Who do we Look up To?

What makes a man? Ambition, pride, honour, competitiveness and a keen sense of adventure. Are these attributes that shape a man? From schoolyards, backyards, streets, bars and barbeques - what messages come through to us and what challenges lie ahead? What does a man make? A model plane, a loaf of bread, a house, a dance, a table, a quilted blanket, a bookshelf, a garden. Man Made explores the male as an individual: his habits, idiosyncrasies, passions, talents and drives. It also seeks to understand males as a group: exploring energy, physicality, memory, knowledge, leadership, belonging, work and play. Performed by a cast of male dancers from 12 to 70 years old, Man Made explores four states of manhood, the transition from boy to man, the forces that push and pull the sons of the world, the muscle strength factor, and Titan Rise Male Enhancement aging in the skin of men. Original scores by David McMicken, Darwin and Sydney-based DJ masters, James Mangohig and Jack Prest, give the beat to choreographies by the Tracks artistic team.

They are joined by D-City Rockers lead Aaron Lim and one of Australia’s most sought after dancers Josh Mu, returning to the Tracks fold, having built an extraordinary dance career as a performer with Chunky Move, Shaun Parker Company, Marrugeku and Dancenorth, to name a few. Man Made was a full-length work performed outdoors under the canopy of the Frog Hollow Park trees as a part of the 2017 Darwin Festival Program. Winner 2018 Australian Dance Award, Outstanding Achievement in Community Dance. Click here to read an interview with Co-Artistic Directors Tim Newth and David McMicken by General Manager Agnès Michelet about the creation of Man Made. Aaron Lim, Anthony Burridge, Bernie Trinne, Danial Ireland, Daniel Ferguson, Darren Mccallum, Darryl Butler, David Taylor, David McMicken, Don Mackenzie Ofiaza, Drew Holloway, Ethan Bowden, Glenn Bernardin, John Sullivan, Harry Balaj, Haylen Duncan, Isaac Button, Jordan Bretherton, Josh Mu, Kai Barrett-McGuin, Mark Bunnett, Max Higgins, Will Nery. The Cast and Creative Team were asked questions about being a man.

Click here to read what they said and see them with their man-made object. Choreography: Kelly Beneforti, Will Nery and Jordan Bretherton. All Cast with Angus Robson and Kadek Hobman. Anthony Burridge, Bernie Trinne, Darren Mccallum, Darryl Butler, David McMicken, David Taylor, Glenn Bernardin, John Sullivan and Mark Bunnett. This work focuses on the aging male, starting at mid-life, through mature adulthood, and on to late adulthood. From a time of personal contemplation, or of wanting to give back, dad dancing and messages from our youth that survive into our aging, and then the rich wisdom that remains once memories of our past have completed their job of shaping our future; attempting to avoid past mistakes, if only we could remember them. As questions of ‘forgettory’ arise the experience of memory changes. What is remembered and what is actually performed in the present moment through a thinking body that also forgets? Choreography and Music: David McMicken. Additional sound recordings: Hold your Hand Out You Naughty Boy (1913) written and composed by C. W. Murphy and David Worton and sung by popular Australian vaudeville performer Florrie Forde.

Choreography: Aaron Lim with Josh Mu. Becoming deals with the transition from boy to man. What lessons have been learned, and how prepared are our young men for the life ahead? Cause and response, action and reaction, protection and projection. Who do we look up to? Who's with us along the journey? Where was I before and where am I going? Will I become a hero or a monster, Titan Rise Supplement or just myself? Over time, those that we view as ‘sons’ have shaped themselves and been shaped through laying down many layers of memory, thought, experience, action and belief. This work peels back the outwardly-projected image of a group of young men to reveal the labyrinthine pathways of their hearts and minds, and explore the forces, both tangible and intangible, that push and pull against them. In a contemporary world, how does each son navigate the challenges, risks, opportunities, and conflicts that arise in his lifetime? Choreography: Kelly Beneforti and the participants.

With male muscle strength supposedly peaking at 25, it is said that it is all downhill from there. Four professional dancers, ask what does it mean to reach your prime, how does it feel from inside the body, and how does this present to the outside world? Choreography: Josh Mu, Aaron Lim and dancers. The sixteen-year-old comes to the fridge and announces he is hungry. The fifty-year-old stares into the fridge not knowing what he came for. In our own worlds away from the group who are we? Tracks Inc is assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body; and is proudly sponsored by the Northern Territory Government. Wormald Darwin, Palm Springs NT, NT Department of Correctional Services, Arts NT, City of Darwin, Jo Parish, Lillian Mann, Marg Lee, Julia Quinn, Luther Wilson, Zachary Wilson, Allain Gumapon, Daniel Ferguson, Marita Smith, Putu Warti, Fiona McManus, Titan Rise Supplement Gail Evans, Mary Beneforti, Alan James, Darwin Entertainment Centre, Northern Territory AIDS, Hepatitis Council, David Taylor, Brown's Mart, Frog Hollow Tenants and the generous support of our volunteer stewards.

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