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Baklâ dance review: Choreographed tale of survival

Max Percy delivers a show that succeeds in being tense, humorous and poetic 

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Baklâ dance review: Choreographed tale of survival

The Tagalog word baklâ can be used in multiple ways: anything from a noun describing gender non-conformity to a slur. Max Percy’s one-person show uses this as a jumping-off point, taking inspiration from the way words shift, move, reflect and shape our world to explore ideas of belonging, colonisation, identity and sexuality. 

Picture: Northwall Arts Centre

Moving between 1521 (the beginning of Spanish colonial rule in what’s now known as the Philippines) to a non-consensual sexual encounter in the present, Percy’s performance switches between direct address, balletic physicality and moments of jaw-breaking tension in the intimacy of Summerhall’s Demonstration Room. A lesser performer might let their audience off the hook; Percy compels us to not look away. But there’s humour, and gentle poetry too; for example, in describing a difficult relationship with a grandparent: ‘separated by seven kitchen tiles’. Ultimately this is a story of survival, told through a beautifully human and committed performance.

Baklâ, Summerhall, until 27 August, 1pm. 

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