Meryl Tankard
Meryl Tankard (born 1955, Darwin, Northern Territory) is an Australian dancer and choreographer who has a wide national and international reputation.
Tankard's father served in the Royal Australian Air Force and the family moved to various bases during her early years. She was born in Darwin, but had her first dance lessons in Melbourne. Several years later the family moved to Penang, Malaysia and was influenced by Malaysia's colour and ceremony. Later, living near Newcastle, New South Wales, Tankard took classes in Newcastle and then in Sydney before entering the Australian Ballet School in 1974.
Career
Tankard's professional career began as a dancer with the Australian Ballet at the end of 1975. She also choreographed her first work, Birds behind Bars, for a choreographic workshop program, Dance Horizons, in 1977.
Tankard's early successes as a performer came when she worked in Germany with Pina Bausch and her Tanztheater Wuppertal between 1978 and 1984; Tankard was a principal artist and toured extensively. Meryl created roles in Cafe Muller, Kontakhof, Arien, Keuscheitslegende, 1980, Bandoneon, Walzer. In 1980 she played the leading role in the movie Quackfurdonald Mit Lieben Gruss, filmed in Munich and Disneyland and screened on German television. In 1982 she co-wrote and performed in Sydney on the Wupper, a short film awarded the Silver Film Band for Best Short Film at the 1983 Berlin Film Festival.
She then spent several years between Australia and Europe. In Europe she was a guest performer with Bausch's company as well as performing in Lindsay Kemp's Company. In Australia in 1984 she made Echo Point, and in 1986 performed in Robyn Archer's television production of The Pack of Women for ABC TV and played co-lead in the ABC TV series Dancing Daze, produced by Jan Chapman. In 1986 she created Travelling Light. In 1988 she created and performed solo her full-length Two Feet, which marked a major turning point in the creative collaboration she had established with photographer and visual artist Regis Lansac who created visual projections to accompany Two Feet and continued to develop this aspect of their collaboration.
In 1989 Tankard was offered the directorship of a small company in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, which she named the Meryl Tankard Company. Works in Canberra included Banshee (1989), VX18504 (1989), Nuti (1990), Kikimora (1990), Court of Flora (1990), Chants de Mariage I and II (1991–1992), and Songs with Mara (1992). Tankard also revived Echo Point and Two Feet, collaborated with the theatre director Pierre Bokor on Circo (1991), and created choreography for Opera Australia's Death in Venice (1989), and made Sloth as part of Seven Deadly Sins - a program by seven contemporary Australian choreographers filmed for television by the ABC in 1993.
She moved to Adelaide, South Australia as Director of Australian Dance Theatre. Tankard created Furioso (1993), Aurora (1994), Possessed (1995), and Rasa (1996), Seulle (1997) and Inuk (1997). She also choreographed The Deep End (1996) for the Australian Ballet and Orphee et Euridyce for Opera Australia. Australian Dance Theatre (under Tankard's leadership) toured extensively world wide. It was the first Australian company to be invited to perform at the prestigious Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York.
Tankard left Adelaide in 1999 and began a career as a freelance choreographer. Her commissions have included: 1998 = Bolero for the Lyon Opera Ballet; 2002 = commission by the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games to create Deep Sea Dreaming for the opening ceremony; 2000 =The Beautiful Game for Andrew Lloyd Webber on London's Westend; 2001 = commission by Tiffany & Co. at New York's Museum of National History; 2002= Ocean Dance to honour the Dalai Lama in tribute concert Sydney Opera House; 2002 = Merryland, for Netherlands Dance Theatre 3; 2003 Wild Swans, commission from the Australian Ballet and the Sydney Opera House, a full length work based on a Hans Christian Andersen fairy story to a commissioned score by Elena Kats-Chernin ; 2003 = Pearl for thirtieth birthday celebrations of the Sydney Opera House; 2004 = @North, for the Berlin Ballet; 2004 = created Petrouchka for Netherlands Dance Theatre 1 in The Hague; 2006 = choreography for "Tarzan" for Disney on Broadway New York; 2007 = Created "Kaidan" commission by Sydney Festival and Sydney Opera House with Taikoz; 2008 = Created "Inuk 2" for Sydney Dance Company; 2009 = Created "The Oracle" commission by Sydney Opera House and Malthouse Melbourne; 2010 = Gained a Graduate Diploma in Film Directing at Aust Film and TV Radio School; 2010 = Short film 'Moth" and 'Mad"; 2011 = Created "Cinderella" for Leipzig Ballet with Gewandhaus Orchestra
Awards
- 2010 = Outstanding Choreography award Australian Dance Awards for The Oracle
- 2004 = Creative Fellowship Australia Council
- 2003 = Centenary Medal
- 2002 = Lifetime Achievement award Australian Dance Awards
- 2000 = Helpmann Award for Costume Design for Deep Sea dreaming for Olympic Games Opening Ceremony 2000
- 2000 = Nomination for Laurence Olivier Ward for best theatre choreography "Beautiful Game"
- 1998 = Mobil Pegasus Award for Best Production "Inuk' Summer Festival Hamburg
- 1995 = Age Perf Arts Award (dance) for Best Collaboration for Orpheus and Euridice with Australian Opera
- 1994 = Betty Pounder Award for Original Choreography for "Nuti"
- 1994 = Victorian Green Room Awards for Dance Direction, Design, Management for "Nuti and Kikimora"
- 1993 = Victorian Green Room Award for Female Dancer in leading role "Two Feet"
- 1993 = Sidney Myer Performing Arts Award for Individual Achievement
- 1992 = Canberran of the Year
- 1983 = Silver Bear for Best Short Film Berlin Film Festival "Sydney an der Wupper"
References
External links
- 'Australian Dancing' biography
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