“Many performances claim to be immersive … Dambudzo goes deeper and further to position the audience within an unstable alternate reality, stirring up the best kinds of trouble.” Broad Street Review

Dambudzo

Past Dates

Dates Location

Oct 23 - Oct 24, 2025

Spielart Festival / Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany

Oct 16 - Oct 18, 2025

Charlesrois Danse, Brussels, Belgium

Oct 08 - Oct 09, 2025

BAM, Brooklyn, NY

Oct 02 - Oct 04, 2025

Duke Arts, Durham, NC

Sep 25 - Sep 27, 2025

RedCat, Los Angeles, CA

Sep 18 - Sep 20, 2025

Fringe Arts, Philadelphia, PA

Aug 15 - Aug 17, 2025

Tanz im August, Berlin, Germany

Mar 14 - Mar 19, 2025

Mostra International de Teatro de Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil

Sep 11 - Sep 13, 2024

Festival D'Automne, Paris, France

Jun 11 - Jun 14, 2024

Wiener Festwochen, MuMoK, Vienna, Austria

“The magic of Dambudzo stems from its experiment with risk. Audience members feel the risk of participation… The performance perfectly encapsulates the experience of building community and encourages people to welcome the risk of connection.”

L.A. Dance Chronicle

Dambudzo is a bold, anti-genre collapse of sound, painting, sculpture, and performance. In Shona, dambudzo means “trouble,” and it is also the name of Zimbabwean writer Dambudzo Marechera, who, along with other radical African thinkers, inspires nora’s exploration of the relationship between knowledge and language shaped under colonial rule. A glorious celebration of radical African presences, Dambudzo shatters clichés, defies conventions, and opens new spaces that transcend the limitations of language, while the artists are embodying more subtle ways of communicating and being together.

 

Dambudzo is a conversation with Zimbabwe’s enfant terrible Dambudzo Marechera and the Bhundu Boys, a band that captivated the youth with JIT, a hopeful, bright sound that has since waned under the pressures of capitalist and colonial legacies.
Large-scale paintings on plastic allow the performance space to shift between intimate and public configurations. The house built by Dambudzo—a “house of hunger,” or shabini—brings together neighborhood residents who live each minute with zest and abandon. Beauty, love, and violence are spoken in one breath; the street enters the house, and the house is the street.

 

The humans who populate the house are musicians, revolutionaries, tricksters, and sellouts. Constant reminders of empire and settler colonialism resonate throughout the work, punctuated by the sound of barking Rhodesian ridgebacks.

nora chipaumire, creative direction & performer / Tatenda Chabarwa, performer / McIntosh Pedzisai “SOKO” Jerahuni, performer / Jonathan Kudakwashe Daniel, performer / tyroneisaacstuart, performer / Fatima Katiji, performer / Mohamed Yousry Fathy “Shika” Saleh, performer / Shamar Watt, performer / Joyce Delores Edwards, performer / Gilbert Zvamaida performer / Vusumuzi Moyo, sound engineer / Kwamina Biney, sound engineer / Heidi Eckwall, Technical Director /Soren Kodak, Irene Paetzug, Technical Assistant & Stage Design / Amélie Gaulier, Laetitia Tshombe, jay beardsley, Project Management / Svenja Wichmann, Multimedia & Archiving / Sylvestre Akakpo, Management assistant

info@companychipaumire.com - info@companychipaumire.com

Thomas O. Kriegsmann / ArKtype - tommy@arktype.org