All Bodies Dance Project podcast
ABDP podcast features discussions and interviews with dance artists that work with accessibility as a central value in their practice. The podcast is hosted by Rianne Svelnis and co-hosted by members of the company. The aim is to facilitate discussions about artistic practice, access, disability, dance, politics and creative process with artists who we admire and/or are curious about. These conversations took place between 2021-2022, providing snapshots in time of these artists’ lives amid the complexities of global pandemic and world events.
Episodes

Monday Jun 20, 2022
Monday Jun 20, 2022
This rich conversation speaks to community connections, Alice’s research of flying on stage, the intricacies of care, boundaries and virtuosity, and confronting spectacle, inclusion and representation.
Hosted by Rianne Svelnis and Harmanie Rose.
Recorded in April 2021

Thursday Apr 28, 2022
Thursday Apr 28, 2022
Hosted by Rianne Svelnis with Naomi Brand
Recorded via Zoom in February 2021
*Since this recording Nadia has taken on a new role as new Artistic Director of Axis Dance

Monday Feb 14, 2022
Monday Feb 14, 2022
A conversation with blind Italian dance artist Giuseppe Comuniello hosted by Rianne Svelnis with Carolina Bergonzoni.
Recorded in January 2021

ABDP Podcast
ABDP podcast features discussions and interviews with dance artists that work with accessibility as a central value in their practice. The podcast is hosted by Rianne Svelnis in collaboration with members of the company. The aim is to facilitate discussions about artistic practice, access, disability, dance, politics and creative process with artists who we admire and/or are curious about.
About All Bodies Dance Project
We are an inclusive dance company located on unceded Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), Səl̓ílwətaɬ (Tsleil- Waututh), and xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam) territories (Vancouver, BC, Canada).
Our work brings together artists with and without disabilities to explore the endless creative possibilities in difference. Our company’s work straddles labels of community-engaged and professional practice. We aim to dismantle assumptions, biases and default notions around contemporary dance, the theatre and the dancing body.