‘Liverpool festival showcasing new commissions along with work from exciting early career talent’

Leap Dance Festival is supporting and nurturing outstanding regional dance talent through series of generous commissions and bursaries at this year’s event.

The annual festival of dance opens two weeks today, promising 16 spectacular days of live performance across Liverpool and beyond.

Tickets are on sale via www.leapfestival.co.uk

As part of Leap’s commitment to championing local and regional dance talent, a series of special commissions – presented in partnership with Culture Liverpool and made possible by the UK Shared Prosperity Fund – will be staged throughout the 2026 festival which runs from 24 April to 9 May.

And in addition, rising star dancers and choreographers will be showing new pieces as they vie for the coveted Liverpool Dance Prize, with five bursaries awarded to help them develop their work.

A commitment to artist development and celebration of exciting dance practitioners is at the heart of Leap and is also part of a wider ambition to make Liverpool a vibrant regional hub for dance.

Two thrilling new festival commissions from LGBTQ+ artists will be presented at Queer Moves which comes to the Unity Theatre on Friday, 1 May.

Amber Buttery and Owen Gillott will stage a new work – The Queer Dancehall – which combines live performance, community participation and a dance film. Subverting a traditional ballroom dance through a queer lens, the work will break away from ‘expected’ gender roles in partner dance and celebrate queer identity.

Ahead of Leap, they are also holding free workshops where they will invite queer couples (and friends) to get dancing.

LIPA-trained Amber Buttery is a director and actor whose work specialises in connecting communities, starting conversations and embracing the complexity of life through bold visuals and sensory elements. Her directing credits include Small Hours (Liverpool Everyman & Playhouse), Missionary (Hope Mill Theatre) and Power (Tmesis).

And Owen Gillott, who has a first-class degree in musical theatre, is an award-winning Liverpool-based dance artist and lip-sync extraordinaire whose dance credits include Between the Lines, Love Letter series and the Vogue Ball.

Meanwhile Rowena Gander is an academic and international performance artist with a PhD in dance practices, who creates thought-provoking solo performance works that question and negotiate themes of sexuality, power and objectification in women.

For Leap, she is working with director Izzie Major to create Red Flag, a physical theatre piece exploring the impact of narcissistic abuse and objectification on an individual’s sense of self, agency and bodily autonomy. The work’s emotional and structural basis uses real stories, collected through ethically facilitated community conversations.

Two further special commissions are also being premiered as part of Leap.

Tom Shennan is an artist and filmmaker working in expanded cinema whose practice explores play, sensory perception and audience agency, drawing on autistic and queer experiences to create often absurdist works.

For Leap, a new dance film, “It is a Tuesday, and I am still the wind”, will be accessible online throughout the festival period.

Wind courses through Liverpool with curiosity, returning again and again to Toxteth. In collaboration with choreographer Shivaangee Agrawal, the film asks what it is that keeps drawing it back here?

Dawn Holgate started her career performing with Extemporary Dance and Images Dance Theatre before joining Phoenix Dance Theatre as one of its first female dancers and later the company’s first education manager. Over three decades she has become a prominent leader the fields of dance education and community including as artistic director of East Riding Youth Dance.

Her piece for Leap has been created in collaboration with The Dancing Queens, a community group of Global Majority women based at Toxteth’s Caribbean Centre and will open an evening at the Unity Theatre on Saturday, 2 May along with Toussaint to Move performing Windows of Displacement.

The work integrates dance, live song and embodied storytelling to explore radical Black joy, resilience and collective care, alongside powerful narratives of womanhood.

In addition to the special festival commissions, emerging artists from across the North West will share work at the Unity Theatre on Thursday, 30 April as part of this year’s Liverpool Dance Prize.

Five bursaries of £750 have been awarded to help artists create a new piece of work and compete for a development grant of £1,000. Artists from the 2024 prize have gone on to present work at the Edinburgh Fringe, Warrington Contemporary Arts Festival and at Turn North West.

Recipients of the 2026 bursaries are Joseph Thomas Adamson; Zara Phillips and Natassa Argyropoulou; Hui-Hsin Lu; Aimee Gerrard, and Laura Macy.

Joseph Thomas Adamson trained at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance and is a queer-identifying, early career dancer, performer, choreographer and movement director who is interested in fusing different disciplines to transform movement into his own language to communicate and connect with others.

His piece, Parallel Pulse, is a contemporary dance duet which investigates the complex and contradictory ways the body and mind respond to significant life events or trauma.

Liverpool’s Zara Phillips received her early contemporary dance training on the Lowry CAT scheme where she had the chance to work with Akram Khan, Jamaal Burkmar and Phoenix Dance Theatre, later joining the National Youth Dance Company. She had a first-class degree from the Northern School of Contemporary Dance. Natassa Argyropoulou is a Greek freelance dancer, performance artist and movement director who also studied at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance. Passionate about movement in all its forms, she recently founded her own multidisciplinary theatre company Sixth House Theatre.

Their new work explores dance as a universal act of celebration; as lived, communal experience, fusing Greek traditional dance forms with contemporary movement language.

Hui-Hsin Lu is an artist, choreographer and teacher originally from Taipei but based in Manchester who specialises in ballet, contemporary, Chinese dance and commercial styles with a focus on elegance, energy and creativity. Her new work is inspired by the five elements – earth, water, fire, air and space or aether.

Meanwhile inspired by the techniques of Taekwondo, Tai Chi and Judo, Aimee Gerrard will present an ensemble piece centring energetic yet precise movements.

And Laura Macy is a dancer, choreographer and professional pianist, performing for stage, music videos – including dancing on Bobamia (Bob’s Dance Shop, Starfall (Zetra) and Heads of Tails (Beija Flo), television and film. She studied dance at LIPA, graduating in 2021.

Her new work, which is confrontational but compassionate, aims to challenge the beliefs and behaviours that young men are often socialised into, and to contribute to long-term cultural change through dance.

Leap Dance Festival is organised and presented by Chaos Arts CIC and is Liverpool City Region’s leading dance event, showcasing the work of local artists, community groups and young people as well as bringing some of the most exciting and groundbreaking work from national and international dance organisations to the city.

The festival also coincides with the International Day of Dance which this year takes place on Wednesday, 29 April.

Since Leap was relaunched in 2024 – following a five-year hiatus – it has commissioned 35 new dance works including five films and supported the work of seven early careers artists. A total of 1,438 people took an active part in Leap in 2024 and 2025, and last year’s event attracted audiences of almost 73,000 through live and digital engagement.

Leap Dance Festival Director Paul Doyle said: 

“We are delighted that the city has responded so well to the return of Leap over the past three years. This years festival sees us continue our support for local and regional artists, and our commitment to creating opportunities for emerging artists and graduates to test ideas and begin their careers here in Liverpool. This year we are working with new partners, nationally recognised artists and companies and furthering our reach across the city region.  ”

For more details on Leap visit www.leapfestival.co.uk

Follow Leap Dance Festival on social media channels: 

Facebook:       https://www.facebook.com/LeapDanceFest/

Instagram:      @leapdancefestival

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LEAP 2026 NEW COMMISSIONS AND BURSARIES LISTINGS 

Tom Shennan: It is a Tuesday, and I am Still the Wind

Date: Live fromWednesday 29 April 2026

Venue: at various festival events and available online

Tickets: Free

Liverpool Dance Prize

Date: Thursday 30 April 2026

Time: 7.30pm

Venue: Unity Theatre

Tickets: £15/£12

Queer Moves

Date: Friday 1 May 2026

Time: 7.30pm

Venue: Unity Theatre

Tickets: £15/£12

Toussaint to Move

Featuring a curtain raiser from The Dancing Queens choreographed by Dawn Holgate. 

Date: Saturday 2 May 2026

Time: 7.30pm

Venue: Unity Theatre

Tickets: £15/£12

Book online at www.leapfestival.co.uk

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