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Macho Dancer
In the Philippines, erotic clubs and bars have their own form of dance: that of Macho dancers, who perform for both men and women, their performances based on a specific movement vocabulary and physicality. In Macho Dancer, Filipino dancer and choreographer Eisa Jocson explores this economically motivated language of seduction, using notions of masculinity as body captial, and proposes a version that transgresses gender codes. Alone on stage, she recreates the muscular tension and compact undulations of this dance to a nostalgic musical repertoire from the 1980s and 1990s. Premiered in 2013, Macho Dancer is part of a trilogy focusing on the eroticisation of the dancing body and its socio-economic dimension, in the course of which Jocson has also explored pole dancing (Death of the Pole Dancer, 2011) and the work of Filipino hostesses in Japanese clubs (Host, 2015).
Source: programme of the CND