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Bad, meet Evil Launch Party - April 2011

Posted on 23 April 2011 by admin

Someone should give Joseph Fonti the memo…

Word is, the illustrator and conceptual artist wowed guests with an amazing launch at the Treehouse-Balaclava, last Friday night. The contemporary venue was transformed into a chilled, soulful hangout for Melbourne’s fashion, hip-hop and design enthusiasts. Illuminated by eerie-candle light, the high calibre event exhibited Fonti’s debut-collection of graphic art and street-wear to a sea of stylish attendees.

An unexpected surprise, guests were treated to a rather satirical performance by Australia’s son of hip-hop, 360. Setting the scene for a fierce catwalk show, the ambassador for the ‘Bad, meet Evil…’ brand had crowds in hysterics with his brazen hosting skills.

Enlisting the old-school talent of scratch-DJ Paolo, models worked the runway, confidently dancing to the sounds of Missy Elliot and Pharoahe Monch. But wait, the impressive collaborative forces didn’t end there… Local sponsors, The Real Pants Man and Warrior provided models with the latest in quality denim and footwear, while guests nibbled on delicious Lolly-Kebabs provided by the Sweet & Nut Shop.

Far from bad or evil, the night was a true success, with many of Fonti’s original artworks being sold to collectors, fans and friends. Attendees pressed the tight-lipped designer for hints regarding the new-season range but, settled for a gift-bag courtesy of SPOOK magazine.

Congratulations to Fashion Rebel & Joseph Fonti for choreographing such an incredible night.

Would you like the chance to win a one-of-a kind ‘Bad, meet Evil…’ satchel valued at $100?

Simply log onto Facebook, become a fan of ‘Bad, meet Evil…’ and leave a comment that rhymes. The most creative post will take home the prize. For additional photos please contact natarsha@fashionrebel.com.au

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Become A Professional Dancer

Posted on 20 October 2010 by admin

Zealous Choreography

Master class and dancer development classes by Ben Veitch. Become a professional dancer.

http://www.zealouschoreography.com.au/

http://blog.zealouschoreography.com.au/

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Bondi Dance Company

Posted on 04 August 2010 by admin

Bondi Dance Company - Sydney

Hi guys! Bondi Dance Company  has recently come in to new ownership. With directors Samantha Silva and Katie McMahon, being well connected within the dance industry, these two bring a high level of training and will expose students to all genres of dance.

Both Katie and Sammy are very excited about the future of BDC. Together they share a high level of teaching experience, which they combine with a youthful and vibrant energy, to educate their students in the most enjoyable way.

They plan to introduce new styles of dance including ; Breakdancing, Commercial Contemporary, Street Tap and Lyrical Hip Hop. Whether you’re someone with no experience, wanting to keep fit and have fun, or an aspiring dancer wanting to further develop a career in the industry… Bondi Dance Company caters to you all!

For all interests and enquiries please contact BDC:

bondidancecompany@gmail.com

0405 752 323

All ages welcome!

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Master Class with Ben Veitch

Posted on 21 July 2010 by admin

Got to work with some great students at Danielle and Arna’s School of Dance. Thanks for your hard work girls I really enjoyed the class.

The song is called My Little Girl from Jack Johnson. Please feel free to leave a comment if you have any question on the work:)

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Dance Audition at Art Centre Gold Coast, Saturday 24th July

Posted on 21 July 2010 by admin

Ben Veitch is holding a Dance Audition @ Art Centre Gold Coast, Saturday 24th July.

Call is at 10:00am.

Zealous Choreography Dance Audition

Looking for Star quality, Individuality, Versatility and ownership over there own success and work. If you have any special dancing skills we would love to see them. For more info http://blog.zealouschoreography.com.au/dance-audition-24th-july/ or you can contact us at info@zealouschoreography.com.au

Behind the scenes of a Zealous Choreography productions. Choreographed by Ben Veitch.

www.zealouschoreography.com.au

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The Foundary - Dance is Infectious

Posted on 10 March 2010 by admin

The Foundary was created in 2009 for one purpose, to support dancers. Its mission is to create a foundation for all dancers across the globe to help them further their career.

It’s an independent dance company aiming to support the dance movement through all its services. Support and encouragement are its core values and will echo these throughout its delivery.

The foundation will provide dancers with:

  • Opportunities to award financial sponsorship;
  • Dance portfolio including resume building, video compilations, photo shoots;
  • Assistance with international visa applications;
  • Marketing and promotion;
  • Health & mindset;
  • Agency work when available.

The Foundary will continue to provide internationally acclaimed dance choreographers to Australia when the opportunity arises. It believes in pushing the boundaries and wants to push the level of training for dancers with the support of everyone in the industry. As long as dancers are benefiting, I will provide as much as I can to the dance community!

The Foundary

The dance community is a family and we all should support its passion, enduring commitment and energy. Let’s work together!

How you can Help?

The Foundary is constantly looking for corporate partners and friends of dance to align with its mission. If you are interested in supporting The Foundary’s vision, in any capacity, please contact Annie on 0401 132 837 or at annie@thefoundary.com.au.

For more information visit: The Foundary

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UTV - Upsurging Talent Video

Posted on 17 December 2009 by melissa

utv-profile-poster-version-3-1

Do you know how to use a Broadcast HD video camera inside out and have your own car? We are expanding our camera crew for the busy year ahead! If this is you or you know someone that is, jump on the link below and tell us all about you and your experience as a camera wizard!

I want to work with UTV!

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Hip Hop specialist heading to the US

Posted on 27 October 2009 by anniemurdoch

Anti FischerArticle by: Luke Royes

SINNAMON Park student Anti Fischer is preparing for the opportunity of a lifetime.

The 17-year-old Kenmore State High School student has been invited to one of America’s most prestige hip-hop dance showcases.

The dancer and teacher at Maddance and Fresh Elements studios will perform at the annual Urbanite hip-hop event.

“I’ll be going in November to perform in Urbanite, a showcase held every year by Dance 2xs,” she said.

“Urbanite is in Chicago, but after that I’ll be in Los Angeles and maybe New York.”

“Patrick Chen, founder of Dance 2xs, asked me to perform.”

As dancers go, the hip-hop specialist is something of a latecomer to the discipline.

“I started dancing and actually taking real classes around October 2006,” she said.

“Before then I would just dance in my room and choreograph without actually knowing what I was doing.”

“My friend was a dancer and she told me she was going to a international choreographers’ workshop and I wanted to come, even though I had never danced before.”

“She ended up having something else on that day so I went by myself and that day I found my passion in life.”

Director of Woolloongabba studio The Foundary Annie Murdoch said the company would be supporting Fischer’s adventure with funds raised from workshops with Black Eyed Peas back-up dancers, who were in town last week.

“She has been requested by the event organisers to showcase her amazing talent,” Ms Murdoch said.

“This is an annual dance event in America that harbours some of the top dance talent around America. This is a great honour for Anti and I am proud to support her.”

Visit http://www.thefoundary.com.au

Original Article by: Luke Royes
http://south-west-news.whereilive.com.au

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Recalling Michael Jackson’s final steps

Posted on 21 October 2009 by admin

With the documentary ‘This Is It’ due out soon, some who worked with Michael Jackson recall his final days.

Article by: By Chris Lee

Short of someone inventing Smell-o-Vision before Oct. 28’s global rollout of the feature documentary “Michael Jackson’s This Is It,” fans will never get to know one of the most visceral aspects of working with the King of Pop. “He had this amazing fragrance,” said Mekia Cox, one of 11 backup dancers who worked with Jackson between April and June on “This Is It,” his series of 50 sold-out concerts scheduled to start taking place at London’s O2 Arena over the summer. The shows would have marked the superstar’s return to performing after a 12-year touring absence. Another dancer, Daniel Celebre, referred to Jackson’s singular musk as “the love potion,” recalling its ability to trigger an almost Pavlovian response in those downwind. “No matter what you’re doing, as soon as you smell that smell, boom! You have to get more focused,” Celebre recalled. “Because he needs to know we’re having that love. And throwing the love around.” It’s not uncommon for those who worked with Jackson in his final months to speak about the entertainer in emotionally overheated terms. Several close collaborators on what was being touted as Jackson’s final tour — a concert extravaganza that could have resurrected his finances, reestablished his cultural relevancy and spread messages of global interconnectivity, love and environmentalism — seem to have gotten swept up in his grandiose vision. It’s one that would have involved elaborate aerial dance numbers, the world’s largest three-dimensional LCD screen, pyrotechnic illusions, 12 original short films and even the presence of a bulldozer and a children’s choir onstage. With the release of “Michael Jackson’s This Is It” next week for a limited two-week theatrical engagement, his fans and doubters alike can see a nearly actualized version of that vision for themselves. To hear it from those who worked on “This Is It,” the film will provide new insight into the private Jackson that few outside his inner circle ever see.

Travis Payne and Michael Jacksons Principal Dancers on' This is It'

“Michael was a new Michael,” said “This Is It” concert director Kenny Ortega, who also directed the film. “He was 12 years a dad, a businessman, an entertainer’s entertainer. That wonderful, innocent part of Michael was ever present, but there was another Michael there with more worldly concerns. He had deeper reasons for wanting to do this than I’ve ever seen for him to want to do anything else before.”

Consisting of digital video footage shot in rehearsals during the weeks before the production moved to London for final run-throughs, the movie also will throw Jackson’s physical and mental bearing into stark relief — at a time when many are still struggling to understand the circumstances surrounding his death. Jackson, 50, died of acute intoxication by the anesthetic propofol on June 25, and according to his autopsy, he also had been taking a laundry list of sedatives, anti-anxiety medications and painkillers.

Some people who worked with the entertainer daily, however, insist there were no outward signs of his drug dependence.

“He was on a whole new level,” said backup dancer Dres Reid. “When you saw Mike, it was a different Michael. He had a swagger about him.”

Ortega directed the singer’s “HIStory” and “Dangerous” tours in the ’90s and is the force behind the “High School Musical” franchise and the “Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour.” The director had been in talks with Jackson for more than two years about mounting some kind of performance. Yet Jackson had held out for a “substantial reason” to return to performing, Ortega said.

In March, Jackson called Ortega with news that he had signed to mount a series of concerts with promoter AEG Live.

“He started saying, ‘Kenny, my kids are so fascinated with what I’ve been doing my whole life, they’re like super-fans. So I want to share with my children now that they’re old enough to appreciate it and I’m still young enough to do it,’ ” Ortega recalled.

The superstar intended his concerts as payback to fans and a platform to broadcast his concerns. “The messages in my songs, the ones I wrote 10 years ago, are more meaningful today,” Ortega quoted Jackson as saying.

Associate director Travis Payne, a choreographer who had worked with Jackson on world tours and music videos since the early ’90s, said: “This was to be the biggest platform possible for him to refamiliarize the messages that had been in his music and films for years. . . . Michael was going to remind everyone of the job we have to complete with regard to reversing our damage to the planet.”

Although the pop icon was about $400 million in debt heading into “This Is It,” Ortega insists their conversations never broached Jackson’s financial predicament. Nor, despite Jackson’s long absence from the world’s stages, did the word “comeback” factor into their discussions.

“One time, I said to Michael, ‘You’re going to get your crown back. I can’t wait,’ ” Ortega said. “Michael just giggled at me. ‘God bless you, Kenny. You’re so funny.’ He just didn’t think that way.”

“Michael Jackson’s This Is It” will showcase a dimension of the performer that falls well outside the prevailing images of one of the most photographed men of the last half-century. Whether your notion of Jackson is as the surgical mask-wearing eccentric who was acquitted in a 2005 criminal trial on child molestation charges, the guy who dangled his baby over a hotel balcony, or the man who moonwalked across the stage during his epochal 1983 “Motown 25″ performance and urged the world to “look at yourself to make a change” — the movie presents a competing notion of the “Thriller” singer. Jackson as the boss, a perfectionist and creative visionary who was personally invested in the smallest details of his show.

“If he was in the middle of a dance number and something wasn’t right, he’d say, ‘Stop!’ Everything would come to a stop,” Ortega said. “And he’d say, ‘Don’t do that! Wait for me. Watch me.’ And remind people that this wasn’t an automatic production. You don’t just push buttons. You watch Michael.”

Cox said: “He was commanding.”

“As much as he’d fire off what was on his mind at the time, he’d still have a light gesture at the end,” added fellow backup dancer Shannon Holtzpffel. “But he’d be very direct. And we’d be like, ‘Wow.’ ”

According to those close to him, Jackson’s exacting nature took a physical toll on him that is visible in the film. Ortega said the singer had been losing weight and grew fatigued from missing more and more sleep as the production’s London deadline neared. Both Payne and Ortega spoke of Jackson’s penchant for rehearsing until as late as 1 a.m. and then calling them around 4 to brainstorm new ideas.

“He didn’t sleep a lot,” said Ortega, who like many others interviewed by The Times said he had no idea that Jackson had a drug dependency. “He had been losing weight and didn’t like to eat much when he was in my company. It was always, ‘I’m dancing. I don’t want to eat.’

“I discussed it with him, with his doctor, with his team. I was really concerned about Michael getting the proper rest, the proper nourishment. We were told — and Michael assured me — that he was in good health,” he said.

Payne, who had gotten to know the singer’s professional M.O. working with Jackson on his “Dangerous” and “HIStory” tours, made sure to have Boost meal replacement shakes, Orangina and Martinelli’s apple cider on hand to keep Jackson replenished.

“He’d go for periods of time without eating or sleeping because he was so immersed in what we were doing,” Payne said.

Nonetheless, Ortega remains resolute that “This Is It” was nothing but a “nourishing” experience for the entertainer, not the cause of his demise. And that for Jackson fans — for that matter, anyone curious about Jackson’s final days — the movie can still offer a meaningful interface with the King of Pop.

“The movie is dedicated to Michael’s fans and his children,” said Ortega. “But he’s so alive and present in this movie, when we were in the editing room, there were times I’d forgotten he was no longer with us. . . . He’s so big, so engaging. He draws you in. And I think there is a fascination that will go beyond the fans.”

By: By Chris Lee
Original Article: LA Times

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Sydney Consumed by the passion of Three2Tango

Posted on 05 September 2009 by admin

Last night Three2Tango rewrote the rules of Argentine Tango at a spectacular showcase to announce their new same-sex and mixed tango classes starting in Paddington on 7th & 10th September 2009.The special guests were also treated to a short preview of the dance company’s new Three2Tango show to be launched @ SLIDE in Sydney Nov 4th/ 5th.

Three2Tango

Paddington Church Hall, Oxford Street, Paddington will now host mixed and same-sex couple classes:

Casual drop in class for ‘Same Sex’ patrons will commence on Monday 7th September 2009 from 6.30-7.30pm.  In addition, drop in classes designed for ‘Mixed Sex’ patrons commence on Thursday 10th September from 6.00-7.00pm.  Both courses will be 12 weeks long and the cost is $12 per class. No partner is required.

Patrons attending should wear anything comfortable to dance in, and footwear should be kept to low heels for women and dress shoes for men.

The aim of the course is to teach the basics of modern tango to anyone interested in learning to dance in a fun, relaxed environment. By the end of the series, dancers will have a sound knowledge of famous basic tango steps including tango walks, hooks, embraces and cradles. All footwork will be taught so that by the end of the course, a full-length choreography can be performed by all, regardless of when you start.

Three2Tango dance classes sydney

Using sex, seduction and passionate rhythms to make their own mark on this dance form, Three2Tango has combined mesmerizing footwork, breathtaking lifts and hot turns to transport audiences to the famous, steamy salons of Buenos Aires. The new Three2Tango show will premiere on 4th November 2009 at Slide Bar, Oxford St, Darlinghurst.

For more information please contact:

William Centurion
Company Director
Three2Tango
Tel:0406 359 211
Email: William@three2tango.com.au
Web: www.three2tango.com.au

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