NewsCirca’s Wolf is a triumph – brimming with primal power and acrobatic...

Circa’s Wolf is a triumph – brimming with primal power and acrobatic precision

The Australian premiere of Circa’s Wolf at Brisbane’s Queensland Performing Arts Centre was a breath-holding whirlwind of primal excitement. In two 40-minute acts, Director Yaron Lifschitz took us on a journey of savagery, survival and togetherness.

Circa is an edgy contemporary circus company that offers audiences a boost of adrenaline through well-crafted acrobatic skill, as well as insightful critiques of humanity.

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There are deep lessons once you scratch the surface of Wolf – a masterful piece that examines animal urges, as well as solitary survival, sexuality, nurturing, pack mentality and communal responsibility.

Incredible human sculptures

The audience enters the QPAC Playhouse to comical video images of wolves, including 1930s Disney illustrations, stop-motion animation and vintage Shirley Temple footage – all gesturing towards different cultural representations of Red Riding Hood and the Big Bad Wolf.

The curtain opens with the stage fully obscured with haze and, through the dense fog, we see a body hanging from a rope and one lone wolf at a back corner of the stage. It watches, waiting, ready to pounce; the predatory theme is immediately obvious.

A group of contemporary dancers in black and tan bodysuits pose in a tight cluster on a bare stage, each in a slightly different pose.

CAP.
Andy Phillipson

What unfolds is a dynamic physical show that is driven by raw, animalistic imagery.
Strap work and trapeze artists pepper the show, as bodies gnaw and snarl at them from below. We see feats of incredible physical prowess, and an exploration of the wild nature of wolves.

The humans-as-wolves towers elicits the largest gasp from the opening night audience. More and more bodies climb up on shoulders before, finally, the tower collapses and the entire cast tumbles expertly across the stage. The patterns created by the whirlwind of bodies are mesmerising.

Groups of bodies dance to shift into position to create human sculptures. When the team is clustered together, hands or feet simply spring up when required to help performers springboard to their next feat. The performers must act as a pack for the survival of all the members.

Wolves climb up and cling to each other and then pounce at their prey across the stage, landing from the heights of other performers’ shoulders.

A dancer is launched high into the air, fully extended in a split-like position with arms reaching forward. Below, three other dancers in matching costumes look up as if preparing to catch him.

Andy Phillipson.
Andy Phillipson

A roiling romp

Circa has perfected the art of the inaudible landing. Even from tremendous heights, the acrobats land with silent precision.

The stark white wall and stage-covering mat provide a minimalist set design which prioritises the visual importance of the performers’ movements. Their silhouettes and shadows offer a perfect background for the ever-morphing sculptural patterns they create using their bodies.

Wolves move in and out of the stage – establishing dominance over the prey – and transform from individual beasts into a collective pack. One body-sculpture features a wolf holding four other performers on his shoulders, but it is not complete until two more cling around each leg: a feat worthy of the pack leader.

Another notable scene is met with roars of laughter;

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