2026 Making Moves
A film by David Kaplowitz
Produced by Sadler’s Wells
‘Leave your problems outside and the dance takes over’
Go behind the scenes of Making Moves 2026, a short documentary celebrating young dancers from schools and youth groups across England.
Through Making Moves, Sadler’s Wells supports dance teachers across the country and gives young people the opportunity to create original work using choreography toolkits developed by renowned choreographers Richard Alston, Ivan Michael Blackstock, Fin Walker and Thick & Tight.
Hear directly from the young dancers as they share their creative process and what it means to bring their own choreography to the stage.
Credits
Film Director and Editor – David Kaplowitz
Colourist – Michael Davis
Captions – Michael Peers
Regional Film Makers – Alex Matraxia, Dan Martin, Kamal Macdonald
Sadler’s Wells Learning & Engagement
Director of Learning & Engagement – Joce Giles
Learning & Engagement Manager – Laura Warner
Projects Producer, Learning & Engagement (Maternity Cover) – Katie Vernon-Smith
Senior Projects Officer, Learning & Engagement – Brittany Roberts
Producer, Learning & Engagement – Christopher Haddow
Projects Coordinator, Learning & Engagement – Siân Gilling
Technical Production Manager – Mishi Bekesi
Dance Education Consultant – Lucy Muggleton
Workshop leaders – John-William Watson, Ruby Portus, Zara Phillips
Volunteers – Saffran Clifford, Jacob Lincoln, Islina Jonet, Genevieve-Raphaelle Antoine, Esther Carr, Kayleigh Oborka-Letman, Imi Hunt and Az Farrell
Regional Platforms 2026
Production Manager and Lighting Designer (Regional Platforms) – Amelia Hawkes
Company Stage Manager – Emma Cameron, Janine Bardsley, Rachel Candler
Deputy Stage Manager – Millie Swinchin Rew
National Platform 2026
Lighting Designer – Adam Carrée
Lighting Programmer – Matthew Carnazza
Company Stage Manager – Laura Hammond
Deputy Stage Manager – Marius Arnold-Clarke
Making Moves 2025/26 Choreographers
Sir Richard Alston
Ivan Michael Blackstock
Thick & Tight
Finn Walker
With Special thanks to our Making Moves Partner Venues
Lilian Baylis Studio, London
The Lowry, Salford
1532 Performing Arts Centre, Bristol
DanceEast, Ipswich
Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham
Riley Theatre, Leeds
Making Moves Groups 2025/26
Adore Dance London
Ardingly College
Ascent Theatre Company
BA Dance Academy
Bournside Theatre Ensemble
Brooks Youth Dance Company
Bucks Youth Dance Company
Burnley College Dance
CAPA Juniors
Chantry Academy
Coast Youth Dance Company
Cockburn John Charles Academy
Dance United Yorkshire’s Resi/Dance Youth Company
Davison CE High School
DS Youth Collective
Eden Youth Dance Company
Eloquent Dance
Gateway Studio CIO
Gosforth Civic Theatre Youth Dance Company
High Storrs Dance Company
Homewood School & Sixth Form Centre
Horizon Community College
Ipswich High School
Linton Village College
Loreto College
Midhurst Rother College
MK Dance Theatre
Mulberry UTC
Newman Dance Academy
Our Lady and St Chad Catholic Academy
Phoenix Performing Arts
Phoenix Youth Academy Seniors
Prelude Youth Dance Company
Queenswood School
RISE Youth Dance
RJC Dance – Shahck Out Youth Dance
Sandymoor Ormiston
Somerset Youth Dance Company
St Gregory’s Catholic College
St Richard’s Catholic College
Sterran Dance Company
Stockport Grammar School
Strode’s College
Studio 12 – Northfleet School for Girls
Swavesey Village College Dance Company
The Boswells School
The BRIT School
The King’s School
TPD Young Artists
Trinity Academy Leeds
Welling School
Windsor High School and Sixth Form
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Transcript: Making Moves 2026
[Gentle, upbeat music]
Like just leave your problems outside and then like dance. It just takes over, kind of. So yeah, it’s a really good feeling for me.
A lot of the time when I dance, it’s about telling a story. So I feel like I’m really just kind of communicating in a way that words can’t usually so it’s a lot more expressive.
I think it just kind of motivates you to do more.
[Energetic music]
[Cheering]
Come with us!
[Pensive, upbeat music]
Ivan Michael Blackstock: How’s it going? My name is Ivan Michael Blackstock.
Fin Walker: Hello, I’m Fin Walker. I’m a director and choreographer.
Daniel Hay-Gordon: Hi, I’m Daniel Hay-Gordon and I’m one half of Thick & Tight.
Richard Alston: My name is Richard Alston. And I’ve been a choreographer
for a long time. Almost six decades.
Ivan: I come from the world of hip hop. and there’s a massive philosophy within that, each one teach one. So I think it is in the DNA of what I do making sure I pass down, share my knowledge. And also, you know, I don’t have all of the answers. The answers come with us coming into communion me sharing my experience, sharing kind of how I look at things how I make pieces of choreography and then there’s a feedback loop, you know. So then I’m learning too. I’m sure we’ve all kind of made some sort of
choreography and dance before or we’ve got a certain skillset. Doesn’t mean you just kinda go like, “Nah, Ivan, I’m an empty vessel. Teach me.”
[Laughing]
Yeah? So I think it is also, yeah, holding on to something. It’s holding on what you know, what you love, what you connect to. Yeah?
Nillanthie Morton: I started the toolkit with my youth group and already the change in their creative work… It’s amazing. I just got it on video, and I was looking at them thinking, “This is what
I’ve been waiting for.” Doing this with Ivan is really opening new ways
of creating movement and I can just see the results already after one session.
Fin: My practice and my methodology is only a starting point and their interpretation of what it is that I’m offering is what’s most important. And so that actually then they can make it their own and that it’s about me supporting and facilitating them to open up the cornerstones of their own perception so that their thinking is more fluid and more expansive. Fin: Good, doesn’t matter what it looks like. Just thinking about opening the body.
Kelly McClelland: This weekend has just meant so much to me and working with Fin Walker is just a dream. Her process is so genuine and just really helps you to find the truth in your soul of movement which is something I really want to bring back to my young dancers and get them to question the reason they move and why they want to do this.
[Energetic music]
Daniel: What I hope comes across in the work that’s produced is the mixture of different styles that we use with dance. So we use drag, lip syncing and mime and humour and theatre. So I hope that there’s a real rich blend of styles being used and I hope also that the pieces have a good amount of humour in them.
[Come Rain or Shine, Judy Garland]
Daniel: To really communicate with all the students about the ideas in the toolkit and to keep getting them really involved in all the aspects of creativity whether that’s choreographing or editing or directing or editing the music or thinking about costume. I’d love for all of the students to feel that they’ve had a real say in what is being produced on stage.
[Inspirational, upbeat music]
Richard: And I’d like you to look at these two because they are now doing it with a new Saturday morning energy.[Laughing] Okay. All right. No pressure, you two.
[Laughing]
Richard: The things in the toolkit are things which have inspired and excited me so I hope that I can give that to the group leaders and they can then feel full of resources to deal constructively and positively with the young people who will be dancing the work.
– 1… and 2….
and 3….
Richard: Good. Good. Okay. [Applause] It’s really good so try to keep that quality. Don’t let it get more peaceful. It’s lovely if it’s really quite sharp into the space. Be confident and make sure that you make young people confident. Teaching is enabling and I’ve always found it very exciting to help people do more so they feel that they are empowered to help young people do something really amazing. That’s what we all want.
[Motivational music]
– It feels very profound. Even though we’re dancing as a collective it feels like everyone’s sort of got this own personal journey that they go on throughout the whole piece. Yeah, it’s very connecting.
– Choreographing my piece for Making Moves was great because I got to show my own creative ability. So then you would go back on your left when you pull back instead of the right. And then to perform with my mates at RISE Youth Dance is just great because they were supportive along the way.
It’s just choreo, Helen, so….
Helen: Well, yeah, it is but it’s your piece of choreo, so…
So as an audience member… because I’m doing this for the audience,
you know?
Helen: Excellent.
– What I took away from Making Moves is definitely the way that I transfer emotional and personal feelings thoughts close to me into movement and translating that in a way that evokes emotion from the audience.
[Pensive, upbeat music]
– So, I wasn’t here last week. You create your own little solos to finish it off with. Yes, Ed.
Ed: Maybe we all do like something like we all do like little solos and then we all come together in unison at the end?
– Love it.
– The piece is meant to be a satire on modern views on masculinity and we’re challenging those stereotypes and flipping them on their heads.
– We came up with this idea about kind of male stereotyping and how we could represent that in a stage dance.
Ed: So when we started choreographing it, we all sat in a circle and we wrote ideas down on a notepad. And then we tried to translate those
to a piece of music. And tried to figure out moves that would fit the themes that we thought of and the ideas but would also fit the music in a way that would be fluid and match our ideas.
[Just Ken, Ryan Gosling]
Ed: Performing something that was a product of our own ideas is very exciting, especially on a stage like Sadler’s Wells.
– It’s not even just a dance, it’s our feelings put into dance. We’ve personified our feelings and made them actions and I think it’s really good to do that and know that it’s our dance.
– Yeah, I think this dance has definitely given us an opportunity to try out new ways of dancing. And throughout the process, we’ve seen each other grow. Within the toolkit, a lot of the time we used words like resistance which played a very big part in a lot of the duets that we saw in the earlier part of the dance which really helped us to sort of get our message across.
– So I think it really has pulled us together as a group and kind of makes us be even more proud of it because we can say that we’ve really,
really worked together on it.
– They’ve listened, they’ve wanted to explore, they’ve wanted to grow. Yeah, I’m just so proud. I’m so proud that they just love it as much as I do.
[Inspirational, upbeat music]
– It’s been really great. It feels kind of rewarding to show off what we’ve done because we’ve worked really hard at doing it and I’m really excited to show everybody.
– I’m very, very confident. I think a couple of us are quite nervous but because we’ve been working on it for a long time I think we’ll smash it.
[Motivational music]
– The best thing about Making Moves was doing the choreography ourselves. So listening to what the choreographers wanted and then being able to change it into a way that we can express ourselves.
Can you tell me what you have learned doing this dance?
– Learning new moves.
– We got to use moves from everyone and we got to use everyone’s different styles and stuff.
– It pushes you out of your comfort zone as well like you’re not used to making up stuff yourself and fully doing it yourself without a teacher.
[Music dramatically fades]
[Motivational music returns]
– It was just very enjoyable because obviously getting to keep on your feet learn every single week.
– I’ve genuinely made friends that I’m gonna keep for like the rest of my life. Like I think dance is really a lot about making connections with other people.
[Music fades]