Quote:
Originally Posted by Kevy Baby
I'm fairly good at dancing around an uncomfortable topic.
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Really? I thought you took more of a head-on approach to those topics.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Strangler Lewis
My grandest moment was during a ballroom class I took in college through the P.E. department. It was tango time, and the 50+ lady instructor partnered me. "You're very good," she said as the music swelled. "Now, lead with your thighs!"
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That truly
is a grand moment.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Prudence
14 years of tap, and I forget how many of ballet. Ballet I was never very good at due to some mishap in the way my hips were formed (except for jumps - I was an AWESOME jumper).
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I have the opposite freak hips. My turnout from the hip is ridiculous, especially on my right, though I am not a strong jumper. My turnout makes the parallel stance in jazz very tricky.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Prudence
I loved tap.
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Tap really is so much fun.
I started dancing in pre-ballet classes when I was 3 at the Bevelle Studio in Danville. My first teacher's name was Miss Joy and she wore her hair in a very big, very bright, reddish-orange beehive. We did a lot of dancing in circles, holding hands, clapping on beat to learn rhythm, and running around using babooshkas to represent everything from babies to flowers. I also remember tambourines in use, just thought ot that. Hmm.
Since then I have danced in many different studios (depending on where I was living or traveling) and studied and taught different forms of dance, but always return to ballet. For 16 years I took ballet, tap, jazz and tumbling (gymnastics minus the equipment and competition) at
San Ramon Valley Dance Academy. Then I dropped the tumbling and jazz to concentrate on ballet, but liked tap and still played with that as well for 10 years after that. I stopped dancing for 10 years when I got married and had my two children. I thought I was too old to dance and figured that it was fun while it lasted, but that part of my life was over. When my daughter was 4 and started taking ballet classes, I was shocked at the intense feelings of nostalgia I had, being in a studio. I took her for her weekly ballet class and did not want to leave. So I went back to ballet then. Very soon after I added a lyrical and tap classes. I was invited to substitute teach when needed, which is not often, but really fun. I'm not good at math, but even taking out the 10 stagnant years, the number of years spent dancing is high.
At least two of the studios where I danced are gone now. Footsteps in San Francisco, last I heard, was doing strictly salsa. Some of my favorite teachers have been
Alexei Badrak, Margret Lloyds-Smallie,
Joan Winton, Karla & Klaudia Kobelt and Mo Ruslender.
Growing up my
ballet training was
SAB, but later took classes in the
Cecchetti method. As an adult I have favored
Vaganova, thanks to Alexei Badrak, who has been the most inspirational teacher I've ever known. Since dancing with Alexei, I just love a good mazurka. When I am fortunate enough to have my own students, I don't stick to a strict syllabus, but instead strive to stoke a passion for dance and impart my love for music and movement.
I love all the dance pics! I wish I had a scanner, I could add some of mine, though I don't think I've ever worn a costume as sequined and fabulous as Morri's. I have worn my share of fishnets though. The most memorable costume was a lime green and orange monstrosity worn for a recital in the 70's -- bell bottomed lime green jazz pants, with orange sequins sewn down the outside seam of each leg. The music? Shaft, of course. Can you dig it?