End of Season 2026

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Heading into summer at full swing!

End of Season 2026

Heading into summer at full swing!

A festive End of Season programme by Introdans – entirely in black-and-white style – featuring a number of fabulous and vibrant choreographies.

In addition to various virtuosic highlights from Introdans’ recent repertoire, the program also includes plenty of surprises and inclusive dance encounters. New creators are introduced, special guest dancers make an appearance, and the company reflects on collaborative projects with artists and organizations from other disciplines. For dancers ending their careers or moving abroad, the annual End of Season is also the perfect opportunity to shine one last time and showcase all their talents. The audience is invited to join the celebration in style – dressed in black and white to match the performance theme!

 

The programme includes ballets by choreographers Igor Bacovich & Iratxe Ansa, Po-Cheng Tsai, Lightfoot & León, Robert Battle, David Parsons, Adriaan Luteijn and Chantal de Vries. Read more below.

End of Season premieres on June 18, 2026 at Theater Amphion in Doetinchem.
Tour: June 18 to June 27, 2026
Locations: Doetinchem, Eindhoven, Gouda, Hengelo, Apeldoorn

 

Agenda

End of Season 2026

Doetinchem, 20:00 h

Theater Amphion

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Doetinchem, 20:00 h

Doetinchem, 20:00 h

Theater Amphion

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Doetinchem, 20:00 h

Eindhoven, 20:00 h

Parktheater Eindhoven

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Eindhoven, 20:00 h

Gouda, 20:00 h

Goudse Schouwburg

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Gouda, 20:00 h

Hengelo, 20:00 h

Schouwburg Hengelo

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Hengelo, 20:00 h

Apeldoorn, 20:00 h

Theater Orpheus

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Apeldoorn, 20:00 h

Programme

SH-BOOM! – Sol León and Paul Lightfoot
SH-BOOM! (1994) is one of the earliest works in the oeuvre of Sol León and Paul Lightfoot, who were associated with Nederlands Dans Theater for many years. They drew inspiration from the satirical black and white drawings of the Spanish painter Francisco de Goya. And just as they would later do so powerfully and incisively in their subsequent work, they already succeed in this gem in masterfully combining the dark sides of life irony with its lighter sides humour. Set to popular songs from the 1930s and 1940s, SH-BOOM! takes you into a theatrical hall of mirrors, where women dance in flowing dresses and the men stand quite literally in their underwear.

Floating Flowers – Po-Cheng Tsai
Floating Flowers is inspired by a traditional Taiwanese ceremony during the Ghost Festival, in which floating lanterns are placed on the water to honour deities, ward off misfortune and make wishes. For Po-Cheng Tsai, this was a ritual he performed as a child together with his father. After his father’s death, he lost the meaning of the ritual, and that very loss led him to create Floating Flowers: a tribute to his father and a way of letting go of old memories. The dancers move like lanterns drifting across the water, wrapped in light, transparent fabrics. The choreography feels optimistic and fresh, with a touch of humour.

Promenade – Robert Battle
A dynamic, playful satire on social norms and values. That is how you might describe Robert Battle’s Promenade. Set to a deconstructed tango, lyrical one moment and rhythmically fierce and commanding the next, the American choreographer presents a formal social dance performed in folk dance like patterns. But beneath the surface something is brewing. Gradually, less civilised, animal like accents creep into the controlled partner dance: dancers lick themselves, peck with their heads like chickens, stomp on the floor. True to Battle’s style, the energy bursts off the stage. The New York Times aptly called Promenade a “high-energy workout”.

In addition to these treasures from Introdans’ repertoire collection, the company presents a sizzling fragment from Pink Panther Party XXL by choreographers Adriaan Luteijn and Chantal de Vries. A swinging performance full of disco joy from the seventies about tolerance, with an inclusive cast that continues to make space for everyone’s individuality. The icing on the liquorice cake of the evening.

Caught – David Parsons
David Parsons’ iconic solo Caught is a fusion of art and technology, requiring perfect timing and exceptional athletic stamina. The result is an impressive play with gravity, in which the dancer appears to float through the air, devour space and then magically come to a standstill at the centre of the stage. At the heart of the piece lies the human fascination with flying, something Parsons believes to be universal. He conceived Caught after collaborating with photographers and studying how light is used in photography to capture images. By manipulating the lighting so that only certain shapes and positions are illuminated, he created a series of snapshots. Combined, these isolated images form a dance that seems to take place entirely in mid-air.

Susto – Sol León and Paul Lightfoot
Also on the programme is the much-acclaimed Susto by Paul Lightfoot and Sol León from 1994. In this work, the dancers play with a sand jet to the sounds of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony. The beauty and humour of this renowned choreographic duo come fully to the fore once again. Sol León and Paul Lightfoot are among the most prominent choreographers in the Netherlands. Since 1989, they have been creating work together, including for Nederlands Dans Theater.

Promises – Igor Bacovich and Iratxe Ansa
The lyrical movement language of the Italian-Spanish duo Igor Bacovich and Iratxe Ansa is striking. Their own company, Metamorphosis Dance, has received international acclaim for its sculptural choreographies. For this new work for Introdans, which premiered in the programme Less is More in September 2025, Bacovich and Ansa collaborated with Spanish set designer Marta Pazos. Colour is the aesthetic starting point of her stage design. Bacovich previously danced with Krisztina de Châtel and Nanine Linning, while Iratxe danced with Nederlands Dans Theater.

Mano a mano (Introdans premiere) – Igor Bacovich and Iratxe Ansa
The duet Mano a mano carries the motto “A tightrope walk between you and me” and is set to the rich music of Astor Piazzolla’s Otoño Porteño. Igor Bacovich and Iratxe Ansa had long cherished the wish to explore this music in a choreography, and with this ballet they have realised that ambition. They created the work in June 2025 for Theater Osnabrück in Germany, and it will now receive its Introdans premiere.

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