From March 22-25 Singapore will play host to True Colours Festival – the Asia Pacific Celebration of Artistes with Disabilities. Some 20 exceptionally talented artistes and troupes will converge in Singapore for what will be the first and largest gathering of artistes with disabilities to perform in an event in the Asia-Pacific region.
True Colours is presented by Unesco and The Nippon Foundation (TNF), two international organisations which champion the rights of persons with disabilities (PWDs). It is produced by Very Special Arts Singapore (VSA) and supported by many partners, including DBS, Singapore Sports Hub and the Asia-Pacific Development Centre on Disability (APCD).
The festival comprises a ticketed multimedia indoor concert experience at the Singapore Indoor Stadium, a free admission outdoor festival village just a short walk away and an international conference on arts and disability.
Multimedia indoor concert experience
This concert, which will be performed on three evenings, will present musicians, singers and dancers from the Asia-Pacific, along with guest artistes from Canada, the UK, the US and Chile. They will perform to a total estimated audience of more than 12,000 at the Singapore Indoor Stadium.
Specially commissioned for True Colours performances are new works by contemporary inclusive dance troupe DAZZLE from Japan, wheelchair dancer Rodney Bell from New Zealand, a collaborative theatre production by Singapore’s Very Special Theatrics and
Australia’s No Strings Attached Theatre of Disability.
Japanese contemporary dancers Kazuyo Morita and Natsumi Sadayuki will also perform a special festival commission on the outdoor Festival Village stage while No Strings Attached will perform the world premiere of its new work, I Forgot to Remember to Forget.
Among the other highlights are Canadian virtuoso violinist Adrian Anantawan (https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ANWl2C4tPWcyUWVeZTq8BHFJdMU0CnFW/view); crooner Tony Dee from Australia, star of the 2016 Rio Paralympics trailer We’re the Superhumans; multi-national crew ILL-Abilities, considered one of the world’s most talented street dance crews; Drake Music Scotland’s Digital Orchestra; and Alienette Coldfire from the Philippines, second runner-up in France’s Got Talent 2016; and Ma Li and Zhai Xiao Wei, the first pair of dancers with disabilities to enter China’s CCTV national dance competition. They did so in 2007 and won the silver medal and the audience popular vote.