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Posts Tagged ‘dancing’

Lake Lure, North Carolina Memorial Tribute To Patrick Swayze

Patrick Swaye will be remembered by residents of the North Carolina community where he filmed the movie that made him famous.
Swayze lost his battle with pancreatic cancer on Monday, but he’ll be best remembered for his breakout role as Catskills resort dance teacher Johnny Castle in Dirty Dancing, a low-budget 1987 film that would become [...]

Patrick Swayze Tribute “Dancing With The Stars” Sept. 23

Dancing With The Stars will honor Patrick Swayze on its Sept. 23 live results show, PEOPLE has learned.
Swayze, who went from Broadway dancer to Hollywood star in box-office hits like Dirty Dancing and Ghost, died on September 14 after a nearly two-year battle with pancreatic cancer. The son of a choreographer, Swayze made a guest [...]

Jennifer Grey: “Patrick Swayze Was A Real Cowboy”

Jennifer Grey, who appeared alongside Patrick Swayze in his 1987 breakout film Dirty Dancing, is remembering the late actor, who died Monday evening after a nearly two year battle against inoperable pancreatic cancer.

“Patrick was a rare and beautiful combination of raw masculinity and amazing grace,” Jennifer said in a statement to The Insider overnight. [...]

Dirty Dancing star Patrick Swayze dead at 57

Actor Patrick Swayze, whose turn as a smoldering dance instructor in “Dirty Dancing” made him one of the iconic film stars of the 1980s, died on Monday after a long battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 57. Swayze, an actor and dancer who cemented his status as sex symbol opposite Demi

Derek Hough Joanna Krupa Dancing To “Baby Got Back” (VIDEO)

Dancing With The Stars partners Derek Hough and Joanna Krupa are showing off their “back” — kinda — in a new viral hit heating up YouTube.
Tune in when Derek and Joanna take the floor for real on the ninth season premiere of DWTS Sept. 21 @ 8PM on ABC.

Aaron Carter “Chelsea Lately” VIDEO (Sept. 9)

Now that Dancing With The Stars cutie Karina Smirnoff has dismissed series co-star/rebound guy Maksim from the ballroom, do you think her Season 9 partner Aaron Carter stands a shot at love with the petite dancer?
Chelsea Handler sure does!

Maksim Chmerkovskiy Karina Smirnoff Breakup

Dancing With The Stars champions Karina Smirnoff and Maksim Chmerkovskiy won’t be dancing down the aisle in holy matrimony, after all. Karina’s rep tells E! News that the ballroom pros, who spent the summer performing in the Broadway production Burn The Floor, have parted ways after nearly a year of dating.
Smirnoff, 31, and Chmerkovskiy, 28, [...]

Jo Wood taking tips from Mick Jagger to win ‘Strictly Come Dancing’

Jo Wood, who is participating in ‘Strictly Come Dancing’, is getting performance tips from none other than Mick Jagger for winning the show.
The ex-model has been chasing her ex-hubby Ronnie Wood’’s flamboyant bandmate for advice on how to shine in the contest.
It is believed that Jo, 53, is ultra-competitive and wants to gain an advantage [...]

Channing Tatum “Dirty Dancing” Spoof VIDEO (Ft. Charlyne Yi)

Video: Channing Tatum and Charlyne Yi Cinemash “Dirty Dancing”
Nobody puts Baby in a corner!
A shirtless Channing Tatum makes the best of those washboard abs and does his best Patrick Swayze in a hilarious new video parody of the classic love scene from 1987’s Dirty Dancing.
Charlyne Yi, of Knocked Up fame, co-stars.
“I’m scared of being [...]

Maksim Chmerkovskiy Karina Smirnoff Wedding June 2010

Dancing With The Stars couple Maksim Chmerkovskiy and Karina Smirnoff are too busy to tie the knot!

The dancers became engaged in December 2008 but plan wait until next summer for their wedding.
Maksim and Karina have hired a wedding planner for their June 2010.
“We don’t plan [the wedding],” Maksim told PEOPLE Magazine on Friday. “We’re [working] [...]

“Dancing With the Stars” duo prepare to turn up the heat on B’way

NEW YORK (AP) — Karina Smirnoff (kuh-REE’-nuh SMEER’-nahf) and Maksim Chmerkovskiy (MAKS’-ihm shmehr-KAWF’-skee) have no time to think about their wedding.
They’re too busy burning up the dance floor.
The professional dancers – best known from ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars” – are preparing for their Broadway debuts in the ballroom dance show “Burn The Floor.” [...]

Katie Holmes “So You Think You Can Dance” VIDEO (Judy Garland “Get Happy” Tribute)

Katie Holmes performed a song/dance tribute to entertainment legend Judy Garland on Thursday night’s So You Think You Can Dance 100th Episode Special.

We can’t wait to hear your thoughts on the performance!!

Katie’s taped segment aired near the end of the show — she said her reason for doing the show was to introduce the new [...]

Katie Holmes found Judy Garland dancing tribute ‘really fun’

Katie Holmes has said she is “very excited” about her singing and dancing tribute to Judy Garland.
“The Dawson’s Creek” star is set to perform on the 100th episode of the US version of talent show So you Think You Can Dance.
“I like to sing and dance so it is really fun,” Us magazine quoted her [...]

Katie Holmes “So You Think You Can Dance” 100th Episode Sneak Peek VIDEO

Katie Holmes will perform on the milestone 100th episode of FOX’s summer reality hit So You Think You Can Dance this Thursday, July 23.
In this sneak peek video from tomorow’s show, the actress chats with host Cat Deeley about her “Get Happy” song-and-dance tribute to entertainment legend Judy Garland, as well as The Dizzy [...]

Rhythm to beat the blues

Ecstatic dance has an image problem. It’s a shame, because it will keep you fit, give you a natural high, and could even change your worldview, says Christine Ottery

Ye-ow. As I sit down to write this, my thigh muscles are screaming. Last night, for a sweaty hour and a half I was twirling, swaying, reaching, wiggling, shaking, flapping, and moving my body into every kind of arc, angle, figure-of-eight and heap-on-the-floor configuration.

I was ecstatic dancing. This can be a strenuous cardio workout, and has all the associated upsides: the feel-good fix of endorphins, getting fitter, toning up and losing weight. One ecstatic dance teacher, Christian de Sousa, discovered just how fit he was from all the dancing when on a two-hour mountain run with a marathon-addicted friend. “I was actually leaving him behind,” de Souza says.

There’s no significant study of the physical pluses of ecstatic dancing, so I hooked myself up to a heart rate monitor for the duration of my workout. My gadget told me that I spent 54 minutes out of 1 hour and 35 minutes at a heart rate that will improve my endurance and aerobic fitness. I burned up 334 calories – equivalent to 100g of Jelly Babies.

Sadly, ecstatic dancing suffers an image problem. Mention it to the uninitiated and they’ll picture eye-rolling, flushed, pseudo-orgasmic people with quivering bodies and arms aloft, Woodstock-style. But ecstasy in this context relates to a trance-like mental state. Some ecstatic dancers are disillusioned clubbers. “They want to carry on getting the rave high but leave the drugs behind,” says Richard Clare, a 26-year-old ecstatic dancer.

“Trance is not just some mystical experience, which belongs to special people, it belongs to human beings who are prepared and willing to dance themselves into that state”, says Ya’ Acov Darling Khan, co-founder of the School of Movement Medicine in Devon.

Khan describes trance as discovering that you’ve got second, third, fourth, and fifth gears of perception when you’ve been ambling along in first. This is analogous to the science behind trance: that our conscious modus operandi is mostly beta, (cognitive, problem-solving) brain waves, but we can tune into our alpha (focused, aware) waves and delta and theta (creative, transcendent) waves.

Communities have danced ritual celebrations since time immemorial, but in the west we have made dance into a form of entertainment. However, in recent times “psychotherapeutic” dance therapy has been made available on the NHS, depending on your primary care trust, as part of art therapy for people with mental health problems, particularly schizophrenia. A study cited on the American Cancer Society website infers that dance and movement therapy can help with all kinds of emotional problems, especially boosting body image and self-esteem while reducing anxiety, isolation and depression.

Ecstatic dance has similar therapeutic effects, although often couched in more spiritual terms. It encompasses everything from large global movements such as 5 Rhythms and Biodanza to local drum’n'dance meet-ups, so there is no governing association. You may find 5 Rhythms is a good place to start. Its creator, Gabrielle Roth, began as a dance teacher and has studied and disseminated ecstatic dance for over 50 years. There are now more than 250 certified 5 Rhythms teachers worldwide, and countless offshoots.

“Dance is an art form and movement is a life form,” Roth says. She observed patterns in the way people moved and 5 Rhythms was conceived. The rhythms form a natural wave, building up through gentle “flow”; jagged “staccato” rhythm; peaking in the head-rolling frenzy of “chaos”; and then drawing you deeper into self-expression with “lyrical” beats; and finally meditative “stillness”. The different rhythms allow us to “put the entire psyche into motion. That is to say we need to be physically fluid, emotionally fluid, mentally fluid, and not locked into positions and beliefs and theories,” says Gabrielle.

I decide I’d be hard pressed to be as awkward and ungainly as Mark in the Rainbow Rhythms episode of Peep Show, so I try a couple of 5 Rhythms classes. There are about 60 people in each class. Nervously, I stretch and warm my muscles. As the rhythms take off, I shake off my shyness. We dance by ourselves, with partners, and at the centre of a circle, where I whirl like a dervish, swoop and leap. My body is expressing itself – it’s utter abandonment and a complete high. As Roth says, “there’s no dogma in the dance”.

I also go to a new ecstatic dance group with a percussion band called Urubu. The improvised drumming creates a deep release in me: in one session I weep silently while comforted by a fellow dancer. As we embrace each other in a perspiration-soaked hug, it doesn’t matter who wears what, who smells like what, or how we dance. Ecstasy is the best leveller. “You recognise the life that’s moving through you and feels good”, says Khan. “It’s the same life as whoever’s standing next to you, whether they’re a complete stranger or your best friend.”

It is no surprise that people make lasting connections that go beyond the dance scene, given the intensity of the experience and the way people engage with each other without the distractions of alcohol, drugs, or even speech. Friendships form, sometimes even romances. Dancers come from all kinds of backgrounds, they are all ages, and there is an equal mix of men and women.

Dancing yourself into a trance can also give you a new perspective on your role in a global society. Roth has recently set up a charity, 5 Rhythms Reach Out, for marginalised people in Cambodia and Thailand. She believes that change must come from within, and ecstatic dance can be a catalyst: “You’re just in a position of being inside of and completely connected to the bigger picture. It’s a very real state of being.”

Other ecstatic workouts

Yogi Bhajan brought Kundalini yoga to the UK in the 70s. It uses repeated postures called “kriyas” to unfurl latent energy from the base of your spine to the top of your head, creating altered consciousness.

The practice of Tantra contains some solo sutras, which are exercises with breath that are intended to heal by releasing negative emotions and root us in an awareness of our body. Can be very ecstatic!

Find an ecstatic dance group near you

gabrielleroth.com has a list of 5 Rhythms teachers, including some in most major UK cities.

schoolofmovementmedicine.com is a Devon-based school for healing dance practices.

admt.org.uk has a list of Masters-qualified Dance Movement Therapy practitioners in the UK.

acalltodance.com is the website of London’s most popular 5 Rhythms teacher, Sue Rickards. It also lists some other London ecstatic dance classes.

meetup.com is a useful resource for finding ecstatic dance sessions in your area. Otherwise, try Googling.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Patrick Swayze Snapped Looking Healthier

Patrick Swayze has been pictured looking more healthy than he has in months.

The Dirty Dancing star, 56, who was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer early last year, appeared to have gained a little weight and grown some of his hair back. He had…

Now for a Texas Tommy!

Britain is going crazy for a joyous dance from the 1920s called the lindy hop. So why can’t our writer get the hang of it?

In a cramped basement in central London, two dozen couples glide, bop and leap around a parquet floor. A few of the men have thin moustaches, waistcoasts and two-tone shoes, while some of the women have polka-dot dresses that billow out as they twirl around their partners in a tuck-turn, flat spin or a Texas Tommy. In the background, scratchy records play out trumpets, saxophones and horns in a combination of six-step jazz, blues and swing.

The idea of couples dancing the lindy hop seems so dated that you would think this must be a revival night – a once-in-a-while nostalgic hark-back to the 1920s, when lindy hop was emerging from the shadow of the mighty charleston as the dance for the young. But you’d be wrong. Lindy hop (also known as swing, jive and jitterbug) has been gathering a steady following in the UK for more than a decade, spurred on by the popularity of TV dance shows. All over the country, there are day courses in lindy hop, holidays, drop-in classes, club nights, competitions and even a trade in the associated paraphernalia – for men, retro panama hats, suits and spats; and 1940s prom dresses for women.

“When you go out swing dancing, you actually go dancing,” says Simon Selmon of the London Swing Dance Society (LSDS) – a lindy hopper of more than 20 years. When he first started teaching in the early 1990s, Selmon dreamed of getting 20 people in the class. “Now, we are busier than ever – we’re running more events and classes. We’re doing more corporate events and we’re getting requests from schools, partly because of the health aspects. Teachers also tell me it’s good communication between people and there’s teamwork involved.”

I started taking Selmon’s classes partly out of curiosity, but also because, with seven weddings to attend this year, I thought it would be useful to finally learn how to couple dance. I joined 150 or so beginners for his most popular class, Wild Times, on a Tuesday night. The lesson began with a stroll, which felt a bit like a jazzed-up line dance (I learned later that you should never call it a line dance in front of a lindy hopper). Ten minutes later, I was working through the basic footwork: a slow-slow, quick-quick on a six-step count. Then we headed downstairs, where more advanced dancers showed us how to do things properly.

I also tried out a smaller, more intimate class. The 52nd Street Jump, a club based in south London but named after the New York street that’s home to such jazz venues as Famous Door and Three Juices, runs 10-week foundation courses to give shy beginners the chance to screw up in front of a smaller bunch of fellow newbies. I asked instructor Steve Mason: what type of person goes along? “One minute you could be talking to a bank manager, then you’d be talking to a policeman, then you could be talking to a plasterer. How many other things in society are there where we hang around in groups of people like us? I’ve always liked the fact it’s such a mixture.”

Lindy hop dates back to 1927, when George “Shorty” Snowden was tearing up the dance halls of Harlem. He took jazz steps from the charleston, introduced fast break-outs (in which the woman is thrown out to the side, and then snapped back in) and won every competition and dance marathon going. After a win at the Manhattan Casino, a reporter asked what Shorty called the moves he was using. Shorty glanced over at a newspaper carrying a front-page report of the aviator Charles Lindbergh’s successful solo flight in the Spirit of St Louis from Long Island to Paris, which bore the headline: “Lucky Lindy hops the Atlantic”. He shot the reporter back a name: the lindy hop.

The dance spread quickly thanks to the music of Count Basie, Benny Goodman and Glenn Miller. In the 1930s, dancers introduced the “airsteps” – acrobatics in which the man throws his partner over his head or between his legs. By the early 1940s, ballrooms across America were hosting regular lindy hop competitions. Swing was the pop music of its day, and lindy hop the way you enjoyed it.

The scene changed after the second world war: the US government put a tax on dancing clubs, so tables and chairs took the place of couples on dancefloors. Rock’n'roll and bebop took over, and things only picked up again in the 1980s, in the clubs of New York. “Back then, if you’d said lindy hop, you’d have had half a dozen people who knew what it was,” says Selmon. He was learning rock’n'roll dances when, in 1986, his instructor suggested some new moves and a trip to the swing clubs of New York. On his return to London, Selmon set up the LSDS. Four years later, he was teaching so much dancing he decided to take a year off his day job buying and selling antique jewellery. “That was 19 years ago,” he says. “It’s been a very long year.”

Back in the class, Selmon starts people off on the basic footwork, and adds a few turns. It’s not that difficult to learn. “You need about three months to feel comfortable then, if you want to refine it, it probably takes about a year,” he says. “You only need a dozen steps to happily dance socially all night long.”

For the first three lessons, I stared at my feet as I jerked (I don’t want to say danced) awkwardly around the floor. For the next three weeks, I was still mouthing the names of the moves, and keeping time very consciously in my head. It took around four months before I could think about leading someone for even half a song. But many of the people who started with me progressed much more quickly; my problem was that I didn’t practise enough.

Ask anyone at the club who the best dancer is, and they will invariably point you to 83-year-old John Barnes, a regular at Wild Times. He’s been lindy hopping since the summer of 1996, though he first saw the dance in the 1940s when he played piano for a west London youth club frequented by Amercian soldiers. More than 50 years later, he started to learn the dance himself after going to a nostalgia night of swing music at the Queen Elizabeth Hall. He hadn’t intended to dance that night, he says, but when he was approached by a young woman who offered to partner him, he says he couldn’t resist.

One thirtysomething Londoner has come alone to Selmon’s class. “It’s something to do other than drinking all night,” he says. Another woman says she dragged her boyfriend along six months ago after coming to classes by herself for a few months. Now he’s also hooked, and they dance three or four times a week.

Lindy hop’s appeal is easy to understand: it’s a joyous dance. “Many of the pioneers of lindy hop grew up in the economic depression of the 1920s and 30s, and dance was escapism, a way to forget your troubles and have fun,” says Selmon. Economic depression is not, it seems, the only thing 2009 shared with the 1920s. Eighty years later, the lindy hop is no longer consigned to dance history – but may just be the social dance of the future.

To find out more about lindy hop, visit 52ndstreetjump.co.uk or swingdanceuk.com

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Enduring allure

Ahlan Wa Sahlan belly dance festival

By Yolande Knell
BBC News, Cairo

Hundreds of women of all nationalities sway their hips and twirl in time to the beat of a drum in a hotel ballroom by the pyramids in Cairo.

Belly dancing is said to have been practised in Egypt since Pharaonic times and now it has caught on around the globe.

It is well-established in Europe and the US and has recently spread to Asia. This year dozens of dancers travelled from China for the Ahlan Wa Sahlan belly dancing festival.

"Because this is the land of dance, women have to come!" declares Raqia Hassan, the festival organiser.

"When she comes she can meet famous dancers and musicians. She can see the pyramids. Anyone who comes to Egypt one time, she cannot stop coming back."

Japanese belly dance fan

Raqia, who has taught many belly dancing celebrities, leads her large class through the basic moves of the dance putting together a routine.

"It’s fun and you can do this at any age," says Ewa Horsfield from London. "You can express your own personality. It’s an individual dance. You just listen and respond to the music."

Many speak of the fitness benefits of belly dancing.

"In China all ladies like for their health," says Angel from Shanghai.

"This kind of dance began here. Here teachers [are] very, very good so all Chinese ladies want to come."

Contradictions

Belly dancing is big business in Egypt thanks to the global market.

Designer, Safaa Yasser Bakr, runs a belly dancing costume shop in the historic Khan el-Khalili bazaar.

She helps a Brazilian woman try on a sky-blue sequinned bra and a matching skirt with a split up one side.

"In one show big stars change costume many times," she tells her. "You need maybe five different pieces."

Nowadays Safaa sells most of her alluring outfits to foreigners.

Safa Yasser Bakr

"I see people coming from France, Italy, United States, Argentina, Spain, Japan," she says.

But in Egypt at large, many experts fear the dance is losing its appeal.

Society has become more religious and conservative over the past generation and belly dancing is not considered a respectable profession.

"I don’t like belly dancing. I don’t like to see a woman half-naked dancing and moving her body like that," says one man on the street in central Cairo.

"It has a kind of sexual movement. That’s why I don’t like to watch it," adds his friend.

An older passer-by remembers the famous dancers of the 1960s with affection but says he would not let his wife or daughters dance in public today.

"I liked the old belly dancer because you could not see a lot of her body," he remarks. "They were very respectable – not like the new ones now."

Enduring art

Dance historian, Mo Geddawi, accepts belly dancing is facing a challenging time in Egypt but says this must be seen in perspective.

"Forget about different governments and religion," he says. "When Christianity and then Islam came the dance was taboo, but people continued to dance."

"Sometimes in public it is less but the dance never died."

For now though international devotees help to ensure the dance goes on.

Diana Esposito from New York came to Cairo on a scholarship to study the social and economic reasons for its decline but has become an accomplished belly dancer herself.

"The first time I saw it I thought the movements were so sensual," she says. "I decided to try something new and it became an addiction."

"I don’t see the dance being done properly anywhere else in the world. That’s why everyone flocks here – this is the capital of belly dance."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Julianne Hough “Really Excited” About “Footloose” Casting

Dancing with the Stars pro turned country music starlet Julianne Hough is beaming over her role in the upcoming Footloose remake.

The talented hoofer, 22, will show off her fancy footwork in the role of rebellious preacher’s daughter Ariel Moore in the movie musical. And Gossip Girl star Chace Crawford has already been cast as Ren [...]

Des Moines Dancing Illegal After 2 A.M.

DES MOINES, Iowa — Dancing the night away in Des Moines doesn’t seem to be at the top of many must-do lists. Maybe because it’s illegal.

An obscure city ordinance outlaws publicly shaking your groove thing in Iowa’s biggest city after 2…