Michael Earl ParmenterMNZM (born 1954) is a New Zealand choreographer, teacher and dancer of contemporary dance.
Career
Parmenter studied dance in the 1980s in New York and was influenced by both New York-based choreographer Erick Hawkins and Japanese Butoh master Min Tanaka.[1] He has a master's degree in creative and performance dance from the University of Auckland.[2] He formed the dance company Commotion in 1990 with notable works including the dance opera Jerusalem.[3]
Reporter Simon Wilson recounting a significant moment in the arts for him about a Parmenter performance:
I remember Parmenter telling his life story, the boy from Southland, born in the 1950s, gay in a conservative Christian family, how he got from there to dance, and then to a show based not on choreography but on words, although there was some very lovely dance in it too. That was A Long Undressing.[6]
In 2022 Parmenter spent six months in Dunedin as the Caroline Plummer Dance Fellow at the University of Otago, during which he established a Balfolk group in the city.[12]
^Parmenter, Michael (2008). Hand to hand : intentionality in phenomenology and contemporary dance (Masters thesis). ResearchSpace@Auckland, University of Auckland. hdl:2292/5924.