Tag Archive | "tap dancing"

The Tap Pack


Riverside Theatre, Parramatta, Sydney
March 2013

By Nicole Saleh.

What began as an idea penned on a napkin 12 months ago, The Tap Pack came to life and premiered as part of the annual Dance Bites season at the Riverside Theatre, Western Sydney, in a fun, stylish and energy packed hour long show.

Created by seasoned Australian performers Jesse Rasmussen (Tap Dogs, Hot Shoe Shuffle, Happy Feet and So You Think You Can Dance), Thomas J Egan (Fame, Tap Dogs, The Boy From Oz) and Jordan Pollard (Guys and Dolls, West Side Story, The Addams Family), and inspired by the original ‘Rat Pack’ of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jnr, the Tap Pack’s group of five classy guys in their suits and ties took to the stage with the same sense of cool confidence as  their predecessors.

With a loose storyline, narrated by performer Dion Bilios, we followed the journey of five very different characters performed by Rohan Browne, Kuki Tipoki and creators Jesse and Thomas, who worked through their own personal struggles, addictions, and strained friendships in their quest to get their show picked up by a Las Vegas producer.

Backed by The Tap Pack Bandits, a strong six piece band of drums, horns and keys, led by Musical Director Chris King, the five guys crooned classic big band numbers including  ‘Straighten Up and Fly Right’ and ‘Lady is a Tramp’ but also added a contemporary twist with Cee Lo Green’s ‘Forget You’. Comedic humour was threaded throughout the show with some cliché jokes and slapstick gags that had the audience amused and laughing out loud.

The definite highlight of the show, as its title suggests, is the tap dancing which was fast, intricate, rhythmical and entertaining. Whether it was creating beats as background music to their dialogue, or the challenging routines using pool cue sticks instead of canes, all five performers did a fantastic job of delivering complex cross rhythms and showcasing the creativity of this art form.

In a strong solo performance, Thomas wowed the audience with his acapella tapping and the ease in which he delivered difficult tricks with his fast footwork. His rhythms were smooth and his turning combination had speed and clarity. Jesse Rasmussen also delivered a memorable solo paying homage to the tap legends who have gone before; Gregory Hines, Fred Astaire and Jimmy Slyde.

Overall, all five performers delivered charismatic performances and finished the show on a fun note, dressed in leopard print shirts for the big tap finale. This show has great potential and gave audiences a taste of what The Tap Pack is all about.

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Tap Dance Quiz


Maybe you can tap out a rhythm, but how much do you really know about tap dance?

By Rain Francis.

1. Which of the following steps would you associate least with tap dance?

a) shuffle

b) cramp roll

c) layout

d) wings

2. Which of the following musicals would you find the most tap dancing in?

a) 42nd Street

b) A Chorus Line

c) Oklahoma!

d) Hair

3. True or false: Mr Bojangles is a fictional character.

4. With which style of tap dance would you most associate Michael Flatley?

a) Irish tap dancing

b) Soft shoe

c) Broadway tap

d) All of the above

5. Which of the following is not a character from Anything Goes?

a) Billy Crocker

b) Reno Sweeney

c) Moonface Martin

d) Billy Flynn

6. What is the name for a tap dancer who dances very close to the floor, using mostly footwork and little upper body movement?

a) flapper

b) shuffler

c) stepper

d) hoofer

7. The USA celebrates National Tap Dance Day on May 25. In what year was this signed into law?

a) 1909

b) 1949

c) 1989

d) 2009

8. Mumble, Gloria, Memphis and Norma Jean are all characters from which tapping movie?

a) Step Up

b) Happy Feet

c) Singing in the Rain

d) Tap

9. Which famous tapper is not an actor in the 1989 film Tap?

a) Savion Glover

b) Gregory Hines

c) Sammy Davis, Jnr

d) Fred Astaire

10. In the film Anchors Aweigh, Gene Kelly famously performs a tap dance number with which cartoon character?

a) Mickey Mouse

b) Jerry Mouse

c) Bambi

d) Jessica Rabbit

 

ANSWERS:
1 – c; 2 – a; 3 – false; 4 – a; 5 – d; 6 – d; 7 – c; 8 – b; 9 – d; 10 – b

 

Photo: Melinda Sullivan and dancers perform the winning routine at this year’s Capezio ACE Awards at Dance Teacher Summit New York.
Photo courtesy of Break The Floor Productions

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Win Tickets to Australia’s Got Tap!


The Official Show of the Australian Tap Dance Festival.

Australia’s best tap dancers fly in to Melbourne to perform in one jaw-dropping tap show for the Australian Tap Dance Festival. Australia’s Got Tap will feature performers from Tap Dogs, Happy Feet 2, Bootmen, Hot Shoe Shuffle, 42nd Street, Got to Dance UK,  Australia’s Got Talent, Nigel Lythgoe’s Superstars of Dance and select Tap Festival participants.

Experience classic and famous routines, original choreography and live music.

Australia’s Got Tap
Friday 13th July  7.30pm (one show only).
Irving Theatre, 38 Huntingtower Rd, Armadale VIC.

For more information visit www.TheTapDanceShow.com / www.AustralianTapDanceFestival.com.au

Win a Double Pass to Australia’s Got Tap!

Just email info@danceinforma.com with subject: “WIN TICKETS” and tell us Why Your Love Tap Dancing.
Dance Informa’s Editors will pick the best responses to win.
* All valid entries must include your full name, postal address and date of birth.

Competition open until July 8.

 

Published by Dance Informa dance magazine -covering dance in Australia, dance training, dance auditions, dance teacher resources, dancewear and fashion and more.

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Tap Dogs to Tour – WIN TICKETS


Australia’s very own Tap Dogs first appeared at the Sydney Festival in 1995. The tapping feet of this internationally acclaimed dance sensation has now reverberated around the world in 330 cities, 37 countries, and been seen by more than 11 million people. Now they are coming home – stronger, faster, louder and more outrageous than ever to tour Australia from July to August 2012.

The 2012 winter tour commences in Canberra 3 to 8 July, then Newcastle 10 to 15 July, followed by Adelaide 17 to 22 July, Hobart 16 to 18 August, Albury 21 to 23 August and finally Wollongong 24 & 25 August.

Created by Olivier Award winning choreographer Dein Perry, this global dance phenomenon combines the strength and power of workmen with the precision and talent of tap dancing and is part theatre, part dance, part rock concert.

The adrenalin pumped touring cast includes the best tap dancers from around the world. Leading the pack is Sheldon Perry (brother of Dein) along with fellow Aussies Matthew Papa, Nathaniel Hancock, Jesse Rasmussen and from the US Anthony Russo and Richard Miller. In addition to the macho line-up, Tap Dogs now has two beautiful female percussionists, Cat Hunter and Lyndsay Evans joining the testosterone fuelled action on stage.

Tap Dogs was originally created and choreographed by Dein Perry and directed and designed by Nigel Triffitt. In the last 15 years Tap Dogs has won 11 major international awards, including an Olivier for Best Choreography.

Win a Double Pass to Tap Dogs in Adelaide or Canberra!

Just email info@danceinforma.com with subject: “WIN TICKETS” and tell us Why Your Love Dance Informa.
Dance Informa’s Editors will pick the best responses to win.
* All valid entries must include your full name, postal address and date of birth.

Competition open until June 20.

Published by Dance Informa dance magazine -covering dance in Australia, dance training, dance auditions, dance teacher resources, dancewear and fashion and more.

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Famous Tap Dancers’ Steps – Chuck Green


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TapWorks Revolutionising Tap


By Chris Bamford

Chris Horsey, on top of being tap royalty, is one of Australia’s top choreographers and performers. He is a major voice in the revolution of tap dance across the world. Horsey has recently been announced as the new Artistic Consultant for the Northern Tap Company in the UK.  His career has seen him travel the world and he has won numerous awards for his work. His dance company, Tap Works, has performed in many dance events throughout Australia and appeared on the very popular television show Gotta Dance in the UK with Adam Garcia.

Now Chris Horsey is putting Sydney back on the map for tap with his new professional full time course, specialising in tap dance. This is the first course of its kind in Australia, if not the world. I recently had the opportunity to chat with Chris to find out more about the Tap Works Professional Full Time Course. 

Tell us about your career as a performer and choreographer.

I trained in all forms of dance. There was a turning point in my life at about 17 or 18 years of age when I auditioned for Cats and 42nd Street in the same month and got both jobs. I had to decide which one to do, and I chose 42nd Street.  That really set me up for the rest of my life, in what direction I was going to go. I have always loved tap dancing, but that’s not to say that I haven’t worked in other areas quite successfully.  I was in the original cast of Chicago, which I auditioned for in New York, and I did West Side Story, which is a fantastic show to do. As I’ve got older I have really started to specialise in tap dancing and have enjoyed being a part of and a co-founder of both Hot Shoe Shuffle and Tap Dogs, which have been two of the most successful tap dance shows that Australia has offered. Now I am very much interested in working with tappers and exploring different ways of tapping, different angles, using technology and narrative, and modernising tap dancing.

 

Chris Horsey, by Gavin D Andrews

Tell us about your new tap course. What can a future student expect from the course?

The Tap Works Professional Full Time Course is for those who are passionate tappers. The course will develop existing skills and the curriculum will focus on taking those who have learnt a syllabus and developing them by exploring the different styles of tapping that there are, like Broadway, Hoofing and street tap jamming. Students will also study the history of tap to widen their knowledge. Another important part for the course is to develop teaching skills, as there seems to be a lack of tap teachers around that have done more than just learn syllabus. I think that’s important for the future of tap dancing and the future of dance schools. Syllabus is very important, but what my course will do is serve as an addition to syllabus work and develop performance skills. The only way to develop performance skills is to practise them and there aren’t many places to do that for tappers. If you’re a hip hop dancer, ballet dancer or contemporary dancer there are lots of companies you can join that will give you experience in performing those genres, but there really isn’t anything for a tap dancer.  This course will provide that place. It will get tappers on their feet four days a week, so they are constantly practising and honing their craft in different styles. We will also generate gigs. I have three gigs lined up next year for the company. The course will give the students the experience of working as a dance company, but in tap shoes. We will constantly work toward new performances and new ideas.

Will you be doing other styles in the course other than tap?  

There’s one thing I have noticed with dancers I have auditioned for shows, gigs and corporate acts over the last 20 years. There are some fantastic tappers out there, but it seems that a lot of them have really only concentrated on tap dancing and they don’t have the  core dance  skills  required to perform my choreography and  Broadway  tapping choreography. They don’t have classical skills, or hip hop skills, which are both very important to be an interesting tapper. So I have scheduled in 1 ballet, 1 hip hop and 1 jazz class per week and also a precision and music theory class. I am working on a program with a drummer. We are putting together a 1 lesson a week course.  It’s important as a tap choreographer to learn to work in different time signatures and to play with the beat, same as a musician would with a song. On top of that it is important for a tapper to learn how to jam and dance solo.

Are you the main teacher of the course?

I am the Artistic Director of the course and I will be teaching 2-3 classes a week. I am in the process of compiling a list of very impressive dance teachers who are willing to teach, including Darren Disney, Caroline Kaspar, Amanda ‘Foady’ Foad, Thomas Egan, Tracey Wilson, Mitchell Hicks and Shane Preston. Winston Morrison and Grant Swift from Melbourne Tap Dance have been very supportive and will be coming up from Melbourne to Sydney to teach their own, very unique, style of tapping. We will cover all styles of tap.

Do you feel this course is a tool that will reinvigorate tap in Australia?

It is a tool to reinvigorate the market. I think tap dance does come and go – it always has and always will. But I think with such a strong emphasis now on the performing arts it’s definitely needed. Dance is in all forms of media, such as movies and TV shows, but tap hasn’t been a part of it much, but it will be one day. I think this course will add to the cultural stew. There is room for this. The only reason it is not already here is that this hasn’t been done yet, but I’m doing it.

Is this course good for a student who has taken full time dance already, as an additional specialist course?

Yes!  But I think if you are really interested in tapping it doesn’t matter what age you are. You can come do this course. It’s not exclusively for people trained in syllabus, for those who have done full time dance, or for young teens. It’s for anyone who is passionate about tapping.

For further information visit www.tapworks.com.au

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Tap Dogs return home with new tricks!


Capitol Theatre, Sydney
January 2011

By Nicole Saleh

Exploding onto the stage at Sydney’s Capitol Theatre are six sexy blokes in their trademark Blundstone boots, tapping out rhythms Aussie style with industrial strength and force. It’s the return of Dein Perry’s Tap Dogs, one of Australia’s most successful theatrical exports. Back home to celebrate their 15th anniversary, Tap Dogs has withstood the test of time and is more dynamic now than when it first began.

Creator and choreographer, Dein Perry, has given tap dancing a unique Aussie flavour that was warmly welcomed home by the audience on opening night. The show is 80 minutes of hardcore tap cleverly delivered with great humour and brilliant tricks, moving tap away from its traditions and into the unexpected. Leading the pack is Adam Garcia, star of the film Bootmen and judge on the hit UK television show Got to Dance. Garcia reprises the role of the Foreman. He is casually dressed in jeans, a singlet and surprisingly a refined blue collared shirt instead of a chequered flanny that is synonymous with Tap Dogs. He opens the show with a strong solo and intricate crisp footwork that leaves you wondering how he can produce such fast and light beats with heavy workman boots. It’s not just about fast tapping for Garcia who also excels in a slow tap duet with Richie Miller that is delivered with amazing tonality and control.

Nigel Triffitt’s set design is like a playground for the dancers. Each of them helps construct the set from moving the floor and pulling ropes to erecting scaffolding, which requires great strength and stamina. The lighting design by Gavin Norris creates dramatic effect and the rock music scores of composer Andrew Wilkie are delivered with powerful force by two female drummers/percussionists; Lyndsay Evans and Genevieve Wilkins.

On stage it isn’t just the angle grinders creating sparks, but also the brilliant feet of tap technicians Sheldon Perry, Matt Papa, Donovan Helma, Jesse Rasmussen, Richie Miller and Adam Garcia. Their loud beats can be heard on different surfaces from timber, steel beams, the stage itself, and even electronic music pads that produce a fun sound when tapped on.

Overall, the Tap Dogs attack their dancing with fearlessness, strength and confidence, jumping on ramps, tapping on ladders and creating complex rhythms while balancing on narrow steel surfaces. Taking tap dancing to the extreme, Sheldon Perry performs an amazing tap solo while suspended upside down! Another highlight, led by the cheeky Jesse Rasmussen (2009 Australian So You Think You Can Dance top 20 finalist), is a sequence using an unexpected instrument; a basketball. The boys create cross rhythms bouncing the balls with the greatest of control in between their tap dancing beats.

It’s easy to enjoy a performance when the cast is also enjoying themselves on stage. Revolutionising tap dancing with its distinct Australian style, there’s no doubt this highly entertaining show will continue to achieve ongoing worldwide success.

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Tap Dogs Return!


Dein Perry’s Tap Dogs are back in Sydney for performances this January and February at the Capitol Theatre.
3 lucky Dance Informa readers won double passes and will be seeing the show this week!

Tap Dogs are currently taking the world by storm with their unprecedented tap show that combines the strength and power of workmen with the precision and talent of tap dancing. The show started with six guys from a steel town north of Sydney. Olivier Award-winning choreographer Dein Perry headed the team with designer/director Nigel Triffitt, and composer Andrew Wilkie and created Tap Dogs; an 80 minute reinvention of tap for the new millennium.

To get your tickets visit www.tapdogs.com

Dance Informa’s Nicole Saleh recently interview Tap Dogs’ Adam Garcia. Click here to read the interview.

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