Dublin Dance Festival

Various Locations, Tuesday 13th May - Saturday 24th May

Dublin Dance Festival brings artists and audiences together, live and virtually, to create and share exceptional, provocative and relevant dance experiences.

The Dublin Dance Festival believes in the power of dance to move, connect and inspire change. With so much of Ireland’s culture tied up in language and the past, dance has a unique power to explore and express what it is to be human, right now.


Date:
Tuesday 13th May - Saturday 24th May
Time:
Varies
Price:
Varies

You might also like...

What's on

Scene + Heard Festival

Smock Alley Theatre

This is th 9th edition of the SCENE + HEARD programme and we are STARGAZING! ​Inside, You’ll find Music, Myths, Witches, Sieges, and Dead Monks. You’ll find Theology, Philosophy, Ancient Gods, Aerobics and Acrobatics. You’ll find love, loss, longing, Cronie Boys, Common Girls, Feral Women, and Quiet Men. You’ll find Gleeks, Freaks, Catfishers and Starchasers, Synesthesia, SIMS, Showponies and Sheep! At SCENE + HEARD We believe that Art is supposed to reach its audience. We believe that it is the prerogative of the work to sometimes not work. We also believe the audience should

What's on

Urinetown The Musical

Malahide Community School

Urinetown is a wickedly funny, fast-paced, and surprisingly intelligent comedic romp. In the not-so-distant future, a terrible water shortage and 20-year drought has led to a government ban on private toilets and a proliferation of paid public toilets, owned and operated by a single megalomaniac company: the Urine Good Company. If the poor don’t obey the strict laws prohibiting free urination, they’ll be sent to the dreaded and mysterious “Urinetown.” After too long under the heel of the malevolent Caldwell B. Cladwell, the poor stage a revolt, led by a brave young hero, fighting tooth

What's on

MILK مِلْك

Abbey Theatre

Having premiered in Palestine in 2022, MILK مِلْك is a powerful visual theatre experience concerned with a disaster. Not with its causes, its type or its consequences, but with how it divides time in two – before and after – and rifts the two apart, turning time into something with no duration or end. Past becomes present and future loses all meaning other than endless repetition. Inside this rift, which at first appears safe, a group of women look everywhere for their lost motherhood. Coming to the Abbey Theatre for eight performances only, this powerful and determined performance