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Who was your
most difficult student?
Joel was one of
my first hip-hop students at NYU (New York University). He was from an
Orthodox Jewish background so he was rarely exposed to dance, but loved what
he saw of it and was eager to learn. I remember him coming in the first day,
showing me that he could barely touch his knees when he stretched forward.
He was very stiff and jerky and had difficulty following counts in music.
However, he stayed with it and eventually tried one of our studio’s (PMT
Dance Studio) performance workshops. He worked day and night, literally, and
over time developed one of the leads for a number of pieces. Will is another
student I met in my NYU classes. Eventually, he tried our studio’s
performance workshops. He had a very difficult time learning the steps and
on two separate occasions we were going to kick him out. However, he pleaded
with us and stepped up to the plate and was able to keep up. Now, it’s just
amazing. He is one of our best students and always takes the forefront in
every dance. For both Will and Joel, it took a lot of time and effort, but
over months and now years they have become very accomplished performers in
their own right.
What do you
most enjoy about teaching?
By far,
teaching is rewarding in how you can change lives and see people grow as
people and performers. I’ve seen shy, unhappy and introverted people blossom
into outgoing, happy and confident people.
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Which
teacher most influenced you?
I did not learn
from class, I learned on my own. The person that most inspired me when I was
younger was Michael Jackson, as I would watch his performances and almost
obsessively learn the steps and movements. I have adapted his style into a
lot of my movements and even into my performance philosophy. Breakdance wise
I would cite the Japanese and Korean break dance crews and groups, starting
from the pop groups like Deuce to Ichegeki and the Gamblers. I started
learning breakdance before anything else, and it is what originally sparked
my interest in dance.
What do you
students most enjoy about breakdance?
Breakdance is style that you can do a lot of tricks or
cool movements within a freestyle dance structure. Many of the moves at
first appear hard and somewhat impossible to learn. I think the feeling of
finally getting these moves and then applying them to a dance they made up
or a routine they can performance anywhere is the thing they most enjoy and
find gratifying. They feel a sense of accomplishment in doing something that
they originally thought hard or impossible, and that others woo about.
What is the
most difficult aspect for a beginner?
The
understanding of how to use your body and how to balance is always the
hardest thing to learn. They need to understand that you are depending more
on form, balance and technique rather than just pure brute strength. Often
times you are simply controlling your body’s natural momentum. Second, they
have to understand their own body and what their strengths and weaknesses
are. From there, they need to apply what they like performing and create a
style of their own. Students have to understand that there is more to
breakin’ as an art form than just power moves and flashy tricks.
What is the
nicest thing a student ever said to you?
Here are two recent things students have said that meant a lot to me. Jess
said, ‘I hope I have the strength to do what you did. What you’ve done is
truly remarkable.’ And Marie, a member of my dance company, said, ‘It’s
always cool working with you as a person and as a choreographer, I enjoy
learning new tricks that about three years ago I never though I would be
doing. When I first started taking class with you, I was seriously
considering giving up dancing because I was in this company where the
artistic director told me I sucked every day. You saved my dance life, dude.
That’s pretty cool.
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