Lord of the Dance hits town
Luis Pena
Mark O’Donnell is the Lord in Michael Flatley’s “Lord of the Dance,”
which is showing at the Orange County Performing Arts Center through
Saturday.
O’Donnell comes from Glasgow, Scotland, where he began to perform
in Irish dance as a hobby when he was only 6. He has competed in
several competitions and has won the all-Scotland and all-Ireland
titles for dance.
When he was 17, “Lord of the Dance” was showing in O’Donnell
hometown. He went to go see it, and when he saw Flatley’s performance
it was like nothing that he had seen before.
“Its taken Irish dance to a whole new level, and no one has ever
done this before,” O’Donnell said.
“Lord of the Dance” is a story about good and evil, which is told
through traditional Irish dance and music with a modern flare to
them. The evil Dark Lord challenges the Lord of the Dance.
“It’s a good mixture of music and dance and all things good,”
O’Donnell said.
The show consists of vivid costumes, high-tech stage effects,
lighting and pyrotechnics with more than 40 dancers. More than 50
million people have seen it worldwide.
The show is constantly on the road and plays about eight times per
week on average.
“For me personally it’s got a lot to do with the audience because
every show you do the audience is different,” O’Donnell said. “You
got to treat everyone as if this is the first time the have seen the
show.”
O’Donnell says what inspires him the most after three years of
performing with the show -- two of those years as the lead -- has
been trying to make the role his own. It is challenging, he says, as
a performer to have to do the same choreography over and over again,
and at the same time try to find new moves.
At 22, he says he feels that after three years of performing he
hasn’t reached his creative peak with the role. He said he also
doesn’t have plans to leave the show anytime soon.
“The more excited [the audience gets] the more they give you and
the more you want to keep going,” O’Donnell said. “It’s a great
feeling bringing the audiences to their feet.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.