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Then the girls had to train a few of the remaining new members from the ground up. “Some people say it’s not a sport because it’s not as hard as football,” said team captain Alyssa Winters. “We get injured a lot.”. Cheerleading, which marries gymnastics with dance for an exciting display of athleticism, consistently ranks high in sports injury rates, according to coach Desiray Madrid. “We have the most concussion and head injuries aside from boxing,” Madrid said. “These girls are catching bodies the same size as themselves without wearing anything.”.
A Shakespeare ballet, festivals galore, a “Roman Holiday” on stage and plenty of topnotch music highlight our list of cool stuff to do in the Bay Area June 1-4 (and beyond), Oakland Ballet’s “Dreamy” program: Graham Lustig has been credited with helping jepun crochet ballet flat shoe to restore vitality to the venerable Oakland Ballet, and the company this weekend marks the first season with him as full-time artistic director with a program devoted to his works, The highlight in the company’s spring program is Lustig’s 2001 work “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” — set to a Felix Mendelssohn score — which is getting its Bay Area premiere, as well as the world premiere of his new piece “Consort,” inspired by Shakespeare’s Sonnets and featuring live accompaniment by counter-tenor Dan Cromeenes and lute player Dominic Schaner, And on June 4, the company hosts its third annual East Bay Dances, featuring performances from several area dancers and companies, Details: “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” 7:30 p.m, June 1-2, 2:30 and 7:30 p.m, June 3; $20-$60; East Bay Dances, 4 p.m, June 4; $20-$25; all performances at Odell Johnson Performing Arts Center at Laney College, Oakland; oaklandballet.org.— Randy McMullen, Staff..
After intermission they shimmied to the irresistible jazz rhythms of Fats Waller and Jelly Roll Morton while intermittently breaking into yoga poses. This was nothing new for the doyenne of high-low dance. Since the Indiana-born, California-raised choreographer launched her career in 1965 with the comically absurd “Tank Dive,” complete with swimming fins, yo-yo, and high heels, she has been kicking sand in the face of uptown and downtown dance alike. Beginning as an iconoclast with breathtaking musicality and comic genius as a dancer, she tore down the barriers separating ballet from boogaloo, ballroom and modern dance. She then concocted fusions of elegance, funk, romance and comic-book Gothic. Her works ranged from masterpieces to noodling.
That end-of-the-series limp is familiar to every dancer who’s done “Nutcracker” time, “The first week, you’re like, ‘I got this.’ But it’s a different story the fourth week into it,” Johnson says, “The fatigue, The repetition, You can get complacent.”, Yet, for dancers — as for all of us — the years spin faster and faster, and Christmas Eve, the ballet version that arrives around Thanksgiving, comes sooner and sooner, One more season of “Nutcracker.” One season jepun crochet ballet flat shoe closer to the end of a career..
Stories: Barbara Day Turner conducts the San José Chamber Orchestra in its 28th season opening concert, featuring stories told in music. The program features Samuel Barber’s “Knoxville: Summer of 1915,” with soprano Kearstin Piper Brown. Sept. 30, 7 p.m. Trianon Theatre, 72 N. Fifth St. $10-$70. 408-295-4416, sjco.org. The Lieutenant of Inishmore: San Jose Stage Company presents Martin McDonagh’s satirical comedy about “Mad Padraic,” an Irish Liberation officer whose methods test the limits of violence within the organization, and his quest for revenge after receiving threatening news regarding his beloved cat “Wee Thomas.” Through Oct. 21. The Stage, 490 S. First St. $32-$72. 408-283-7142, thestage.org.
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