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Tranquil Intrigue

The title of this dance interpretation of The Tempest highlights a notable departure from canon. In “We Caliban,” Shobana Jeyasingh imagines Shakespeare’s titular native in the collective sense—a tribe, a spirit and a place at once. Caliban also manifests individually, not unlike a folk devil, to give an extra whiff of tropical mystique to the story, here given a postcolonial reading that emphasises Prospero’s role as an imperialist. “You taught me language, and my profit on 't/Is I know how to curse,” Raúl Reinoso Acanda’s Caliban hisses at Holly Vallis’s Miranda, his defiant delivery conjuring a crisp critique. The production draws out an important nuance of language as a symbol of power: does it represent dominion or liberation?

Performance

“We Caliban” by Shobana Jeyasingh

Place

Sadler’s Wells East, London, UK, April 22, 2026

Words

Sara Veale

Raul Reinoso Acanda and Holly Vallis in “We Caliban” by Shobana Jeyasingh. Photograph by Foteini Christofilopoulou

With the help of dramaturg Uzma Hameed, Jeyasingh distils the story across seven light-touch scenes, weaving in complementary voiceovers, graphics and text. Our first glimpse of ‘Group Caliban’ is a huddle of bodies swaying to dulcet birdsong. There’s no trace of Shakespeare’s monstrous characterisation, the bitter “deformed slave,” though shades of resistance are highlighted in this collective imagining. Silky contemporary dance sketches a portrait of serene, unspoiled beauty, with small leaps into arms and long, luxurious stretches of torso and limb—a fetching rendering of “the isle… full of noises/Sounds, and sweet airs.” Draped in soft purples and pinks, hands linked in an unbroken chain, the dancers ripple across levels and planes in velvet synchronicity.

Colonialism comes knocking with a clipped narration of Queen Elizabeth I’s 1584 letter imploring Sir Walter Raleigh to go forth and conquer the “heathen, barbarous lands” of the Caribbean—a geopolitical event Jeyasingh comingles with the play, layering Elizabethan ruffs with projections of sixteenth-century maps and scripts. It’s not long before Prospero and his daughter Miranda wash up on Caliban’s pristine shores and ensconce themselves among the locals, plying them with books. 

Shobana Jeyasingh Dance in “We Caliban” by Shobana Jeyasingh. Photograph by Foteini Christofilopoulou

Shobana Jeyasingh Dance in “We Caliban” by Shobana Jeyasingh. Photograph by Foteini Christofilopoulou

Here solo Caliban steps forward, sturdy, curious, young and handsome. His relationship with Miranda is conveyed in a tense duet that starts out confrontational and morphs into something sensual. The pair hold wary, intense eye contact as they swap places on a chair; they grip hands and tug in opposition until they fall backwards. Hands wander to graze cheeks and lower backs. A facedown drop prompts a horizontal clinch with an erotic, slow-burning recovery. Their erotic back-and-forth supplants the play’s intimations of rape and corruption with a roiling wave of mutual desire. Still, here arrives a displeased Prospero (Harry Ondrak-Wright). Cue a soundscape of colonial writings emphasising the “natural” moral superiority of Europeans over “natives” as Prospero swiftly contrives to marry Miranda off to a political rival from Milan. 

The dancing moves in sync with the storytelling: pleasing and well-marshalled, with the ensemble deftly toggling between different registers to represent Group Caliban pre- and post-Prospero. Latter incarnations bring some depth to Prospero, who wields a stick as he connives how best to consolidate his power, part sorcerer, part coloniser. The ensemble also step in as background actors to the Milanese court, diving and clambering in a sprightly show of political ladder-climbing. The production doesn’t fully plumb the interesting questions it poses, but the impressionistic tack works well to create a flowing, streamlined hour of dance.

The closing scene centres a duet between Reinoso Acanda and Tanisha Addicott—a silky, languid interlocking of bodies. While it doesn’t quite sync with the stated vision of “a new and fractured landscape,” the liquid extensions and interesting floorwork here are resonant. A tranquil and intriguing final note.

Sara Veale


Sara Veale is a London-based writer and editor. She's a member of the UK Dance Critics' Circle and has written about dance for the Observer, the Spectator, Harper's Bazaar, Auditorium, Gramophone and more. Her book, Wild Grace: The Untamed Women of Modern Dance, was published by Faber in 2025.

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