History By 1986, Newson had worked with 28 different choreographers and was beginning to feel increasingly frustrated by lack of subject matter within the British contemporary dance scene. He has been quoted as saying that he felt the majority of the work he had been dancing in was 'conning' audiences 'about the depth' of what was being presented. Seeking a way to challenge the limitations of dance, he began to explore the concept of
physical theatre, which he saw as allowing him to use 'any means necessary to find the most appropriate way to say something'.
Early work The first work Newson produced with the new company was
My Sex, Our Dance (1986), created in partnership with the performer Nigel Charnock. It tackled the emergence of AIDS as a social issue, exploring through physical risk-taking the extent to which two men can trust each other. This was followed by
Deep End (1987), and
Elemen T(H)ree Sex (1987), works which focused on heterosexual relationships. These works toured the UK, with
Elemen T(H)ree sharing a bill in 1987 with
My Sex, Our Dance; something
Deep End would also do in 1987 and 1988. In 1987 the company premiered
My Body, Your Body, which featured performer Wendy Houstoun, who had attended a workshop and quickly became a frequent collaborator with the company. The work, based on audio recordings of a close female friend of Newson's and the book
Women Who Love Too Much by Robin Norwood, explored the psychology of women who seek out relationships with abusive men. Initially conceived with students at Leicester Polytechnic (now
De Montfort University), the piece was remounted and toured the UK at the end of 1987.
Dead Dreams of Monochrome Men followed in 1988, and drew inspiration from the book
Killing for Company, written about the mass-murderer
Dennis Nielsen. In 1990, the work was adapted for film with the director David Hinton and went on to be awarded as The Best Stage Performance Reworked for the Camera by IMZ Dance Screen. Co-produced by EXPO Seville, Britain at EXPO and
National Arts Centre Ottawa, the show opened in Seville and saw its UK premiere at Tramway, Glasgow.
The Independent newspaper called it 'one of the richest and most unsparing theatrical experiences' they had had 'in a long time'. The work was also awarded a London Dance & Performance Award (1992) and adapted for film, with director David Hinton collaborating with Newson on the move from the stage to the screen. The production of Newson's next work,
MSM (1993), was based on first hand verbatim interviews with men of various ages, backgrounds and sexualities on the subject of
cottaging -
MSM is the sociological term to describe the act of men having sex with men, irrespective of the sexuality they identify as. It was co-commissioned by the
Royal Court Theatre (London). 1995's
Enter Achilles scrutinised the concept of masculinity in modern society. Set in a typical British pub, it looks at how a group of men hide actions and feelings that are deemed unmanly, only for these repressed emotions to manifest themselves in other ways. The work toured initially in the UK and Europe in 1995, and to Australia in 1996 - a revival tour to the US, Canada and Europe followed in 1997, then Russia and Japan in 1998. The stage production was also translated to film, with Newson working with the director Clara van Gool. The film was shown widely at international festivals, and won awards including a
Prix Italia and an
Emmy Award for the Performing Arts (1997). A new production of
Enter Achilles, in collaboration with
Ballet Rambert and
Sadler's Wells, staged its world premiere at the
Adelaide Festival in March 2020.
Bound to Please and The Happiest Day of My Life 1997 saw the premiere of
Bound to Please, in which Newson directly tackled the dance world. The work featured a love scene between an older woman (Diana Payne-Meyers) and a much younger man. Newson then followed this work with
The Happiest Day of My Life (1999), which saw him exploring the themes of love and betrayal, mixing the surreal with the suburban. The elaborate set of a carpeted room sinking into water won
Time Out Design of the Year.
The Cost of Living In 2000, the Sydney 2000 Cultural Olympiad commissioned Newson to create
Can We Afford This, later renamed
The Cost of Living. It opened London's
Dance Umbrella season, and featured 17 performers investigating how society measures success and how we in turn calculate our own value. Newson was cited as saying the work was about 'what we think we are, and what we think we ought to be'. The touring of the show took DV8 to South East Asia for the first time, and led to several revival projects: a re-staging toured extensively in 2003. In the same year,
Tate Modern commissioned a reimagined version of the show
Living Costs marking Newson's first site specific work for DV8. The production took scenes from
The Cost of Living and blended them with new material, as visitors were taken on a promenade around 7 levels of the Tate Modern, to explore the concepts of high/low art and living through dance, circus, video projection and live music.
Just for Show Just for Show (2005 – 06) incorporated virtual technology and allowed Newson to play with ideas around image; where ‘people are often more concerned about looking good, than being good’.
Just for Show and subsequent productions
To Be Straight With You,
Can We Talk About This? and
JOHN were presented and co-produced by the
National Theatre in London.
Move to Verbatim Theatre Newson has stated that after "Just for Show", he began to feel that he could no longer express complex ideas and stories solely through movement.
Can we Talk About This? (2011-2012), dealt with freedom of speech, censorship and Islam. For this production, Newson drew on existing interviews as well as ones he conducted himself, concerning events such as the
Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy, the murder of filmmaker
Theo van Gogh, and the burnings of
Salman Rushdie's
Satanic Verses. The work sought to examine how those events, and others, have influenced multicultural policies, press freedom and artistic censorship. "Can We Talk About This?" was awarded the
Helpmann Award (2012) and Production of the Year (2012) by Tanz Magazine (Germany). Newson's most recent work, again using the methods of verbatim theatre, is
JOHN (2014), which follows one man (the eponymous title character, played by performer Hannes Langolf) tracing his criminality, drug use and personal relationships, efforts at rehabilitation and desire to lead an ordinary life. Built on interviews with over 50 men, the work premiered in Vienna (2014), before having an extended run at the
Royal National Theatre in London (2014-2015). It was also broadcast to cinemas around the country through the pioneering
NT Live programme.
2016 - DV8 On Hold On 12 January 2016, as DV8 celebrated its 30th anniversary, the company announced that artistic director Lloyd Newson was taking time out to reflect about the future. Due to this the company confirmed that the production of new work was to be paused indefinitely. == Selected awards ==