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 Forty Years and No Slowing Down

From its first steps in 1986 as Dundee Rep Dance Company with Royston Maldoom at the helm, to the present day, Scottish Dance Theatre has sealed it's reputation as a forward-thinking company who pushes the limits of what dance can do. Over the years, it has been helmed by the likes of Janet Smith, Tamara McLorg, Fleur Darkin, and Neville Campbell has included work by diverse choreographers such as Sharon Eyal and Gai Behar, Liv Lorent, Didy Veldman, Emanuel Gat and Damien Jalet. Since 2019 Barcelona-born Joan Clevillé has been artistic director of SDT, bringing rich storytelling and innovative choreography to company. Fjord Review caught up with Clevillé ahead of the big anniversary season to find out what lies ahead for this dynamic company.

Scottish Dance Theatre celebrates its fortieth anniversary. Photograph by Camilla Greenwell

What can audiences expect for the 40th anniversary of Scottish Dance Theatre?

Audiences can expect a season that honours our roots while looking boldly toward the future. For our fortieth anniversary we’re presenting new work by Scottish choreographer Tess Letham, alongside world premieres by internationally acclaimed artists Emilie Leriche and Edouard Hue, and a performance co-created by local participants, dance tutors and choreographer Bridie Gane. Together, these projects celebrate the company’s deep connection to Dundee and Scotland and its outward-looking international profile, culminating in an anniversary gala at our home theatre, Dundee Rep. Alongside the performances, we’re opening our archive to reflect on the artists, people and encounters that have shaped Scottish Dance Theatre over four decades—a celebration of diverse voices and an invitation to share in the curiosity and generosity that continue to define the company.

Joan Clevillé, artistic director of Scottish Dance Theatre. Photograph by

Joan Clevillé, artistic director of Scottish Dance Theatre. Photograph by

Why do you think that contemporary dance resonates with such a wide-ranging group of people?

Contemporary dance resonates so widely because it speaks directly to our most fundamental human experience: the body. Our thoughts, emotions and sensations all live in the body, and movement offers a language that can express what words sometimes cannot. In an increasingly digital and often isolating world, dance creates a rare space for genuine, shared presence—a chance to witness and feel something together in real time. At its best, contemporary dance also reflects the moment we live in: it engages with the questions, tensions and possibilities of our time, inviting audiences to respond both intellectually and viscerally. For me, that combination of physical immediacy and cultural relevance gives it an incredibly powerful resonance.

Do you approach each piece of choreography the same way, or is it a different creative process every time?

In some ways it’s both the same and completely different every time. I don’t have a fixed methodology or formula, and at the start of each creation I still feel that familiar anxiety of impostor syndrome. My process is deeply collaborative and responsive to the people in the studio. I work in dialogue with the dancers, inviting their presence, skills and perspectives to shape the work as it develops. At the same time, there are threads that run consistently through my practice. My background in the humanities means I often begin with a period of research and reading—both fiction and non-fiction—and I tend to structure a piece by breaking its arc into progressively smaller components, bringing specific propositions or questions into the studio for each moment. Sometimes I arrive with a clear vision; at other times the process is more open, and I rely on the dancers’ generosity and intelligence to help uncover the way forward. Continually finding the balance between certainty and the unknown is what keeps the process alive for me.

Scottish Dance Theatre in “Moving Cloud” by Sophie Nappi. Photograph by Brian Hartley

Scottish Dance Theatre in “Moving Cloud” by Sophie Nappi. Photograph by Brian Hartley

What can you see happening in the future for Scottish Dance Theatre?

Scottish Dance Theatre occupies a rare and valuable position today: there are very few full-time repertory dance companies left in the UK, and I believe the repertory model remains deeply meaningful. It affirms the diversity of contemporary dance and asks performers to cultivate an extraordinary degree of openness and adaptability. As we navigate profound social, cultural and environmental change, I see the company’s future as a platform for innovation and experimentation —a space to pilot new ways of collaborating, of being together and of reaching across cultures. The tools we cultivate in the studio—listening, trust, negotiation and collective imagination—are not only artistic skills but transferable ways of relating to one another and engaging with the wider world. I am constantly in awe of the power of embodied intelligence, and I believe that as dance artists we are in a unique position to contribute to civic and creative communities in ways that resonate far beyond the theatre and benefit the generations to come.

Lorna Irvine


Based in Glasgow, Lorna was delightfully corrupted by the work of Michael Clark in her early teens, and has never looked back. Passionate about dance, music, and theatre she writes regularly for the List, Across the Arts and Exeunt. She also wrote on dance, drama and whatever particular obsession she had that week for the Shimmy, the Skinny and TLG and has contributed to Mslexia, TYCI and the Vile Blog.

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