Showing posts with label Dance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dance. Show all posts

Monday, 31 August 2020

Dance Again: Australian dancer in Hong Kong: Kristopher Peter Long





























 

Incredible photography by the gorgeous Yana, shot in Kennedy Town, Hong Kong . 

Outtakes from a shoot for a feature on the amazing dancer/choreographer Kristopher Long. 

Absolutely loved working with the two. Yana's one of my fav humans on the planet, so its always a joy to work with her. Kris just went beyond what was expected - nearly every shot was amazing. 


Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Dance in her pants: Dancer Bethany Taylor stays fit



FIT AND FAB: Bethany Taylor

The rigmarole of a gym is not for everyone. The unpredictability of weather can be a hindrance for those who like to go for a run outside, and team sports are for a chosen few. But anyone can dance at any age and at any time, right? “I suppose,” says Bethany Taylor, an interior design student. “All you need is some great music and some space.”

She started dancing at age four, when her mother took her to baby ballet in Muscat, Oman, and trained at the Emma Tse Elite Dance Academy in Hong Kong for years. “I’ve tried pretty much every style of dance – ballet, hip hop, contemporary, tap, jazz, salsa, street,” says Taylor. “My favourites are ballet and street dance; one form is strictly disciplined and the other, freestyle. I love how much attitude and fun you can have with street, while ballet is so elegant. And which girl didn’t want to be a ballerina growing up?”

Although dance is a personal and individual experience for her, it’s helped Taylor in her modelling profession, too. “It gives you amazing control over your body, and you know what angles your body looks good at. It also helps with stamina. Shoots are always so long, and you’re usually standing up, so [training for dance] helps to keep you going for long periods of time.”

Three years ago, Taylor opted to go to college in London instead of taking the difficult route of professional dancing. Although she gave up the hard-core discipline of ballet, she’s found other forms of expression through a range of classes at Studiodanz in North Point.

“Classes are mostly taught in Cantonese, but it’s helped me learn faster as I’m not distracted by what’s said and I follow the movement. I’m forced to concentrate and pick up faster, which has been an excellent form of self-discipline. And dance is the finest form of motion and discipline.”

What drew you to dance?
Ballet is so beautiful and elegant. It’s really high art. I may not do it much any more, but I still appreciate it. Now I dance for fun, and it is the most fun way to exercise.

Is there any particular dance you’d like to try?
Zumba – it’s half exercise, half dance, and looks really fun. It’s a concoction of salsa and aerobics. I’ve been meaning to go, and this year I’ll do it.

What’s your diet like?
Processed food is a definite no, but the word “diet” really puts me off as I don’t believe in dieting. If you eat properly, watch your calories, but don’t deprive yourself, maintain portion control and eat a healthy amount. You don’t need to follow whatever diet is in fashion.

What’s been a memorable dance class?
At Pure Fitness in Central, choreographer Tony Stone [who has worked with stars like Salt-N-Pepa, Falco and LL Cool J] came to teach for a brief session, and it was a serious dance-off and workout. For three hours we were moving non-stop. It was a good class. He’s in his 50s but is in amazing shape.


What other ways do you stay fit?
Gym about four times a week, which keeps my cardio up. I have regular sessions with a personal trainer, and he’s really tough. The day after our sessions, I hate him – but it’s worth going to. I do my own body conditioning regime at home to keep toned, and go to street dance classes a few times a week at Pineapple Dance Studios [in London] more for fun. There’s no exercise that I hate. I have so much energy and love being active.

What’s the secret to looking really lean and toned?
Before a shoot, I cut my carbs and salty foods, and just have proteins and vegetables. And I drink a lot of green tea and water. If hungry during a lengthy shoot, I snack on cashews and bananas.

What’s your favourite health food?
It has to be quinoa; it’s so easy to prepare and so tasty. It fills you up but doesn’t make you bloated, and you can add whatever you like to it. My favourite combination at the moment is with celery, feta and ham. I’m also a massive fan of making fresh soups. It’s cheap and easy, and you get your daily dose of veggies.

P. Ramakrishnan
ramakrishnanp@hotmail.com
Portrait by Sabrina Sikora Photography
http://sspmodels.phanfare.com/
Feb 07, 2012

Wednesday, 26 May 2010

almost famous: Rani Asra Gidwani: Indian Dance Instructor and Choreographer Balances Motherhood and Bollywood Moves

Eight days before she delivered her beautiful baby girl Raina, Rani Asra Gidwani was squatting on cushions on her mother's living-room sofa, addressing a room full of dancers. Gidwani teaches Indian dance all year round but she's busiest during the months leading up to Diwali, the Indian new year, which falls on October 25 this year.

"I said no to everything, but when people want you, they want you," she says. "I had an assistant; I showed them what to do and taught all the way till my last trimester."

With no formal training but with three decades of experience behind her, Gidwani combines Bollywood-style "filmy" dancing with MTV-inspired sequences and dollops of originality and style.

Officially, she's been instructing for nine years at her Kowloon School of Dance but as far back as she can remember she's been grooving to music. "I've been dancing since I was three years old choreographing my own dances since I was five," says the 33-year-old. "I've always been one of those people who leads the dance; I can't follow other people and copy them. That's not my style. What I have to offer is unique and original. I can't blindly copy what's on TV."

Apart from the vast number of youngsters she's taught over the past nine years ["Ninety-five per cent of the Indian kids in Tsim Sha Tsui who dance have come to some class or another with me"]. Gidwani's worked with Chinese, Japanese, Russian, British and Americans, enthused by the exuberance of Bollywood musicals' and joie de vivre.

"For the older ladies especially, or couples who just want to look good when they're dancing at events, it's a great workout. with Indian dance, bhangra especially, you shake everything. Bhangra-cise is huge in Britain and I'm sorting out a schedule in Hong Kong too.

"Indian music has crept in to so many remixes. From Eminem to Ricky Martin, the influence has spread into the club scene as well so when people want to learn to move to it, they come to me. I'm sure I was the first person to mix hip-hop and Indian songs and teach dance."

A voluminous file reveals her students' information -- an age group from three to 60. "I worked with an international school last year, with teachers, students, all of whom were putting on a Bollywood show after Moulin Rouge I think. They were eager to learn and that made it fun for me to teach. The best part was that there were no hassles because they were so enthusiastic."


Opportunity to work in Bollywood, the world's largest film industry, came often, but she didn't grab the offers. "I've had offers to work in showbiz many times but I wasn't ready to leave home - I was born and brought up in Hong Kong. To live in Mumbai and cater to stars and their egos and try my luck - I wasn't sure. Deep down, I didn't have the confidence then."

And now? 

"Now, I'm happily married and a mother of a 10-month-old. I still get to do what I love and seriously have no regrets."

Words: P.Ramakrishnan.
Portrait: SCMP
Published in South China Morning Post
South China Morning Post
建立日期: 2003年07月19日

Tuesday, 18 May 2010

High Heels: Hong Kong Ballet takes on The World of Suzie Wong


Hong Kong Ballet went for the bold as some of the best dancers from across Asia, together with a lead from Canada, got together for Stephen Jefferies' stage adaptation for Hong Kong's very own tale, The World of Suzie Wong. P.Ramakrishnan tried to match steps with the production's principal dancers and choreographer, as they tried not to break a leg during rehearsals.


There are neither girls in fluffy tutus nor men in tights in this dance adaptation of Richard Mason's The World of Suzie Wong. In Stephen Jefferies adaptation, women in tight cheongsams and high heels take over the stage. While men in suits and sailor uniforms jazz it up with nary a leotard, men's stocking or dance belt in sight.

As preparations are in full force leading up to opening night, the air is thick with anticipation in the labyrinth, monochrome annals of the rehearsal halls at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre, in Tsim Sha Tsui. Mirrored walls brocaded with dance bars, high ceilings and tape decks speckle the otherwise bare rooms as dancers stretch and twist their bodies in pretzel shapes.


"This isn't as difficult to do as a pure classical ballet is," says danseuse Faye Leung, who essays the titular role. "Traditional ballets are very, very precise and there's no room for error. If we make a slight mistake in this dance, no one will notice, but in traditional ballet, it becomes so obvious. But there are other difficulties in this ballet - dancing in high-heel shoes and cheongsams. It's really unsafe, so slippery! With a tutu and a leotard, they flow with the body and aren't cumbersome."

Just watching the unit perfect their positions, pirouettes, and pas-de-deux, it's easy to spot Leung and see why she's got the lead role. She has that certain magical essence that makes her stand out in a crowd, a quality that has helped her land nearly all the leads in the past decade. Roles have included turns in classics such as Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty, Giselle, The Nutcracker, and Romeo and Juliet. So exquisite are her skills that the roles have created especially for her by a variety of choreographers; roles such as Suzie Wong, Princess Jade in Legend of the Great Archer and Tango Ballet Tango (Stephen Jefferies), Madame Butterfly and Turandot (Natalie Weir), Valeria in Spartacus (Irek Mukhamedov), Lady White in The White Snake (Domy Reiter-Soffer), and Dreams of
Tenderness and Solitude
(David Allan).

Well of course she's limber and doe-eyed and has more grace than God intended to distill down to one petite frame of a body, and as she hops onto the table for the interview, clad in leggings, stretching out her long limbs, she has the countenance of a teen, not her 28 year-old self. But the body reminds her, she says, of her age. "It hurts. I'm in pain almost all the time!" she says revealing all the injuries incurred during the-making-of. "Big time injuries during this production, stress fracture - I had three months off and my foot has still not recovered fully. And I can feel the pain, but when I'm dancing, it somehow disappears. I feel nothing but the spirit of dancing. I've sprained my tendons and my arms hurt but somehow when I'm on the stage, it doesn't! There's no nervousness either. I've never been nervous in my life - since I was a little girl, I wanted to be on stage, to dance before a live audience. I look forward to it!"

Her onstage partner Bengt Jorgen, who dances the role of the gwailo in love with Suzie, agrees, "I've been dancing for the last 20 years and never got nervous and it's funny that as I get older, I do get that inkling of doubt. There isn't so much of that in this show because there's confidence. We've been training for a long time so we're well prepared." With a grin, Leung continues, "The only time I get nervous is when the doctor shows me a needle. I've been getting shots for pain and I'm allergic to them (she unfurls her socks to reveal her slender legs, dotted with red marks). Yeah, I hate needles but make me dance on stage alone in front of thousands of people - no problem. One man with one needle and I could faint."

Needless to say, the dancers are in incredible shape. The silhouette of Leung's legs jump out from the posters around town and I wonder if there's a particular dancer's diet that she's on? "I'm not thin, but I do have to watch what I eat because I don't want to trouble my dancing partner. I can carry my weight around fine, but then he has to do it too - quite literally and I don't want him to go 'Oww' every time he has to carry me."


With an easy grin, Jorgen, who also heads the Ballet Jorgen Canada, says "Faye has been a wonderful dancing partner and she's very gifted. I've been dancing for a long time and I didn't think that I'd want to take on the lead in a production anymore, but when the opportunity arose to work with this team, under the guidance of Stephen (Jefferies, Artistic Director), I agreed just for the experience of it, of coming to Hong Kong, where I have performed before, and see what kind of challenge it is to work for another production team. It's nice to be just the dancer and not to have the added stress of all that a production entails."

For someone of Jorgen's calibre (a graduate of the Royal Swedish Ballet, resident choreographer of George Brown College, Artistic Director of Ballet Jorgen, recipient of the Clifford E.Lee Choreography award), does playing secondary character to the title role seem like misstep? "The appeal was that when I read the story, I liked the part, the character I now perform," he explains as we walk around the Cultural Centre while the cast and crew break for lunch. "In a sense it's as much his story because he's the narrator and it's his point of view. And this is such a great production and essentially it's a story of Hong Kong, so it had to be done here in this city too which was an appeal for me to come over from Canada to do this. Being an observer, it's so interesting to see the different take that Stephen has on this show, and how he's doing it differently from what I thought."

As in sync as they are on stage, the leads even chorus what they enjoy about dancing too. "Rehearsals. Refining a dance and the creative aspect is the best part. Performing and having an audience is great too, but a greater sense of depth to the artistry of dance comes during production."



There's a comfort and camaraderie between the 43-member troupe that reveals not just the strenuous efforts put into the production, but the element of fun they have with it too. Discloses Leung, "I don't enjoy watching other dance shows at all, but what I really like to see is rehearsals, what's not on stage - everything that's done backstage, how they work out the routine, how they master it, how the flaws are covered, that's where all the real dancing is. By the time they are on stage, it is all done and people are going through the motion of what they're learned, but as a dancer, it's the learning that interests me. I love to ask questions. When I'm rehearsing and see myself, I ask 'Why is this step not working?"

Though she doesn't have the time to go and see other productions, Leung confesses she's enjoyed a few movies, "Most dance-based movies are fun but are not particularly realistic, but I did like Centre Stage and the one with the kid, Billy Elliot. I must say I also realy liked Honey. I heard Jessica Alba used to do ballet, and that girl can move! The movie was a fun look at the Hip-Hop and R&B music video scene, but it dealt with what all dancers go through - the training, the hard work, the long hours, just in a different format!"

When choreographer/director Stephen Jefferies walks into the room, people fall into place like a scattered puzzle which suddenly creates a unified picture. We stand aside and chat, "The production premiered for the first time last March, but when we put it up again I got the chance to make adjustments. I took time to fix things and get rid of some things and to make it all a bit tighter. It's a big production and we hope to tour with this and really show the world some of the best dances and dancers from Asia."

As the clicks of the high-heels punctuate the dance floor, I snitch on the dancers and tell Jefferies that they've suffered for their art by dancing in heels, "The dancers are in high heels and pointed shoes and I once toyed with the idea of making them wear one high heel on one foot, and a ballet shoe in the other - just to torture them!" laughs Jefferies, "I'm kidding of course!"

Changes were made from the film and the novel, to fit the stage format. "When the story first came out, it was quite controversial. A white man, a gwailo, in love with a prostitute and getting married to her, there was noise about that at first but it's not so dramatic anymore. Interracial couples are not a big deal at all and to heighten the drama, we've changed parts in this production. It's been quite a challenge as we've incorporated some innovative styles, and mixed-up dance forms. It's pretty experimental and not as disciplined as classical ballets are. There's a bit more freedom for the dancers."

So what's the barometer of success or failure for a ballet? The box office? Reviews? Audience reaction?

Says Jeffries, "I've been working in production for so long and when I sit down in the audience, does my spine tingle during the show? Then I know how good or bad it is. It's so important for me to see it all and say, I wasn't bored! That's the key."

Monday, 12 October 2009

Dancing Queen: Hema Malini: Bollywood Dream Girl in Hong Kong for a Classical Performance

A Bollywood legend steps out in style with her daughters for a show with a difference, writes. P.Ramakrishnan

She was a screen goddess in the 1970s and ‘80s and irrefutably, the first Queen of Bollywood, but Hema Malini, 61, says dance, not acting has always been her true calling. “I have faithfully remained devoted to dance,” the legendary actress says. “Even when I was acting, I made sure to find time to practice and perform. I’ve always held stage shows over the years, performed in the US, Europe and Asia in various festivals. Acting in films was a career; dance was my love.” 

Malini and her daughters Esha and Ahana Deol will be in town next week for a one-night performance of Parampara, showing Bharatnatyam, the oldest dance form of southern India, and Odissi, a traditional temple dance form Orissa (eastern India), dating back more than 2,000 years. 

“It’s our national dance,’ says Malini. “It’s what our culture is about and Bharatnatyam is my first love. My mother was a classical singer and had great interest in all arts, so she made sure by the age of six, I was learning.” 

Malini initially studied under Sikkil Ramaswamy Pillai of the Triveni Kala Sangam arts school, and was later taught by the likes of Kittapa Pillai, Vempatti China Satyam and Natranam Gopalkrishnan in Bharatnatyam, and two other dance forms, Kuchipudi and Mohini Attam. Kuchipudi is the classical dance of the south-east Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, known for its graceful movements and strong dramatic characters. Mohini Attam, from Kerala, in southernmost India, is danced only by women and is known for its sensual themes. 

“Dance is a life-long commitment,” says Malini, who took up acting in her mid-teens. She also served an apprenticeship under Mylapore Gowri Ammal in the Abhinay (the art of acting and expression) aspect of Bharatnatyam, and studied the theory and practice of Carnatic music. Through films such as Geet Govind, Durga and Draupadi, Malini helped to popularize so-called dance ballet – an accessible form of classical dance marked by its simplicity, directness and grandeur. 

Malini starred in more than 150 Indian movies during four decades, but always ensured she allocated time for dancing. “There’s a world of difference between film dancing and the traditional art,” she says. “I was very strict about not doing any vulgar movements. I would first ask the choreographer to show me the steps and if I didn’t like it. I wouldn’t do it. I’d do them my way.” 

“Even today, the way Indian cinema is going, there are many good dancers, but its up to the actress how she portrays herself. You have a choice to do or not do a movement a certain way. There are some actresses who are so good they will never appear lewd. Women have to be responsible for how they are shown and projected.” 

In her heyday, Malini was known as the Dream girl, thanks to the 1968 movie that launched her big-screen career, Sapnon Ka Saudagar (the Dream Merchant). Posters carried the alluring line: “Come meet the Dream girl”. “I had no training in acting,” she says. “Dance was it. I think dancing made me more comfortable performing in front of the camera because I knew I had to express myself. In dance, there are no words. All gestures and movements have to reveal the narrative. “In movies, there’s dialogue and song and your face doesn’t have to exaggerate to display emotion as much. There were no schools for acting and training courses like there are now. I took what I learnt from my background and made it work for me.”

Although her youngest daughter, Ahana, has shied away form Bollywood, Esha, 23, is a popular star. Neither has attained the deified status of their mother, who was yet again voted as one of India’s most beautiful women. 

Unlike her own mother, Malini says she hasn’t pushed her daughters – although she certainly didn’t discourage them from following in her footsteps. 

“Everything I am is because of my own mother,” she says. “She wanted me to dance, I did. She wanted me to act, I did. I didn’t push my daughters to anything, but I did encourage them to learn dance from early on. In my early years, I was in Tamil Nadu, where you can easily learn Bharatnatyam, but my kids grew up in Mumbai and its much harder. They had to travel to their teachers and they were in school, so it was a bit much. And they did whine and complain,” she says with a laugh. “But now, it’s the most beautiful thing that binds us together.”

Malini says she’d like to team up with Esha in a film. “Eventually, I’d like to act and want to direct a film with her, but there’s a paucity of good writers and suitable subjects. I can’t do rubbish and I can’t sit at home and do nothing. We’re lucky that we have dance.” 

For the two-hour, Hong Kong show, the trio will perform solos and duets in various styles and costumes, with all three dancing a finale.

“The rhythm and harmony is perfect when we all dance,” says Malini. “We all live together, rehearse together, compose together. Daughters are like an extension of the mother, of oneself.” 


Click on any of the images to see larger pictures.