Curriculum Vitae ENG

Curriculum Vitae

CURRICULUM VITAE ODD JOHAN FRITZØE
Born Drøbak, Norway. 10 January 1962.

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EDUCATION
Examen artium, specializing in science, 1980
Gloppe handicraft school, specializing in drawing, patterns and color, 1981
National Ballet Academy, teaching program, 1984–87
L ́école de danse et l ́échange culturel de Rose Marie Guiraud, Ivory Coast, 1987–88
Examen philosophicum (foundation course in philosophy, philosophy of science, history of science, ethics and/or rhetoric), Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim 1997
Examen facultatum (foundation course in theory of science), University of Oslo 1998

PERFORMANCES 
(group/choreographer, «title», premier location, tours, years)
Torild Bernatek: «It’s about being human», Black Box Teater, 1985
Verdensteatret: «Zanzibar», Bergen, Oslo, M/S Braemar 1988
Imago Danseteater/Lise Eger: «The Earth Dreams»  Black Box Teater, 1989
Collage Dansekompani (CD) /Giorgio Rossi: «Frail Creation» Black Box, Norrkøping, Rome, Piza, 1989
CD/Sølvi Edvardsen/ Kristin Gjems: «Vita», Black Box Teater, 1990
CD/Lise Nordal: «Tidal Waters»,  Black Box Teater, Sandefjord, Faeroe Islands, 1991
CD/Karine Sapporta: «Dead Forest»  Grieghallen, Nationaltheatret, Theâtre de la ville Paris, Metz, Copenhagen, 1994 & 1995
CD/ Riksteatret / Black Box , «Pinocchio», Black Box Teater, Innvik MS, 1993
CD/ Den Nasjonale Scene / Black Box, «Glass», 1993
Menn danser: Øyvind Jørgensen «French Toast», Black Box, 1992
Beavvas Sami Theater «Journey of the Son of the Sun to the Land of Giants», Hålogaland Teater, Tromsø, 1991
Karene Lyngholm «Etiquette»,Black Box, 1991
Lise Nordal, 3-D ballet for the opening of Elektra / Henie Onstad kunstsenter, 1994
Un Magritt Nordseth: «Da-ba-da»,  Scenehuset i Oslo, 1991
Nordseth/Johannessen: «Baroque Frieze», Bergen International Festival and Scenehuset i Oslo, 1992
Un-Magritt Nordseth: «Alf», Black Box, 1995
Anne Grete Eriksen / Leif Hernes: Olympic Games – Opening and Closing Ceremonies, Lillehammer, 1994
Lise Ferner: «The Lady from the Sea»  Black Box, 1996
Kathy Bresse: «Desert Mapping», Black Box, 1999

PERFORMANCES OF SELF-CHOREOGRAPHED WORK
«Star. * – a sound installation for two dancers», on tour 1998–2014
«Hello – Audiovisual Report», Copenhagen, Trøndelag Teater, Mosjøen, Montpellier, 1997 & 2001
«Me&you»,  on tour, 2001
«Residents – A Construction Kit»,  Black Box Teater 2002–11
«Anatomical Adventure»,  Black Box Teater, 2005
«Adventure Botanica», Dansens Hus, Oslo, 2013, plus 45 performances on tour in Hedmark 2014 – 2017

CREATIVE ACTIVITY
(«titles»,  premier location, year of premier, tours)

«A Dog Day’s Night»,, Black Box, 1992
«There’s a negro in the yard – mother dear»  Riksteatret, 1993
«Firekuzinska», Stellaris Dansekompani, Hammerfest, 1994
«To the Stars»,  Tromsø Danseteater, 1995
«Bla -ki bla-da – linguistic confucion»»,  Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, 1996
«Ball,” Sandvika Cinema, 1997
«Hello – Audiovisual Report,” Copenhagen, 1997
«Little Red Riding Hood»,  Black Box, 1998
«Star. * – a sound installation for two dancers» Våler Secondary School, 1988, 264 performances on tour 2002–11
«Zooom»  Black Box, 2000
«Me&you» Alvdal, 2001
«Residents – A Construction Kit» Black Box Teater, 2002, 256 performances on tour 1998–2014
«Anatomical Adventure»  Black Box Teater, 2005
«Frozen Flowering»  Helsinki, 2006
«Balls», Trikkehallen på Kjelsås, Oslo,2007 / Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2008
«Snow»,  Kulturhuset i Bærum, Bølgen, 2009–10
«Brother»,  Norwegian Opera and Ballet, 2012
«Adventura botanica»,  Dansens Hus, Oslo, 2013

PRIZES, GRANTS, SCHOLARSHIPS, AND STUDY TRIPS
Study grant, State Educational Loan Fund, study trips to Africa and Paris 1991
Travel and study grant, Fund for Performing Artists, Wien Tanzwochen 1995
Travel and study grant, Norwegian Arts Scholarship Scheme, Travels in China, 1996
Three-year work grant for artists, Norwegian Arts Scholarship Scheme, 1997–2000
Performing Arts Hub Norway, Performing Arts Award 2000
Travel and study grant, Norwegian Arts Scholarship Scheme, Travels in China, 2006
Finn Tveito’s grant for male dancers, 2002
Travel grant, Fund for Performing Artists, 2007
Oslo City’s Culture Award 2008
Norwegian Critics’ Association, Dance Critics’ Prize 2008/2009
Travel and training grant, Fund for Performing Artists, 2010
Awarded guaranteed minimum income for artists (GI), Norwegian Arts Scholarship Scheme, 2012
Travel and training grant, Fund for Performing Artists, 2015

Curriculum Vitae ENG2019-10-18T13:11:27+00:00

Reviews ENG

Reviews

AFTENPOSTEN “Brilliant in a winter wasteland”
by Inger-Margrethe Lunde, 2 March 2009

“Odd Johan Fritzøe has taken a massive step forward in his artistic career. Exotic Norwegian dance could be a profitable export commodity. This is exotic, fairytale-like, fascinating, and very well directed. Odd Johan Fritzøe and a company of skilled colleagues have created ‘Snow’, a production that surprises and seduces. Winterland. The choreographer has taken himself off to the kingdom of snow, to fairy tales and legends, stories true and untrue, inspired by Scott, Amundsen, and Nansen, the ‘Ice Palace’ of Terje Vesaas, Ibsen’s ‘Rosmersholm’, H.C. Andersen’s ‘Snow Queen’ and White Jade Dragon Virgin of China’s mysterious mountain valleys. Timeless. The show more than succeeds in balancing the different elements. The monumental modernist scenography of Karl Hans, Espen Tversland’s computer animations, eliciting internal abstractions of ice, mountains, and snow across the panorama of the stage. Bjarne Kvinnsland’s rich musical arrangement with drums and percussion instruments played live, and not least Kathrine Tolo’s teasing costumes – mostly in white – provide the props for this sojourn in the wintery expanse. Snow, one feels, is timeless. Technically, the dance is bound and unbound at the same time. Formalistic in terms of stage design with its straight lines, angles, and often angular gesticulations, it is also utterly riveting and magnanimous. Especially in the sequences where the seven dancers lean toward synchronicity. Fritzøe pays compliments to different genres and idioms without losing his individuality. Although the transitions are gentle, the show is nonetheless divided into clearly defined sections. From the abstract and the blithely playful to the more dramatic tableaux. One of the highlights is Scott’s struggle across the ice. The wearily fluttering white flag and the even more exhausted polar explorers are represented through strong visual images. Some of the quieter, more traditional sequences, danced by Torunn Robstad, contrast nicely with the wilder and feistier sections, represented by Cecilie L. Steen and Hanna Mjåvatn. As in ‘The Nutcracker’, Fritzøe has also hired in snowflakes. Fifteen young dancers from Kirsti Skullerud’s ballet school and three very young acrobats dressed as polar bears do an impressive job. Fritzøe’s use of dream and reality with ice-covered peaks and mountains, make for a heavenly show. Snow is generous, it gives and generates happiness and excitement. Excellent PR for Norway if the Foreign Ministry can only be bothered to take the time and make the investment.”

DAGSAVISEN «Dance in the Premier League»
by Inger-Margrethe Lunde, 20 September 2000

“Video graphics come to the dance theater! It’s not often you get to see a such an equally proportioned theatrical project. Choreographer Odd Johan Fritzøe has entered into an extremely rewarding partnership with no fewer than three high-profile artists, each of whom brings their own distinctive idiom to ‘Zooom’, a nimble, surprising, original piece of choreography. The point of departure here is cinematic effects – we’re told as much by the credits that role across the stage curtain. ‘Zooom’ grows into a thrilling theatrical journey through peaks and underwater troughs, large sonic cavities, modernistically carved surfaces and lively spaces full of playful video graphics. It’s much more than a bunch of platitudes in motion. You almost forget it, despite seeing paraphrases of ‘I love you very much’ and so on, not to mention a delicious parody of the twist, danced by Thomas Gundersen alone. It’s just as nostalgic as it is bereft of nostalgia. A delightful tutu dance ensemble where we mostly see the dancers’ buttocks enveloped in divine splotches of red, orange, green, purple, blue, and yellow. Kenneth Flak performs  here a delightful maneuver with his feet while standing on his head. The other dancers, Camilla Myhre, Irene Rothmund Velten, and André Austvoll. Surprising variations notwithstanding. It’s the formal effects that surprise us most of all. Absolutely nothing is left to chance. The physical scenography is alive in all its being. The body, video graphics that are menacing as knife and saw blades, tracks and shafts, but also almost ridiculously cute flowers on display, and sliding white scenographic elements, circles and ovals cut out in a white space full of electronic music with percussion and, toward the end, a prepared piano, are «superimposed’» with immense confidence. The expanse gives the viewer a monumental experience. Fritzøe’s dancers are unsteady at times, not that it detracts from the work as a whole or from the choreographer’s distinctive dance idiom. They can suddenly clench their fist, let a leg or elbow drop or perform contortions as if that particular part of the body is sliding down of its own accord, drops. It doesn’t, though, because in an instant it can transmute into some agile gesture or other – circular even though there’s always a lurking suspicion of staccatoed abruptness. It’s an idiosyncratic form of interrogation we can link to Fritzøe’s own choreographic identity. ‘Zooom’ is Fritzøe’s first full-length show and it’s impressive. Together with Lise Nordal’s latest show, «Entrance», premiered last weekend, it confirms the accession of new formal idiom of great strength. The premier division of modern Norwegian dance is growing big and strong. It’s all hugely gratifying.”

KLASSEKAMPEN “Living Installation”
by Inger-Margrethe Lunde, 13 February 1996

“Soooo strange! Look, there they go. Smiles and arched eyebrows meet the four dancers currently in the employ of Henie Onstad Art Center to be/do a dance installation in the center’s different galleries among hundreds of spectators. A few hours every weekend, they compete for attention with Munch/Solberg, Kain Tapper, Sverre Wyller, Harvey Quaytman, Rune Dyrøy, and the building’s façade. Three women and one man are clad in silvery short gowns with black edges, black socks, and shoes. They all sport black, bristly short hair and pale-white greasepaint, red lipstick providing the only splash of color. They hold a cassette player. People scramble to the foyer where the dancers, Henriette Slorer, Terje Tjøme Mossige, Camilla Myhre, and Marit Ødegaard, are positions in their allotted places – or countries as Odd Johan Fritzøe likes to call them. In pulsating staccato movements, rather slowish, they present then repeat the pattern, travel over the floor (an idea borrowed from folk dance). Their lithe progress through the rooms is ingeniously choreographed. Arriving at the second station we find ourselves in the enclosed oblong room housing the Munch/Solberg lithographic printing press. The patterns settle down, the dancers move in relation to the room. Longitudinally and around their own axis. Although the structures are carefully planned, like a space mission – the costumes seem to suggest something of the sort – the cool, dispassionate expression, visual and choreographic, is softened by their small nods aside and not-so-camouflaged smiles to the audience. Here, it has a redeeming function, possibly a necessary one. In the main room, vis-à-vis Munch/Solberg they work in the large format. Slight variations are discernible in the pattern’s general oneness. The cassette player becomes an active participant in the dance, and sonically it works very well. The four players have their own intricate soundspaces. A gorgeous but muted cacophony that showcases the absurdity of the whole episode. The music is by ORB, De Press, The Shangri-La’s and Linguaphone Language Courses: German, Arabic, Hebrew, and Russian have been incorporated. Jonas Digerud and the choreographer himself engineered the sound design electronically. At times, it’s completely baffling, at others, words and phrases can be heard but although we can place them geographically, we can’t necessarily understand what they’re saying. The four dancers are also occasionally brought into the language courses. Both aurally and choreographically there is a fund of witty asides. Indeed, they accentuate the comedic effect in these surroundings which are simultaneously retrospective and absolutely modern. One of the stand-out features was ‘Kalinka’,  the only song that sounded more or less more or less as it should, to a snazzy parody by the banister down to the lower floor and the art center’s new extension. Another ultimate station/country, the former concert hall but now a bursting repository of Cain Tapper’s wooden sculptures. A captivating monumental consecrated space providing a wonderful, calm conclusion to this journey through many countries and rooms.”

Salsanor, by Fredrik Drevon, November 2008

“I had the pleasure of seeing a CODA production in the Kjelsås tram depot that was both entertaining and instructive at a deeper level. ‘Balls’ by Odd Johan Fritzøe was an engaging encounter of breakdance and contemporary dance. The show opened with one of the dancers emerging from an ovoid ball. It evolved from an organic story of creation to an exploration of a mechanical universe in the spirit of Charlie Chaplin’s ‘Modern Times’. Occasionally the balls were planets, at others they symbolized existential problems. The dancers’ immersion in the unpredictable and humorous choreography fused into an energetic tussle with issues such as conflict, conformity, and sexuality, not to mention PE classes at school. Nicely placed references to humans as puppets and geniuses, along with inventive ‘breaks’ in the choreography, gave the piece an associative potential as plentiful as a novel or feature film. On the deeper plane, the show shed light on the political symbolic power inherent in everyday gestures, especially with regard to how people strive to break out of, and escape into, conformist patterns. Break dancer Chenno Tim played the role of outsider or renegade; his character struggling throughout to establish its identity in opposition that of the other three.”

KLASSEKAMPEN “Identity and belonging”
by Inger-Margrethe Lunde, 8 September 1993

“‘Negro in the yar’ by Odd Johan Fritzøe, on the other hand, gave us a nice surprise with his interpretation of the theme of ‘identity and belonging’. He takes hold of a multicultural reality. But travels south, linking Norwegian folk culture to African culture, he grew up in Liberia and later studied in different countries in Africa. ‘There’s a negro in the yard – mother dear’ is what he calls the show and it turns out to be a good-humored, intelligent expression of the abundant opportunities in traditional dance. Fritzøe has even performed Norwegian folk dances. His transformation of a familiar language into a modern, fluid balletic idiom in which constellations of dancers, ring dances, and movements weaving in and out of formations are compelling and inspiring. Personally, I’ve got a taste for folk dancing after seeing in this demonstration its potential for change, so infected with laughter, joy and a tiny sliver of irony. The scenography emphasizes in its own particular way the purpose of the choreography. Three futuristic trees form depths and surfaces as required. Visual artist Karl Hansen has undoubtedly contributed to the humorous theatrics created by the tug of the performance and lively scenography. An elk and a camel appear at the end. An encounter across borders, literally; a single image, but it works brilliantly, not least choreographically, in the tempo dance, a kind of hieroglyphic flick. In the field of music, Fritzøe is hugely talented. He opens with a Norwegian folk tune, venturing later to Australia and a powerfully hypnotic soundscape before resorting to an African lullaby from Zaire to accompany the conclusion. The combination of known and unknown, both musically and balletically, creates a convincing whole. The dancers do themselves proud in stick dancing and a merry ring dance, and strangely enough they dance so quietly to the suggestive sequences. The costumes, inspired by the traditional Setesdal style but with hints of Africa, only serve to highlight the success of all aspects of the show.”

KLASSEKAMPEN “Like a Jack-in-a-box”
by Inger-Margrethe Lunde, 27 June 1992

“Odd Johan Fritzøe has taken a giant step forward in the Norwegian world of dance with ‘A Dog Day’s Night’. From something that looks like animals, three dancers emerge out of the night. The transformations proceed in playful, silent steps. From animal to human, from recognizable entity to irony and astonishing moving patterns. Softness and lightness, strength that needed no visual translation, clear thinking in a thoughtful and unitary language, they moved forward, in circles, to an Iberian beat and the chirping of grasshoppers. Drop-dead gorgeous and deeply poetic.”

KLASSEKAMPEN “Light Variations”
by Inger-Margrethe Lunde, 28 March 1992

“Odd Johan Fritzøe’s J.O.D.A.M, danced by Mona Walderhaug and the choreographer himself, was a breath of fresh air, a choreography that speaks to head and heart. The dancers enter carrying two functionalist steel lamps; they’re switched on and off like scenes on and off. Two chairs are also included in the dance. Music and script (Finnegan’s Wake) by John Cage and Pommes Fritz (music mix). Almost minimalistic, a fine performance is created by gestures, symbols, acted out in parallel and individually. Walderhaug in particular exhibited such balletic ease, she even got the quadratic gestures to flow. Variations in tempo and idiom slipped playfully in and out of each other.”

Reviews ENG2019-10-02T08:45:43+00:00

Press Archive ENG

Press Archive

Please credit all photographers according copyright laws.
WINDOWS Right click, choose save link to disk.
MAC Click and hold link, choose save link to disk.
ojfVerdensteateret
Photo: Anne Lise Stenseth
ojf_verdenst.jpg
ojfSnow
Photo: Christian Elgvin
sne.web.jpg
ojfBalls
Photo: Christian Elgvin
Baller.jpg
ojfAdventura anatomica
Photo: Erik Berg
AdventuraAnatomica.jpg
ojfJainen Kukinta
Photo: Sakaria Viika
Kukinta.jpg
ojfAlf
Photo: Erik Berg
ojf_alf.jpg
ojfBla-ki bla-da
Photo: Jacky Penot
ojf_bla_ki_bla_da.jpg
ojfFilo d ‘erba
Photo: Erik Berg
ojf_filo_perra.jpg
ojfBuilders
Photo: Christian Elgvin
ojf_inhabitants.jpg
ojfMorte Fôret
Photo: Jean-Michel Guillaud
ojf_morte_foret.jpg
ojfLittle Red Riding Hood
Photo: Erik Berg
ojf_rod_hetta.jpg
ojfStar*
Photo: Marit Anna Evanger
ojf_stjerne*.jpg
ojfZooom
Photo: Christian Elgvin
ojf_zooom.jpg
ojfAdventura botanica
Photo: Tobias Nordberg
botanica.jpg
ojfPortrait 1994
Photo: Erik Berg
ojf_portrait.jpg
Press Archive ENG2023-02-02T11:29:39+00:00

Partners ENG

Partners

ARTS COUNCIL NORWAY
Arts Council Norway (Kulturrådet), founded in 1965, is a government agency under the Ministry of Culture. The Council allocates grants for artistic and cultural endeavors across the country and promotes new projects in these areas. The Council oversees the activities of the Norwegian Cultural Fund (Norsk kulturfond), Norwegian Arts Scholarship Scheme (Statens kunstnerstipendier), Norwegian Fund for Sound and Image (Fond for lyd og bilde) and other governmental schemes. The Council provided funds for «Zooom», «Residents – A Construction Kit», «Adventura Anatomica» ,»Balls» and «Adventura botanica». Fritzøe has been awarded several travel, study, and work grants, and is ensured a minimum income for artists under the Norwegian Arts Scholarship Scheme.
www.kulturradet.no

HEDMARK TOURING ORGANIZATION 
Located in Hamar the Hedmark Touring Organization (Turnèorganisasjonen for Hedmark – ToH) was founded 21 June 1991. Concerts Norway (Rikskonsertene) had always organized concerts, shows, and performances, but from that year Norwegian schoolchildren were given an opportunity to enjoy theatrical productions, meet writers and visual artists, and see exhibitions and ballets. The system was renamed School Kit (Skolepakka ) and became the main focus of the Hedmark Touring Organization. In 2007, the organization was given responsibility for upper secondary schools. ToH is the educational body responsible for the Cultural Rucksack (Den kulturelle skolesekken – DKS), a scheme designed to let schoolchildren enjoy all kinds of artistic and cultural activities. The 22 municipalities in the county of Hedmark are committed to ensuring all schools in their area are visited. ToH produced «Star. * – A sound installation for two dancers» in 1997, «Me & You»  in 2001. and coproduced in 2002 «Residents – A Construction Kit» . Starting in 2013, Fritzøe is on the road in Hedmark with the show «Adventura botanica», in partnership with Concerts Norway.
www.turneorg.no

FUND FOR PERFORMING ARTISTS
Norway’s parliament adopted in 1956 a law on the use of recordings of performing artists, at the time LPs and tape recordings. The following year, the Fund for Performing Artists (Fond for utøvende kunstnere – FFUK) was created . Cultural activity is its mandate and funds are allotted to professional artists living and working in Norway. The Fund’s mission is to give the public access to live performances across genres and artist categories. It has supported most of Fritzøe’s shows – see the statistics – and helped fund productions, tours, and travel – along with providing training scholarships.
www.ffuk.no

NORWEGIAN FUND FOR SOUND AND IMAGE
Formerly Cassette Fee Fund (Kassettavgiftsfondet), the Norwegian Fund for Sound and Image (Fond for Lyd og Bilde) compensates rightsholders for the legal copying of their work for private use. Most the Fund’s capital is earmarked projects that meet the Fund’s statutory criteria. The Fund also supports the revival of stage shows, such as the 1994 revival of «There’s a negro in the yard – mother dear», «Residents – A Construction Kit» in 2011, and «Snow» in 2010. The Fund has also supported productions such as «Zooom» and  «Adventura anatomica».
www.kulturradet.no

NOTAM
Norwegian Center for Technology in Music and the Arts (Norsk organisasjon for teknologi, akustikk og musikk – NOTAM) was established officially in 1992 with contributions from the Ministry of Culture, Arts Council Norway and Ministry of Education, Research, and Church Affairs. The organization was renamed Norwegian Center for Technology in Music and the Arts in 2008. NOTAM provided the workshop for the creation of the soundtrack to «Star. * – A sound installation for two dancers» and later co-produced and built sound sculptures for «Residents – A Construction Kit», «Balls» and «Adventura botanica».
www.notam02.no

THE NATIONAL TOURING NETWORK FOR PERFORMING ARTS (NTNPA)
The organization celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2014. It was originally established and owned by the organization Performing Arts Hub Norway (Danse- og Teatersentrum). Today NTNPA (Norsk Scenekunstbruk), an independent limited company, is the leading sponsor of the performing arts in Norway. The organization arranges activities related to the Cultural Rucksack scheme and its repertory is based on revivals. The Cultural Rucksack is a joint venture between the Ministries of Culture and Education. NTNPA ’s repertory includes “Residents – A Construction Kit”, “Star. * – A sound installation for two dancers” and “Balls”.
www.scenekunstbruket.no

DANCE IN THE COUNTY OF NORD-TRØNDELAG
A regional production organization for professional dancers, it is supported by the Arts Council, Nord-Trøndelag County Council, and the Municipality of Inderøy. Conceived and realized by dancer/choreographer Anna Hegdahl, it acts today as a platform for research, stagings and education in the art of dance in Trøndelag. The project provides information on and facilitates regional, national, and international partnerships. Dance in the county of Nord-Trøndelag  (Dans i Nord-Trøndelag – D-NT) revived «Star. * – A sound installation for two dancers» and «Residents – A Construction Kit». D-NT and Odd Johan Fritzøe are working together on several artistic projects.
www.dansitrondelag.no

NORWEGIAN NATIONAL LIBRARY
The National Library (Najonalbiblioteket) collects, preserves, and enables access to published works in all types of media. In 1998, a major part of the University Library was transferred to the National Library, with branches at Solli Plass in Oslo and in Mo i Rana. In 2014 the National Library and Odd Johan Fritzøe entered into a written agreement on the legal deposit of web pages at www.oddjohanfritzoe.no. The National Library also holds an 89-page breakdown of Fritzøe’s artistic work – lending specimens can be found at Henrik Ibsen’s gate 110, Oslo. As an administrative and research library, the National Library is a vital part of the infrastructure of the Norwegian research establishment. The National Library is also a political tool designed to facilitate the lasting preservation of Norway’s cultural heritage. Based on knowledge gained in the development of services and on past experience, the National Library has a special responsibility to foster and strengthen libraries in Norway as active and relevant social institutions. As the national agency in the library sector, the National Library informs and implements government policy on public and academic libraries.
www.nasjonalbiblioteket.no

DANCE INFORMATION NORWAY
Dance Information Norway (Danseinformasjon) stores data on current shows in which Norwegian dancers are involved. Dance Information was established in March 1994 as a foundation by the Norwegian Ballet Association on funds provided by the Ministry of Culture. Its name then was Center for Dance. Under its mandate, the foundation owns and manages Dance Information and promotes the art of dance in general through a range of different activities.
www.danseinfo.no

THE NATIONAL TOURING THEATER
The National touring theater (Riksteatret)  is a government-run touring theater, established by a law of 13 December 1948. In 1993 the National touring theatre received earmarked funds to promote the field of dance. During 1993, a year dedicated to dance, the show «There’s a negro in the yard – mother dear» toured Norway and in 2001 theater director Bente Erichsen commissioned the ballet «Zooom» for a new nationwide tour. Fritzøe also toured with «Pinocchio» in 1993 on the theater boat Innvik.
www.riksteatret.no

WEB
Webdesign: Matt Bagguley – matt.bagguley@gmail.com
French tranlation: Virginie Crest-Ekhaugen
English translation: Christopher Saunders
Publisher: Odd Johan Fritzøe

Partners ENG2019-10-02T08:27:42+00:00

Midsummer’s Eve ENG

St. John’s night in the fields

The artist Einar Øfsti painted Midsummer´s Eve in 1901 and as stagedecor it inspires to play with myths and fairytales from the region of Trøndelag in Norway. Rich in history and arts from the Middle Age – here the Christians were hindered by pagans of the north. With his violin, the folk musician Gjermund Larsen, plays live on stage and the four dancers tumbles and dances around this nocturnal celebration of midsummer magic.

Choreografy: Odd Johan Fritzøe
Scenography: Reproduction of painting by Einar Øfsti
Music: Gjermund Larsen
Studiomusicians: Tor Haugerud and Andreas Utnem
Dancers: Alexander Aarø, Elisabeth C. Holth, Guro Gulstad and Severin Romer Iversen
Costumes: Svein Ove Kirkhorn
Production: Dans i Trøndelag
Co-producers: Turnéteateret i Trøndelag, Riksscenen, Ål Kulturhus, Hilmarfestivalen

Premiere 10th November 2018, Dampsaga, Steinkjer
You can watch the performance here: https://vimeo.com/338641922

Photo: Svein Ove Kirkhorn

Midsummer’s Eve ENG2020-06-18T08:50:27+00:00

Adventura Botanica ENG

Adventura Botanica

Choreography/dancer: Odd Johan Fritzøe
Scenography: Karl Hansen
Music: SPUNK – Maja Ratkje, Hild Tafjord, Kristin Andersen & Lene Grenager
Costumes: Svein Ove Kirkhorn
Co-production: NOTAM – Norsk senter for teknologi i musikk og kunst, Dansens Hus, Oslo, Ultima 2013

Premiere 12th September 2013, Dansens Hus, Oslo

Inspired by Charles Darwin’s 150th anniversary and his research into the coevolution of plants and insects the show comprises a series of studies in dance accompanied by choreographed lighting and sound. The stage design’s multiple white surfaces create a space for open-ended interpretations by an adult male dancing around a totem. The performance was on tour in 2015 as part of the Concerts Norway’s nationwide program. Batteries power the soundscapes and lighting and the show is portable – it can be performed outdoors.

The soundtrack is released by Rune grammofon

You can watch the performance here Adventura botanica
For more on the background to the show, see
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8GdkMBluis
Adventura Botanica ENG2023-02-02T10:37:36+00:00

Brother ENG

Brother

Choreography: Odd Johan Fritzøe
Scenography: Karl Hansen
Music: Igor Stravinsky
Dancers: Ouasim Ahssain, Rohil Arif, Kadi Cham, Marion Lund Fransrud, Inger-Helene Jeremiassen, Mira Kristiansen, Vijai Kurunathan, Ida Aisha Macauley, Suad Mahdi, Hermon Selemon, Ane Bækken Soleim, Ousam Souleymane & Azzedin Souleymane.

Premiere 29 November 2012, Norwegian National Opera and Ballet.

Stravinsky’s «Rite of Spring» with thirteen hip hop artist from the lighthouse of dance, The Planet, in an Oslo suburb – Grorud. Oslo City Council asked Odd Johan Fritzøe and Karl Hansen to join forces, and the Norwegian National Opera and Ballet welcomed the show as a feature in its diversity program. Adolescents, all equipped with a shield for protection and to form a collective pattern face the audience seated on all four sides of the stage. There is no sacrifice, but occasionally an individual leaves the group, examines it from the outside and ponders.

Photo: Odd Geir Sæter
Available on DVD

Brother ENG2019-10-17T10:53:51+00:00

Snow ENG

Snow

Choreography: Odd Johan Fritzøe
Scenography: Karl Hansen
Music: Bjarne Kvinnsland
Costumes: Kathrine Tolo
Animations: Espen Tversland
Lighting: Yngve Sandboe
Dancers: Pernille Bønkan, Thomas Gundersen, Hanna Mjåvatn, Torunn Robstad, Cecilie L. Steen, Chenno Tim, Åshild Thinn and young dancers from Kirsti Skullerud’s ballet school.
Musicians: Markus Hernes & Eirik Raude
Producer: Odd Johan Fritzøe

Premiere 26 February 2009, Bærum Kulturhus

Inspired by fairy tales and myths from snowy landscapes. Glaciers, expeditions, frozen hearts and snowstorms in an all-white setting. The beautiful stage design and graphic animations create movement in light, color, and shadow together with the dancers, big and small. Odd Johan Fritzøe was awarded the 2009 Critics’ Prize for this ballet.

You can watch the performance here:
https://vimeo.com/94249689
Photo: Nicky Twang

Snow ENG2019-10-27T07:35:10+00:00

Balls ENG

Balls

Choreography: Odd Johan Fritzøe
Music: Hild Tafjord
Scenography and costumes: Torhild Berg
Lighting: Stig Framnes
Dancers: Trond André Hansen, Thomas Lægreid Gundersen, Mikkel Are Olsen & Chenno Tim
Producer: CODA International Dance Festival 2007, Oslo

Premiere 27th September 2007 as part of the CODA 2007 Festival, Trikkehallen, Oslo.

Four large balls each with an inbuilt audio system create a fluid landscape of sounds and shapes. Two break dancers meet two contemporary dancers in a chamber play about difficult lightness and pleasant heaviness. The ballet was originally conceived as a show for secondary schools. Shown ten times during the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, 8–18 August 2008.

You can watch the performance here: https://vimeo.com/124295523
Photo: Christian Elgvin

Balls ENG2019-10-27T07:36:21+00:00

Builders ENG

Residents – A Construction Kit

Choreography: Odd Johan Fritzøe
Music: fe-mail – Maja Ratkje & Hild Tafjord
Scenography: Karl Hansen
Script: Cecilie Løveid
Costumes: Svein Ove Kirkhorn
Dancers: Odd Johan Fritzøe & Thomas Gundersen

Premiere 11 October 2002, Black Box Theater, part of the ULTIMA Festival

Playfulness and rhythm are key elements of this successful show which has been performed 258 times at cultural centers, festivals, and schools. Eight sculptures with inbuilt sound reproduction equipment give the two dancers an opportunity to build in sound, form, and movement. Choreographed for children and an audience seated on all four sides.

You can watch the performance here:
https://vimeo.com/124296240
See clips from the tour here: https://vimeo.com/141773718
Photo: Svein Ove Kirkhorn

Builders ENG2019-10-27T07:37:21+00:00

Adventura Anatomica ENG

Adventura Anatomica

Choreography/dance: Odd Johan Fritzøe
Music/vocals: Maja Ratjke
Scenography: Karl Hansen
Lighting: Petter Steen

Premiere 17 November 2005, Black Box Theater, Oslo

Fairy tales tell us something about human nature, about our possibilities and impossibilities, and the forces residing within us. A young girl and a wolf, female and male, human versus animal. Artists spin a story in movement, bodies, sound, and form in this second version of the fairy tale of Little Red Riding Hood.

Music released on Bootrop-Boy: http://www.discogs.com/Maja-Ratkje-Adventura-Anatomica/release/1000607
See clips from the show here:
http://vimeo.com/139578347
Photo: Erik Berg

Adventura Anatomica ENG2019-10-27T07:40:51+00:00

Jäinen kukinta ENG

Jäinen Kukinta

Choreography: Odd Johan Fritzøe
Music: John Corrigliano
Costumes: Erika Turunen
Lighting: Juha Westman
Dancers: Evaldas Bielinis, Aina Ettala, Maki Kirjonen, Jaakko Eerola, Adam Kazal, Aki Pakarinen, Samuli Poutanen & Salla Suominen
Producers: Finnish National Ballet & Dinna Bjørn

Premiere 19 May 2006, Helsinki Opera, Finland

Jäinen kukinta was commissioned by Dinna Bjørn, director of the Finnish National Ballet, as part of the NOKO (Nordic choreography) project. It’s a lyrical portrayal and story about our frozen Nordic landscape and intense rejuvenation.

You can watch the performance here:
https://vimeo.com/129541572
Photo: Sakaria Viika

Jäinen kukinta ENG2019-10-27T07:41:18+00:00
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