Lindsay Kemp

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Lindsay Kemp is a British dancer, actor, teacher, mime artist and choreographer.

Born in South Shields on May 3, 1938, Kemp was raised in Yorkshire and attended Bradford Art College before studying dance with the Ballet Rambert under Marcel Marceau.

Kemp formed his own dance company in the early sixties and first attracted attention with an appearance at the Edinburgh Festival in 1968. Despite a host of stage, film and television appearances Kemp is ironically best known through the success of some of his former dance pupils, most notably Kate Bush and David Bowie. Indeed, it is rumoured that Kemp had a brief but volatile affair with Bowie in the late sixties, culminating in a failed suicide attempt.

Kemp’s style of dance, a bizarre mix of Japanese Kabuki, mime and British music hall, has at different times been described as fascinating, colourful and self-indulgent but rarely fails to attract attention. His many stage performances include Flowers (1968) and the Rambert Dance Company’s Cruel Garden (1977). Kemp’s film roles include a dancer and cabaret performer in Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane (1976) and Jubilee (1977) respectively, a pantomime dame in Todd Haynes’ Velvet Goldmine (1998) and the wonderfully camp pub landlord Alder MacGregor in Anthony Shaffer's The Wicker Man (1973).

Lindsay Kemp now lives near Rome, Italy.

[edit] Filmography

  • Jubilee (1977), as Cabaret performer
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream for TV (1985), as Puck
  • Cartoline italiane (Italian Postcards) (1987)
  • The Line, the Cross & the Curve (1993), as guide
  • Guest appearances in Spanish TV show La Mandrágora in 2005 and 2006

[edit] External links and References

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