“Yorke Dance Project is seriously in danger of becoming a national treasure.”
Dance Europe
YDP is excited to share our latest programme, featuring works by renowned choreographers and two world premieres.
This season includes Deep Song by Martha Graham, Lacrymosa by Robert Cohan, and the UK premiere of Bella Lewitzky’s Kinaesonata. We also present two world premieres: Troubadour by Christopher Bruce, set to music by Leonard Cohen, and a new work by YDP associate choreographer Liam Francis.
Our Modern Milestones programme celebrates:
- 100 years of Martha Graham Dance Company
- 100th birthday of Robert Cohan
- 80th birthday of Christopher Bruce
- 60 years of Lewitzky Dance Company
- 1 year of Liam Francis’ new company, Liam Francis Dance Company
Join us on tour from November 2025.
Christopher Bruce’s Troubadour is the choreographer’s first new work in over a decade. Bruce is known for a wide range of work, often choosing unconventional music accompaniment, such as The Rolling Stones when he created his acclaimed Rooster. On this occasion, he has choreographed a dance to six iconic tracks from Leonard Cohen’s live performance at the 02 Arena in 2008, deeply inspired by Cohen’s wonderful prose.
A dancer with Lost Dog and former member of Rambert and ZooNation, Liam Francis’ passion for play and his embodied knowledge of hip-hop and contemporary dance are the drivers for his creative practice. His new work CAST |x| is set to Jethro Cooke’s minimalist score composed entirely of fragmented cinematic voice samples and thrumming textures. Four figures are caught mid-action; accusation hangs in the air. What follows is a gradually-escalating knot of narrative and emotional tension, fractured memory, moral ambiguity and the stories we tell to escape blame.
Bella Lewitzky’s soaring 1970 work Kinaesonata is a kinetic response to Argentine composer Alberto Ginastera’s Piano Sonata No. 1, Op 22. Fast, energetic, intricate and colourful, the work is packed with repetition, lifts, symmetry, and mirrored movement, its eight dancers in constant motion from beginning to end. Kinaesonata was revived by Benjamin Millepied’s i LA Dance Project in 2019.
Set to music by Henry Cowell, Martha Graham’s 1937 solo Deep Song is a visceral reaction to the Spanish Civil War. The work is a cry of deep anguish – its contractions, swirls, crawls and falls are powerful physical representations of human experiences in war. The dance disappeared from the Graham company repertoire in the 40s and wasn’t revived again until 1989.
Robert Cohan’s Lacrymosa was created on Yorke Dance Project in 2015, entering the company’s repertoire the following year. A duet set to music of the same name by Dmitri Yanov-Yanovsky, Lacrymosa explores both the loss and return of a loved one, moving from initial sorrow to the transforming power of reunion. Cohan has said that his starting point was Jesus returning home to Mary Magdalen.
2025 / 26
Leeds
Stanley and Audrey Burton Theatre
15 November 2025
Frome
Memorial Theatre
28 + 29 November 2025
London
Royal Ballet and Opera, Linbury Theatre
19 – 22 January 2026
Supported by Cockayne Grants for the Arts, a Donor Advised Fund, held at The Prism Charitable Trust.’