Premium Content:

Brooke Leeder Speaks Volumes

Brooke Leeder and Tony Currie image by Katherine McLeod‘Dancers Speak Volumes’ is an exciting new production merging spoken word with dance, featuring three short dance pieces that use text to connect with the audience. OUTinPerth had a chat to dancer and choreographer Brooke Leeder about the show.

One of the short dance pieces was created by Leeder and is entitled ‘Not Even New York’. It’s based on her experiences travelling.

- Advertisement -

“‘Not Even New York’ was inspired by my first trip to London. I spent three weeks alone in London and I found that the only thing that I was saying was ‘sorry’ as I was walking down Oxford Street, bumping into people going and going ‘sorry’, ‘sorry’, ‘Sorry!’. So it’s really about that lack of communication. It just looks at the ways that you actually communicate with one another, whether it be minimal or a lengthy conversation.” she says.

The piece uses the word ‘sorry’ as punctuation in the choreography, using a real-life situation that is universally familiar as the basis for the dance, Leeder explains. “We have what is called ‘The Sorry Dance’, so the movement that I was experiencing walking down Oxford Street, hitting people on the shoulder, the movement would start from there, and the only words that we’re saying are ‘sorry’. We started with that and then it developed into how people meet while travelling, the ways that people do talk and not talk at the same time, to actually see this intensely busy tube, where we’re in such proximity but we don’t actually speak to one another. But then in certain times when it’s later at night and maybe people have had a couple of drinks that’s when people are more comfortable to talk to one another. ”

Leeder tells us how the inclusion of spoken word has made for a new and exciting take on choreography, for both her and the other choreographers, Louise Honeybul and Linton Aberle. “It’s really quite interesting. It’s the first time that I’ve done that. I just think within the context of the piece I really wanted to make the piece very accessible, really for people to understand and simply I thought just to use text helps break that down for the audience. And both works, Linton and Louise’s piece as well, they do a similar thing where as performers they talk to one another onstage, and then at certain points there’s actually delivered a short, say, monologue to the audience so you’re connecting to your performer and also then connecting directly to the audience as well through text.

“And being a theatre festival, I think these works are pitched at the perfect audience to get that theatregoing audience, and a way to connect with them through movement as well as text. I just thought this would be the perfect opportunity to reach that wider audience.”

‘Dancers Speak Volumes’ is playing at the Subiaco Arts Centre from the 19th to the 22nd and March.

Book tickets at ticketek.com.au

Sophie Joske

Image: Katherine McLeod

Latest

Dean Misdale brings ‘Dragged Through The Desert’ to Fringe World

The show promises to bring glitz, glamour, and a whole lot of heart to Fringe World Festival 2026.

Co3 will collaborate with The New Zealand Dance Company to stage ‘Gloria’

Its a rare chance to see an acclaimed work from one of New Zealand's most acclaimed dance talents.

Barry Manilow shares he’s been diagnosed with lung cancer

The musician says the cancer has been detected early and he expects to make a full recovery.

The Year in Review | May 2025

Continuing a journey through the big news stories of 2025, we reach May - the month that had the most posts of the year.

Newsletter

Don't miss

Dean Misdale brings ‘Dragged Through The Desert’ to Fringe World

The show promises to bring glitz, glamour, and a whole lot of heart to Fringe World Festival 2026.

Co3 will collaborate with The New Zealand Dance Company to stage ‘Gloria’

Its a rare chance to see an acclaimed work from one of New Zealand's most acclaimed dance talents.

Barry Manilow shares he’s been diagnosed with lung cancer

The musician says the cancer has been detected early and he expects to make a full recovery.

The Year in Review | May 2025

Continuing a journey through the big news stories of 2025, we reach May - the month that had the most posts of the year.

On This Gay Day | In 2013 the Queen pardoned Alan Turing

Turing is credited with being the father of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence.

Dean Misdale brings ‘Dragged Through The Desert’ to Fringe World

The show promises to bring glitz, glamour, and a whole lot of heart to Fringe World Festival 2026.

Co3 will collaborate with The New Zealand Dance Company to stage ‘Gloria’

Its a rare chance to see an acclaimed work from one of New Zealand's most acclaimed dance talents.

Barry Manilow shares he’s been diagnosed with lung cancer

The musician says the cancer has been detected early and he expects to make a full recovery.