Dance and Disabled People
Community dance practitioners have actively
tried to engage disabled people in their practice and there are an
increasing number of disabled dancers earning a living within the
profession, who were accessed through community dance activity, given
that higher and further education routes were in effect closed to
disabled people until recent legislation prised open the door. There
are a number of professional dance companies who are either integrated
(disabled and non-disabled) or are made up of dancers with specific
disabilities or impairments. They have usually emerged within the wider
community dance context or from the specific disability community - deaf
people and their culture for example.
Given the key principle of
community dance - every body can dance with intention and purpose and
working on the basis of what people can do rather than what they can't - community dance offers wide ranging opportunities for
disabled people to engage with dance: personal and collective
expression, advocacy for disabled people in the wider community,
artistic skills, active and healthy leisure activities and professional
opportunities within dance and the arts.
The Foundation for Community Dance’s work around dance and disabled people started in the late 1990's. With financial support through the European Social Fund's
EQUAL programme, we developed a co-mentoring programme for ten disabled
and non-disabled dance practitioners - the report is available
here. We
continue to online produce resources to support disabled, and commission and
publish articles by disabled dance artists, and about dance and
disability in our magazine Animated. We also produce a free monthly
e-newsletter - you can subscribe to it
here.