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Before stepping on the dance floor, actress and YouTube personality JoJo Siwa is already making history — as the first Dancing with the Stars contestant to be matched with a same-sex partner. "I am so excited to be a part of 'Dancing With the Stars,' Season 30, and to be dancing with a girl," Siwa said in a tweet. "I think it's so cool." Siwa's partner will be introduced on the season premiere airing on Sept. 20. "I think it's cool. I think it breaks a wall that's never been done before," Siwa

In spring, Siara Fuller, the artistic director of Charlotte Performing Arts Academy in North Carolina, brought a group of students to a dance competition in Fort Mill, S.C. It was, in many ways, an ordinary weekend within the extraordinary world of competitive dance: Hundreds of young dancers assembled at a convention center, donned glittery costumes and giant false lashes, and presented spit-polished routines for a panel of judges. (Because of Covid-19, the dancers accessorized with face masks.) Read more @ https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/26/arts/dance/competitive-dance.html

“Pivot”, in the metaphorical sense of shifting course to adapt — it’s become a bit of a dance world cliché over the course of COVID (and yes, there’s a sort of obvious pun there, too). All humor aside, Nozama Dance Collective’s N2 made me think of that sense of pivoting. For one, it’s the Boston-based company’s first program since leadership shifted hands — to the new Artistic Director Dana Alsamsam. For two, the performance was to take place outdoors — in a park, lush with summer growth — but Mother

FREDERICKSBURG, Va. — For decades, dancing culture has largely focused on the shape of a person's body. “When I was growing up, I was told I couldn't be a dancer because my body type was not even close to the right body type. I was turned away from studios,” said Company 360 Training Dancer Morgan Cook. After years of rejection and pain attached to an art form they love, the dancers at Company 360 have mastered the craft of expressing those feelings through movement. Read more @ https://www.kxlh.com/news/national/changing-the-traditional-dance-realm-through-movement

A group of ballet schools is to abolish leotards and tights to make transgender performers more comfortable. Loose-fitting clothing will instead be promoted to accommodate transgender dancers who may be self-conscious about their bodies. New guidelines have been adopted by the Conservatoire for Dance and Drama, whose member schools include the London Contemporary Dance School, Northern School of Contemporary Dance, the Rambert School and the Central School of Ballet. Read more @ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/ballet-leotards-ditched-to-help-transgender-dancers-pn2mbbrsf

At the first Oklahoma Indian Ballerina Festival, in 1957, its founder, Moscelyne Larkin, danced Myrtha in Act Two of “Giselle” and Maria Tallchief performed an excerpt from “Swan Lake.” It was a festival created to honor five Native American ballerinas, all hailing from Oklahoma. But it would take 10 years, and the premiere of a ballet, “The Four Moons,” for the festival to really celebrate the dancers’ heritages as well as their artistry. As prima ballerinas in the 1940s through the 1960s in major companies, Yvonne Chouteau, Rosella Hightower, Larkin, and

Esha enters her first Bharatanatyam class hoping to wear a costume and perform on stage very soon or make a video for YouTube like her friend. She has been watching her sister dance and wishes to mimic the beautiful moves one day. However, when she begins to train, she realises her regular classes involve a mundane drill of adavu movements that cause sore legs. The dream of donning a costume and performing seems far-fetched. As a young Bharatanatyam teacher, the challenge is to find new ways to

Anyone who competes on the hit show “America’s Got Talent” has to be battling a ton of nerves in the moments right before they walk on that stage for the first time. After all, they’re on television. It’s a live crowd. Life-changing opportunity awaits if they do well, and a panel of celebrity judges such as Simon Cowell and Heidi Klum are waiting to be impressed. The show must go on, though. You have to be yourself, trust in your limitless talent, and have fun doing what you

Neuromuscular specialist Saurabh Shukla, MD, served his PGY-1 year of residency at Cornell University in New York, completed his residency at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, then moved to the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine for a one-year neuromuscular fellowship before joining the faculty of the University of Mississippi's department of neurology in January of 2019 as an assistant professor and director of the neuromuscular fellowship. Throughout the moves, and apart from his focus on neuromuscular disorder, he has brought one thing with him from

Linda-Denise Fisher-Harrell knows how it feels to be the only Black dancer in the dressing room. “Everyone was friendly, but it was a lonely feeling that nobody looked like me,” says the former star of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, recalling her first dance job 30 years ago, with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. “So when it came to styling my hair, I couldn’t rely on anyone to help advise me. There were so many little things like that.” Read more @ https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/theater_dance/black-women-dance-leadership-positions/2021/08/16/8fa93de6-f6ff-11eb-9738-8395ec2a44e7_story.html