
Last night Joni and I attended the 2013 Michigan Dance
Challenge.
This event is sanctioned by
the NDCA (National Dance Council of America) and is a part of the World Pro-Am
DanceSport Series.
In a word…
WOW!
Or
perhaps… INCREDIBLE!
I forgot
INSPIRING.
That’s three words isn’t it?
It really was a wonderful evening as we
watched Pro-Am couples dance their way across the floor.
I was fascinated by the technical expertise
demonstrated.
With each dance, I found
my attention drawn to particular couples.
It seemed impossible to take my eyes off of them.
I know that it is absurd to think this, but
along with the Professional Judges, each of them with long and envied Dance
Resumes, the event organizers should include one judge that knows very little
about the intricacies of the Tango, or the Foxtrot, or any other of the
Standard dances.
They should include a
judge whose only interest is, “Which couple is so much fun to “watch” that you
can’t “not” watch them.
That couple
should get extra points!
Call them “Spectator
Points”.
Or… “A Pleasure to Watch Points”.
Among my many observations, however, there is one that I
would like to note above the rest.
But
first a little background info…
Over the years I have had the opportunity to work as a Music / Drama
/ Speech Coach.
Some of our students
have advanced to National Competitions.
We have spent hours and hours working with
students as young as 7 yrs old (he won “Best is
Michigan”
in his event), to High School Seniors (some of which likewise won “Best in
Michigan”).
One of the things that is hardest to
accomplish is perfecting a speech or dramatic presentation and then delivering
it during a competition without it looking rehearsed.
This is what I noticed most among the many dancers.
They were all great.
It was obvious that they had spent many long
hard hours in the Dance Studio.
They
had all paid the obligatory dues necessary to compete at this level. I’m sure
that they had the tired sore muscles to prove their worthiness.
I’m very sure that their wallets were much
lighter, their bank accounts much less, as a result of the hours of lessons
provided by some of the finest instructors.
However, some were able to make it look “unrehearsed”.
Some had the ability to smile a smile that looked sincere,
heart felt, genuine.
Some looked like
they were having fun.
And… again and
again I found myself unable to stop watching them.
They were simply a joy to watch.
Even in a dance like the Tango, the “intensity”
of their expression, their Tango face, even though I knew that it was not,
looked real.
I knew they were playing a
part in a drama that had been rehearsed a thousand times before, yet they
somehow made it look as if was the first time.
The “heel lead” pursuit… the “turn of the head” rejection… they made it
feel real.
I suppose the thing that made this really apparent was that
among the many dancers, some were incapable of making this “fresh / unrehearsed”
quality happen.
As a result, their
inability made those that could pull it off really stand out.
Those who came out of their “game face” after
their hurried “bow” at the end of a particular dance seemed in that moment to
be all the more obvious.
Some looked perfect
and perfunctory.
Others looked as though
they were having fun.
And on my Judges
Scorecard… Perfunctory = Minus Points. Fun = Extra points!