Vancouver choreographer Joshua Beamish explores fake news in world premiere of Source Amnesia, January 13 and 14
Five local contemporary dancers probe misinformation and malfunctioning memory through the kinetic movement of MOVETHECOMPANY’s artistic director
Source Amnesia (rehearsal). Photo by Jack Tupper
Joshua Beamish/MOVETHECOMPANY presents Source Amnesia on January 13 and 14 at 8 pm at Vancouver Playhouse
CHOREOGRAPHER JOSHUA BEAMISH draws on some very personal experiences for his newest work, which is about to have its world premiere in Vancouver. Source Amnesia grew, in part, out of his own family’s journey with dementia and amnesia, which impacted his relationships with both of his grandmothers.
The highly respected local dance artist also turned to research related to episodic memory distortion and memory distrust syndrome to create the timely 70-minute work for five contemporary dancers.
Source Amnesia will explore themes of misinformation, fake news, memory loss, and truth.
The term “source amnesia” is the inability to remember where, when, or how previously learned information was acquired, which can lead to false memories created when a real memory is overlaid with untrue suggestions. If someone cannot recall the source of an act or event, it is possible for them to believe false prompts as fact rather than fiction. Beamish places his five dance artists into this ever-shifting reality to expose the fragility of truth and how easy it is for memory or truth to be altered.
“I grew up very close to one of my grandmothers and she was a major supporter of my training and early career,” Beamish says in a release. “And yet, for much of my adult life, she didn’t know who I was anymore. I often wondered if she knew herself. Who did she see when she looked in the mirror?”
In addition to reflecting on his own personal experiences during the creative process for Source Amnesia, Beamish also became fascinated with the Icelandic Six, a 1970s homicide case where six people confessed to a double homicide they had nothing to do with but were convinced they had committed. With Beamish’s signature kinetic choreography, the production also reflects a study where participants were given false facts about their lives, which they later believed to be true.
Source Amnesia’s Vancouver-based ensemble consists of Renee Sigouin (currently with Out Innerspace Dance Theatre and Kidd Pivot), former Ballet BC dancers Juan Duarte and Evan Rapaport, Calder White (who performed with Toronto’s Canadian Contemporary Dance Theatre), and Marisa Christogeorge (formerly of Sidra Bell Dance). Apprentices are Julian Beairsto and Emma Galvin.
“I am thrilled to bring together such a talented group of dance artists from Vancouver to collaborate on this production, which closely reflects the current issues we’re all grappling with,” Beamish says. “Misinformation is something that has become personal to us all. With social media, news has the ability to spread like wildfire, in real time. While we’re quick to share and comment, we often don’t stop to think about factual accuracy. Source Amnesia is a thoughtful physical exploration of memory distrust and how we parse and absorb source information before turning it into something else, be it untruths, a manipulated truth — or even fake news.”
Source Amnesia features lighting design by James Proudfoot and music by British electronic musician Rival Consoles.
Tickets and more details are at joshuabeamish.com.
Source Amnesia, Renee Sigouin. Photo by Jack Tupper
Related Articles
Pond hockey, RCMP battles, and polar bears bring this unique rendition home—with classic Russian touches, of course
Company’s annual holiday twist on The Nutcracker features a flavoursome assortment of styles, from classical ballet to hip hop to ’60s swing
Dreamlike Taiwanese show explores freedom and oppression, with Ling Zi becoming everything from spiky weapons to shivering life forces all their own
Presented by DanceHouse, Taiwan’s Hung Dance draws on the headpieces of Chinese opera to conjure calligraphy, weapons, and birds in flight
The local arts and culture scene has bright gifts in store this season, from music by candlelight to wintry ballets
New production comes as a result of the street dancer’s Iris Garland Emerging Choreographer Award win earlier this year
This spin on Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker features a flavoursome assortment of styles, ranging from classical ballet to hip hop
Quebecois choreographer Audrey Gaussiran’s work tours to Alliance Française Vancouver’s V-Unframed and the Shadbolt Centre for the Arts
Dancers Omer Backley-Astrachan and Jana Castillo explore the importance of connection and trust
Company looks sharp across opening program of eclectic, full-throttle LILA, mysterious SWAY, and epic BOLERO X
Renowned Indigenous choreographer Santee Smith brings her haunting yet hopeful piece to The Cultch and Urban Ink’s TRANSFORM Festival
Presented by RBC, production features more than 250 performers and a live Tchaikovsky score played by members of the Vancouver Opera Orchestra
Production explores identity as the dancers’ movements influence a highly reactive digital projection onstage
OURO Collective’s second annual festival features mainstage performances at Massey Theatre by the likes of TARANTISM and RubberLegz
Presented by Ballet BC at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre, the production puts a fantastical twist on the classic story, all set to Tchaikovsky’s score
Ahead of a premiere at Ballet BC’s TRILOGY, the fast-rising Italian-born choreographer reflects on a creative journey that began locally and led her around the globe
Co-producer Lia Grainger reflects on the storied life of Oscar Nieto, who helped establish flamenco’s presence in Vancouver
Dance and digital art combine onstage with a colourful projection that reacts to the movements of five dancers
Seven artists are on an empowering mission to reclaim Indigenous sexuality from the effects of colonization
The anticipated performance, a captivating cry for freedom, marks the first time DanceHouse presents a Taiwanese work
Mainstage performances presented by OURO Collective include Greece’s TARANTISM, German-American B-boy RubberLegz, and more
Montreal choreographer’s post-pandemic piece, inspired by a type of molecule secreted by moving bodies, comes to the Firehall Arts Centre
Exhilarating double bill featuring a virtuosic classic and a historic West Coast premiere lands here February 9 and 10, 2026
Junior company features eight dancers training with Modus Operandi and Arts Umbrella Dance Company
New exhibition and performance series opens with WTM / What’s the Move? art party featuring Lucy M. May, ĀNANDAM dance theatre, and more
At DanceHouse, the Montreal artist resurrects a piece whose stripped-down expression is still touring after 23 years
At the Firehall Arts Centre, Hiromoto Ida’s production based on the Japanese play Sarachi weaves together elements of contemporary dance and theatre
