Future Cargo: Sci-fi show for Birmingham dance festival
- Published

A truck arrives from an unknown location loaded with a mystery shipment. As the sides roll up, a strange and unstoppable process is set into motion
A sci-fi spectacular lit up the night sky as part of the Birmingham International Dance Festival.
The Future Cargo event on Thursday saw dancers performing in the city's rain-soaked Centenary Square inside an articulated lorry trailer.
Future Cargo is the latest outdoor work by Frauke Requard, a German-born, London-based choreographer, and David Rosenberg.
The performance has been described as "delivering the delicate integrity of a deeply intimate experience within a large-scale dance spectacle".

Audience members wore headphones to hear the music that accompanied the performance

Dancers performed on a conveyor belt that carried them along the trailer

As the performance unfolded, the lorry trailer was filled with plants
Birmingham International Dance Festival (BIDF) opened on 21 September, with live performances set to continue across the city until Sunday 3 October.
"BIDF 21 welcomes audiences back into public places and spaces to enjoy an imaginative and entertaining free live programme, shining a light on the region's amazing dance offer, engaging communities and celebrating diversity and inclusivity," said a festival spokesperson.

The performance went ahead despite rain showers in Birmingham's Centenary Square

Future Cargo has been performed around England since May

A dancer dressed as a bowling pin before Future Cargo moved on to the roof of the trailer

An ever-changing coloured backdrop welcomed a performer inside a fairground dodgem

A space-suited dancer prepares to climb on to the roof for the Future Cargo finale
Events have been staged in Centenary Square, Digbeth, Handsworth Park and at Edgbaston's Midlands Arts Centre.

This is Requardt & Rosenberg's fourth outdoor show. Together they create performance away from traditional auditoriums
Future Cargo is a free, ticketed event and also takes place on Friday 1 October, again in Centenary Square.

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