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Vancouver International Dance Festival Returns for Its 26th Season

This year’s event offers dance lovers a lineup that soothes, provokes, inspires and transforms.

This March, the Vancouver International Dance Festival is set to turn our beautiful city into a hub for global dance that challenges norms and sparks connection. Happening from March 4 to 14, with off-sites and outreach from Feb. 28 to March 15, the festival offers bold expressions, intimate encounters and shared experiences.

Building bridges between people, places and ideas through dance, this year’s festival presents fearless voices from six continents. Artists from here at home, across Turtle Island and from Brazil, Aotearoa, Tanzania, Senegal, Mozambique, Tunisia, Iran, Singapore, Croatia, France, Portugal and Norway come together to offer live art that’s raw, kinetic and experimental.

Speaking directly to the moment we’re living in, VIDF 2026 presents four world premieres, including new creations and exciting interdisciplinary exchanges by Charles Koroneho (Aotearoa), Jeanette Kotowich (MST Territories), Chimerik 似不像 (MST Territories) and Zab Maboungou/Compagnie Danse Nyata Nyata (Tiohtià:ke).

A performer sits on a dark stage floor, looking upward at the camera. They sit in the middle of a grey cluster of words that have been projected onto the stage.
Caroline Chien-MacCaull of Chimerik 似不像 in SI(x). Photo by Carla Alcántara.

A significant thread running through this year’s programming is the presence of street dance artists who expand how we see movement: Compagnie Khor/Khoudia Touré (Senegal, France, MST Territories), OURO Collective (MST Territories) and Caroline “Lady C” Fraser (Tkaronto). These powerful works are presented as a street dance triple bill on March 11 and 12 at the Roundhouse and Annex.

Dance and music are inextricably linked. VIDF 2026 presents nine works that feature live and/or original music, revealing sound that’s seen and movement that’s heard. Other themes include Indigenous perspectives, queer imaginings and women-led projects in celebration of International Women’s Day.

A first in the festival’s 26-year history is the presentation of a relaxed performance by Aluma: Cie de Théâtre (Tiohtià:ke, Tunisia). Festival goers can dive into a fascinating underwater world designed for neurodivergent audiences, offering an accessible and interactive space that invites them to react freely and co-create a luminous world of friendship and play. This and six other all-ages performances invite the whole family to experience live art together.

VIDF 2026 offers not only amazing performances but also social events and community gatherings that invite a sense of belonging in dance, including “Stage Crasher!,” an old-time dance party with Métis fiddler Kathleen Nisbet, and “The Xchange,” a street dance crew exhibition battle offering a dynamic showcase of street and club dance forms like krump, breaking, hip-hop, waacking and house. Or, festival goers can flex their critical chops in the “Living Room,” VIDF’s in-house media space to gather around festival artists and their work.

VIDF promotes access to meaningful dance experiences for everyone. Festival passes offer the best value, with options to create your own four-show, three-show and date-night bundles or see all 14 shows/events for $14 per ticket. Single tickets range from $19 for artists and low-income folks to a $60 pay-it-forward ticket that provides a free ticket to someone who couldn’t otherwise afford to attend. And, new this year, the festival is offering $10 tickets for children and youth 25 and under.

Under new leadership since 2024, VIDF brings a grassroots DIY ethos to the largest dance festival in the country. Visit vidf.ca for full information.  [Tyee]

This article is part of a Tyee Presents initiative. Tyee Presents is the special sponsored content section within The Tyee where we highlight contests, events and other initiatives that are put on either by us or by our select partners. The Tyee does not and cannot vouch for or endorse products advertised on The Tyee. We choose our partners carefully and consciously, to fit with The Tyee’s reputation as B.C.’s Home for News, Culture and Solutions. Learn more about Tyee Presents.

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