Featured

DanceRites returns with largest on-site competition to date

Dinawan's Connection. Photo by Jaimi Joy.
Dinawan's Connection. Photo by Jaimi Joy.

Australia’s only national dance competition for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander groups, DanceRites, returns to the Sydney Opera House Forecourt this November.

The free event will be the largest on-site iteration of the competition since it began in 2015. Twenty-five dance groups and more than 350 performers from over 30 nations and clans across Australia will take to the Forecourt in a joyous celebration of First Nations music, dance and culture.

DanceRites will unfold over two days, with heats on Saturday 25 November and finals on Sunday 26 November. Each group will present a Cultural Dance and Song cycle, representing their local storytelling and language, with many also performing an optional ‘Wildcard’ dance to showcase their unique style.

Sydney Opera House Head of First Nations Programming, Michael Hutchings, said, “Over the past nine years, DanceRites has grown into one of our country’s most joyful First Nations cultural events. It’s an important moment for First Nations dance groups and communities across Australia to showcase their diverse cultures and storytelling traditions – that go back thousands of years – through the powerful mediums of dance and song. Lockdowns meant pausing for a couple of years, so it will be very special to welcome hundreds of deadly performers and an audience of thousands back to the Opera House for the first time since 2019.”

NSW Minister for the Arts, Minister for Music and the Night-time Economy, The Hon. John Graham MLC, said, “It’s great to see DanceRites return to the Opera House this year. Every year, the competition grows and this year will see the biggest one yet. The competition brings together First Nations performers in a weekend-long Forecourt celebration, and I encourage everyone to get out and see this incredible arts and cultural event in the heart of the city.”

Groups will be judged by a panel of First Nations dance experts on their technical dance skills, engagement with language and culture, skin-markings and traditional instrumentation. The panel is: Elma Gada Kris (Wagadagam Kigus, Kai Dangal Buai, Sipingur), Gina Rings (Kokatha Mirning), Matthew Doyle (Muruwari), Peta Strachan (Dharug) and Sani Townson (Koedal, Dhoeybaw, Samu Saibai Island Zenadth Kes).

The groups competing at DanceRites 2023 include: AFL Cape York Aboriginal Dance Team (Umpila and Djabugay/Yirrgay, QLD), ALLKUMO Malpa Paman (Southern Kaantju and Ayapathu, QLD), ANPY Central Desert Mob Dancers (Ngaanyatjarra, Pitjantatjara and Yankunytjatjara, NT), Boigu Island Dance Group (Karbay/Baidham, Torres Strait Islands), Brolga Dance Academy (Gamilaroi and Murrawarri, NSW), Budaabang Bari (Budaabang, NSW), Deaf Indigenous Dance Group (Gimuy Walubara Yidinji, QLD), Dinawan’s Connection (Ngemba, NSW), Dunghutti South West Rocks (Dunghutti, NSW), Eip Karem Beizam (Meriam, Torres Strait Islands), Giingan Yiiliwiyay Dancers (Gumbaynggirr, NSW), Gumaraa Dancers (Gadhu, NSW), Kutaw Zoeru Torres Strait Island Dance Group Brisbane (Koedal, Torres Strait Islands), Maarli Nhuuhngkhus Pikilarna maarni Men & Women dance and sing (Ngympyiaa, Barkindji & Maaura, VIC), Muimuu Bumer Gedlam (Peiudu, Torres Strait Islands), Ngadju Dancers (Ngadju, WA), Ngagalayg Kabaw Buway (Baidham Augadhalaig – Moegi Buai Tribe, Torres Strait Islands), Ngaran Ngaran (Walbunja, Djirringanj and Ngarrigu, NSW), Of Desert and Sea (Yankunytjatjara, SA), Sundowners Kalkutungu Dancers (Kalkutungu, QLD), Swan Hill Aboriginal Dance Group (Wemba Wemba, VIC), Walanmarra Malungan (Wiradjuri, NSW), Warradhaa Dancers (Wiradjuri, NSW), Yalanji Warra (Kuku Nyungkal, QLD) and Yangkay Cultural Connect (Ngemba, NSW).

A total of $36,000 in prizes will be awarded this year, including group awards for the winner and runner-up, as well as a separate prize for the best ‘Wildcard’ dance. Two Rites of Passage awards will also acknowledge individuals’ outstanding contributions to revitalising cultural knowledge and practices.

For more information, visit www.sydneyoperahouse.com/dancerites.

To Top