Akram Khan MBE |
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Khan in April 2010
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Native name | আকরাম হুসেইন খান |
Born |
Akram Hossain Khan 29 July 1974 Wimbledon, Merton, London, England |
Residence | Wimbledon, Merton, London, England |
Nationality | British |
Education | Contemporary dance, performing arts |
Alma mater |
De Montfort University Northern School of Contemporary Dance |
Occupation | Dancer, choreographer |
Years active | 1987–present |
Organization | Akram Khan Company |
Style | Contemporary dance, kathak |
Website | www |
Akram Hossain Khan, MBE (Bengali: আকরাম হুসেইন খান; born 29 July 1974) is an English dancer of Bangladeshi descent. His background is rooted in his classical kathak training and contemporary dance.
Khan was born in Wimbledon, London, England, into a family from Dhaka, Bangladesh. He began dancing and trained in the classical South Asian dance form of Kathak at the age of seven. He studied with Sri Pratap Pawar, later becoming his disciple. He began his stage career in the Adventures of Mowgli tour 1984-1985 produced by the Academy of Indian Dance, now Akademi South Asian Dance. At the age of 13, he was cast in Peter Brook's Shakespeare Company production of Mahabharata, touring the world between 1987 and 1989 and appearing in the televised version of the play broadcast in 1988.
Following later studies in Contemporary Dance at De Montfort University and Performing Arts at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance and a period working with Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s Brussels based X-Group project, he began presenting solo performances of his work in the 1990s.
In August 2000, he launched Akram Khan Company. His first full-length work Kaash, a collaboration with Anish Kapoor and Nitin Sawhney, was performed at the Edinburgh Festival in 2002.
As choreographer-in-residence and later associate artist at the Southbank Centre, he presented a recital with Pandit Birju Maharaj and Sri Pratap Pawar; and A God of Small Tales, a piece for mature women for which he collaborated with writer Hanif Kureishi. He remained an associate artist at the Southbank Centre until April 2005, the first non-musician to be afforded this status, and is currently an associate artist at Sadler's Wells Theatre. In 2005, he was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2005 New Year Honours for his services to dance.