) and devisor of procedures that inform Fringe participation of visiting troupes from as far away as Australia, Korea and Taiwan, cheek by jowl with accomplished locals.

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Best of 2024 / 3 January 2025
3 January 2025
A landmark work of gay ethnography, an avant-garde fusion of folk and modernity, and a chance comment in a great interview
Theatre review / 29 November 2024
29 November 2024
ANGUS REID applauds the inventive stagecraft with which the Lyceum serve up Stevenson’s classic, but misses the deeper themes
Gig Review / 6 October 2024
6 October 2024
ANGUS REID time-travels back to times when Gay Liberation was radical and allied seamlessly to an anti-racist, anti-establishment movement
Interview / 15 March 2024
15 March 2024
ANGUS REID speaks to historian Siphokazi Magadla about the women who fought apartheid and their impact on South African society
Similar stories
Global Routes / 2 December 2024
2 December 2024
Two new releases from Burkina Faso and Niger, one from French-based Afro Latin The Bongo Hop, and rare Mexican bootlegs
Exhibition Review / 1 October 2024
1 October 2024
MARJORIE MAYO recommends an exhibition that asserts Palestinian history, culture and creativity in the face of strategies to erase them
Exhibition review / 7 June 2024
7 June 2024
HENRY BELL steps warily through the collection of a Glaswegian war profiteer to experience his collection of Degas’ remarkable images of working people