Plastic orchid factory stages Nate Yaffe's solo work faith hole, October 25 and 26
Le Radeau production sees Yaffe cultivate an exchange between performer and audience with unguarded emotion and humour

Nate Yaffe in faith hole. Photo by Kinga Michalska
Plastic orchid factory presents Nate Yaffe’s faith hole, a solo work produced by Le Radeau, at Left of Main on October 25 and 26 at 7 pm.
In faith hole, Yaffe cultivates a non-transactional exchange between performer and audience, offering himself as an open orifice spilling fleshy histories with unguarded emotion and humour. By excavating muscle memories as artifacts from a history of conditioning through classical dance training, internalized hetero-masculine values, and restrained hyperactivity, Yaffe strives to reveal the innately queer vocabulary that lives beneath.
Created through radical trust in the body, faith hole embraces Yaffe’s corporeal future, dismissing nostalgic lingerings of self while exposing splinters of personhood to the public.
Ahead of his faith hole performances, Yaffe will also host community workshops on October 23 and 25 at the Scotiabank Dance Centre in partnership with the Training Society Of Vancouver.
Tickets and more details are available through plastic orchid factory.
Post sponsored by plastic orchid factory.
Related Articles
Presented by New Works, the dance piece will draw inspiration from natural surroundings on Granville Island
Offerings also include world premieres from Corporeal Imago and FakeKnot, plus Ame Henderson + Matija Ferlin’s Show Gone
Belle Spirale’s backyard shindig features performances by Action at a Distance’s Vanessa Goodman, Paper Rabbits collective, Ballet BC dancers, and more
This year’s event, on from August 7 to 17, also features a standup comedy show by YouTube star Manpreet Singh and all-ages dance workshops
Waacking-infused world premiere co-created with Justine A. Chambers draws on a 1990 indie Bollywood film choreographed by Sachar’s mom
Performances by the Wild Moccasin Dancers, jazz trumpeter Feven Kidane, party band Dr. Strangelove, and plenty more artists are in store
Artists Kevin Jesuino and Marco Esccer worked with LGBTQI+ society members to create an empowering dance performance that told their truths
Offerings are designed to suit dancers of varying ages and abilities, from the inaugural ISDI2 program to intensives for Juniors and Teens
Presentation features genre-spanning pieces by Aditi Chaudhury and Sudnya Mulye, Jhoely Triana Flamenco, Jullianna Oke, and Krystal Tsai
Repetition, endurance, and ritual from Noam Gagnon, Lesley Telford, Rebecca Margolick, and Tushrik Fredericks
The MascallDance production uses a large set piece to unite three distinct pieces by different choreographers
With arresting dancers and haunting atmosphere, Company 605 and T.H.E Dance Company cocreation grapples with big, timely ideas
Studies in math and an industrial fan are just some of the unexpected touches on the event’s mixed programs
Intimate duet to begin with no end explores the artists’ respective religions with care and intensity
Company 605 and T.H.E Dance Company push cross-Pacific team of dancers to embody a society rushing toward the next thing, at the Scotiabank Dance Centre
The Dust Palace’s cabaret send-up stars a visionary fashion designer who sews costumes live onstage at The Cultch
Canadian-Brazilian interdisciplinary artist brings together film and dance in a work that can be enjoyed from different angles at the Roundhouse
Marco Goecke, Crystal Pite, Sharon Eyal, and Fernando Magadan provide a whirlwind of short work for tomorrow’s next dance stars
Presented with Boca del Lupo, the accessible production by the U.K.’s Seven Circles encourages interactive learning
Aussie troupe Gravity & Other Myths’ stripped-down spectacle has been a hit around the world
Senior dance artists offer decades of insight to the new event’s joyful collaborations with younger performers