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dunhill’s “Voice” Campaign — Featuring The Royal Ballet’s Rupert Pennefather

August 4, 2011 by 4dancers

I love it when a company does something different.

Luxury clothing brand, dunhill, has released an ad campaign for Autumn/Winter 2011 which is titled simply, “Voice”.

What is it all about? In their own words, “Recognising that achievement is the ultimate masculine aspiration and can only ever be attained through skill, intelligence, drive and the ability to be extraordinary.”

Why are we talking about this on 4dancers?

One of the people who was chosen to be featured in this campaign is ballet dancer Rupert Pennefather. In 2008 Rupert was promoted to principal at The Royal Ballet aged just 27, making him one of the youngest ever in the company’s history. He is currently performing in London in Manon to outstanding reviews.

Thanks to dunhill, 4dancers is able to share with you this video–part of the “Voice” campaign. In it, you’ll hear some of Pennefather’s reflections on his life in ballet. The campaign also features the legendary explorer and exhibition leader, Sir Ranulph Fiennes and acclaimed theatre director, Michael Grandage. (If you’d like to see all three of these gentlemen, visit dunhill.)

Here’s the video–would love to hear what you think–I thought it was shot beautifully:

 

Filed Under: 4dancers, Editorial Tagged With: Ballet, dunhill, michael grandage, ranulph fiennes, royal ballet, rupert pennefather

Feet–Glorious Feet

August 3, 2011 by 4dancers

by Stacey Pepper Schwartz

Summer is a time when you see people walk around in bare feet.  Usually I only see this in a creative movement or modern dance classes.  People can be very shy about their feet.  We tend to see feet as a mode of transportation instead of a body part.  We hide our feet in shoes, boots or sneakers.  But in summertime out come the feet.  Sandals, flip flops, and yes, sometimes bare naked.  Around Memorial day I heard a lot of my friends proclaiming they needed pedicures because summer was coming.  I found this comment so strange because I don’t feel feet need to be dressed up to be shown in public.

Most kids love to pull off their shoes and socks the moment they get a chance.  Whenever I ask my daughter to take off her shoes, her shoes come off  and then her socks fly off in two different directions.  I can’t keep track of her socks because I can’t keep them on her feet.  At some point, maybe in the teenage years when feet start to sweat or smell, people become shy or even disgusted by feet.  Now is the time to explore our glorious feet because they are not hidden away in some formidable boots. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial Tagged With: bare feet, dance, dancers, feet

10 Questions With…Tim O’Shei

August 1, 2011 by 4dancers


Today on “10 Questions With…” we have Tim O’Shei from Live! Starring … You!

Tim OShei, Heather Morris, Ina Summers

1. Can you tell readers a bit about your background in writing?

Sure. I’ve always focused on entertainment, sports, business and children’s writing. The magazines I’ve written for range from Dance Spirit to The Sporting News to Scholastic’s Scope, which is for middle schoolers. As an author, I’ve written more than 60 books for kids on subjects like spies, princesses, and survival.

One of my favorite things about writing books is author visits in schools. When I do those visits, I like to tell kids about my succession of dreams, all of which seemed to fail (but actually didn’t): When I was 4, I wanted to become Superman – but couldn’t fly. At 10 I wanted to become a rock star – but the only instrument I was good at was the tuba. Then, at 14, I wanted to be a baseball player — but couldn’t hit the ball.

By 16, I realized I was pretty good at writing, and that I loved doing it. I pitched a story about a baseball scout (who was also a family friend) to a national magazine called Baseball Digest. The editor called and said, “I like your idea, but I have no idea if you can write. Go ahead and do it, and if we like it, we’ll pay you $150 and publish it. If not, then that’s it.” So I went ahead and did the interviews, wrote the story, and got it published. The editor was pretty happy with it and offered for me to do more writing for the magazine. So, in 11th grade, I ended up interviewing big-league baseball players in the locker room and on the field.

Through that, I realized that that writing was a great way to touch all of my dreams – and in a sense, make them come true. Over the next bunch of years, I interviewed hundreds of athletes as a sports writer and hundreds of performers – including rock stars – as an entertainment writer. Once I got to play a game of “professional” baseball, which was actually a movie shoot. (I was writing a story about this baseball movie and they asked me to be an extra, playing left field for a team called the Omaha Royals.) I even interviewed two actors who played Superman – Christopher Reeve and Dean Cain – which I suppose is the closest I could possibly come to that dream!

2. You have written for dance publications during your career. Which ones have you done articles for and how did you get involved with the dance world?

I’ve written a bunch of stories in the last four to five years for Dance Spirit and Dance Teacher. Both are great magazines. I got started when I met a woman named Katia Bachko, who at the time was a Dance Teacher editor, at a writing conference in New York City. I was working on the original Live! Starring … You! book at the time, and wanted to incorporate dance into it. I figured the best way was to write about it.

When I met Katia, she looked at me and said, a bit hesitantly, “Do you dance?” I’m 6-foot-1 and more than 200 pounds  — and I wish I could dance.

“No,” I told her. “But my wife was a dancer. And I’m a teacher.” (Which is true — I’ve taught elementary, middle, high school and college.) Then I added, “So I figure I could write for Dance Teacher!” That worked. I started writing for DT, and DS soon followed.

A funny side note: I actually made my dance debut recently in a dads’ routine for my daughter’s studio. I was dressed as a tulip – with green petals and pink tutu and ribbon socks – and we did a two-minute ballet to Tiny Tim’s “Tiptoe Through The Tulips.” That really made me appreciate dancers’ skills!

3. What do you enjoy about writing articles that have to do with dance?

Dancers impress the heck out of me. They’re so incredibly skilled and passionate. Dance is a perfect mix of athleticism, story telling and visual art.

Beyond that, I’m also fascinated by the mentality that dancers in the commercial world must adopt in order to survive. When you’re a backup dancer for big pop star – Lady Gaga, Beyoncé, Usher, Britney, Rihanna, Justin Bieber, whomever – you’re right on stage, playing a key role in a huge show, and on the receiving end of massive cheers. But they’re almost never meant for you. And once you’re offstage, the makeup is off and the street clothes on, you’re a regular person. Depending how you look at it, that’s either seriously cool or (if you want to be the star) will leave you desperately wanting more.

4. Can you talk a bit about what your latest project, Live! Starring … You!, is about? [Read more…]

Filed Under: 10 Questions With..., 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial Tagged With: dance, dance spirit, dance teacher, disney channel, glee, heather morris, icarly, justin bieber, lady gaga, live starring you, lsy, Miranda Cosgrove, tim o'shei

Together, With A Gift

July 29, 2011 by Kimberly Peterson

by Kimberly Peterson

The Dance World is made up of several large countries, some smaller provinces and many big cities…however the sense of community between them, the community they continue to build and the community they foster all enable dance to be the cultural and societal force that it is.

Dance has long been deeply rooted in culture and tradition, pride in one’s location and the skills of their people, embodying the history of a nation to be relived over and again for future generations so they may know and experience where their people have been. It is political and apolitical, it is emotional and devoid of emotion, it is both all things and nothing and in this ambiguity there is a glorious freedom.

Through the ages, it has tied people together, bridged the gaps between spoken and written languages, expressed the common experience of a body in motion uniting us within that shared medium.

Community can denote many different things, but in this instance, I believe it is most apt to return to the Latin cognates from the French term communité: the Latin cum, “with/together” and munus, “gift”. Together, With A Gift.

As National Dance Day once again kicks off at the end of this week, it reminds me that one of the most beautiful things we can do as human beings, is to give of oneself in the hopes of reaching another person, connecting with another person. Dance is, for many reasons, a universal vocabulary and offers us the opportunity to come together, with that gift. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial Tagged With: dance world, kim peterson, national dance day, So You Think You Can Dance, sytycd

Introducing Lizzie Leopold on “The Business of Making Dance”

July 27, 2011 by 4dancers

Leopold Group by Matthew Gregory Hollis

by Lizzie Leopold

If this were real life I would shake your hand, say “nice to meet you” and maybe we would exchange phone numbers.  But here we are in the vast spaces of the internet.  So, think of this blog as a virtual hand shake.

I’m Lizzie Leopold, choreographer, writer, scholar and social media enthusiast and these are my thoughts on the “Business of Making Dance.”  The intersection of dance and business is busy, fast-paced and highly dangerous, so fasten your seat-belts.

This past week I attended the annual Dance/USA Conference in Chicago, the largest gathering of dance professionals in the country.  I attended as student (as a PhD candidate at Northwestern University), as an Artistic Director and choreographer (Leopold Group), as a part of a dance service organization (Audience Architects), a social media manger (SeeChicagoDance) and as an all-around dance nerd.  I left inspired, confused, clarified and exhausted. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial, Online Dance Resources, Studios, The Business Of Dance Tagged With: audience architects, business of dance, chicago, dance usa conference, jennifer edwards, leopold group, lizzie leopold, pico iyer, seechicagodance, Wolfbrown

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