Dance review: In Her Shadows, Traverse, Edinburgh
In Her Shadows
Traverse, Edinburgh
Rating: ***
Inspired by co-creator and performer Debbie Robbins’s own experience of familial strife, In Her Shadows is an open and honest look at depression. Fusing physical theatre, aerial dance and visual projections, it takes us inside a mind struggling to make sense of the relationships that surround her.
A beautiful curved set, part cinema screen, part aerial playground, is the backdrop for literal and abstract indicators of Amy’s mental state. At times she looks free and weightless, climbing up and spinning with aerial silks, rope or hoop. Other times, words crush her via an email or text exchange with her mother. We read the words projected, see her reaction, feel her pain.
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Hide AdAs a concept, In Her Shadows is to be applauded. Not only does it bring depression out into the open, but it also suggests a means of coping with it, when Amy eventually turns to a counsellor for support.
The decision to split Amy’s psyche between two performers (Robbins and co-creator/performer, Rachael Macintyre share the role) has varying results – sometimes adding intensity, sometimes diluting it. But the work is always engaging, and the use of Jenny Lindsay’s candid poem Today, based on her own experience of depression, is potent.