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APRIL 2009 NEWSLETTER
In This Issue
Join our Carnaval SF Contingent
Peter Rothblatt: The Art of Serious Fun
Global Dance Classes
rmdancersGreetings!

As Rhythm & Motion celebrates our 30th Anniversary, memories keep pouring in. Participating in this year's Carnaval SF reminds me of our roots in SF's Mission district, where Rhythm & Motion first held classes. It was 1979 when The Women's Building, the first woman-owned and operated community center in the country, opened on 18th Street near Valencia. Since I was a supporter, having classes there felt as though our rent was contributing to something important.

Many people lived in the neighborhood and walked to class. Long time, beloved teacher Paul Sullivan (who had many strengths, but punctuality was not one of them) lived directly across the street and frequently had to be woken up by his students. They would knock on his door and he would roll out of bed, often teaching with pillow wrinkles on his cheeks.

During class it was normal to have several small children playing on the edges of the room,
every so often skipping to the music. The stage was four feet from the ground and we teachers developed a special hop and a vault to get down and groove among the students on the floor below.

Throughout the past 30 years, R&M and The Women's Building have maintained a great working relationship. While teachers today may not need students to literally come knocking at the door, I'm happy that dancing together continues to infuse us with community.  

We look forward to seeing you at Carnaval SF in May. 

Sincerely,

Consuelo Faust, Founder and Director, Rhythm & Motion Dance Program
CarnavalCalling all Rhythm & Motion/ODC Students!

Come experience one of San Francisco's most exciting and colorful traditions by joining our first ever Carnaval SF Contingent on Sunday, May 24th. This year ODC/R&M partners with The Mission Boys & Girls Club to present: BrasilCuba-SF under the theme of Las Amazonas. Rehearsals are led by renowned choreographers/dancers Tania Santiago (Afro-Brazilian) and Yismari Ramon Tellez (Cuban).

Rehearsals: Saturdays, 5:15pm-7:30pm
Where: ODC Commons
Cost: $12 per class plus a one-time $25 registration fee (not including costume fees)
Contact: Annie via email or call (415) 863-6606 x106

Peter Rothblatt: The Art of Serious Fun
By Staci Boden

A conversation with Peter Rothblatt is like a swim in a tropical ocean: warm, refreshing and deep. In addition to teaching dance at R&M for 22 years, Peter worked in the R&M office before becoming Artistic Director of Rhythm & Motion Dance Workout Program from 1994-2001. During a recent interview, Peter shared insight about teaching and also revealed how the philosophy inside R&M helps generate an unparalleled mix of music, dance and community.

How would you describe your flavor of teaching?

I'm demanding with a small 'd'. I want dancing to happen; not my specificity, but a specificity. And I definitely want play. I want it to be serious in the dancing but not seriousness in the person. I try to say something completely irrelevant twice a class. I told a student last week, 'Sixty percent of what I say is true, you just have to figure out which part.'

My flavor is teaching. What I use to teach is whatever I can get my hands on. That's the serious part of me.

The common thread is that I'm interested in dance, how bodies move. I'm interested in how to get someone to understand something in a fairly succinct and direct way so that they can actually move into a relationship to dance that is as nuanced and personal as my relationship to dance. We move from 'teacher' and 'dancer' to two dancers.

The invitation from Consuelo is that everyone gets to dance. That's been the training, to show people how to move inside their own bodies.

What did you learn about R&M while working in the office?

Consuelo's talked about a feminist business model and the ways it shows up. That there are a lot of viewpoints available and then we arrive at some truth based on the different viewpoints.

[For example] Each dancer contributes choreography so that their lens, their own style and tradition, gets to be part of the Rhythm & Motion repertoire. And that's what we celebrate. That's why people go around, in and out of the country, and they say can't find a class like this. Because we're doing music from West Africa and then Usher and then an Irish tune. You can find each of those elements but rarely can you find that kind of mix of music and dance.

You mean, where each individual contributes to the community?

Yes. From the beginning we've approached R&M as more tribal. You come, there's people who know how to dance, they teach the ones who don't know to dance and you're all in the same circle. People fumble and they learn from the other dancers, not only from the teacher.

The atmosphere we create, the full-bodied joyous dancing that we invite, and the connections we try to make obvious--like that we're dancing together--that inspires me. That's the part that is both fulfilling and beautiful. It's an antidote to how we mostly live, which is more isolated, disconnected, in the cubbyhole.

So many people get turned onto dance through Rhythm & Motion classes. There's a student who just found out about us and she was beaming during class. That also inspires me.

Besides teaching Fusion Rhythms Tue/Thurs 10:00am at the Commons, Peter is a massage therapist with ten years experience. He is also the President of the Board of Performing Arts Workshop, an organization that helps kids develop their creative expression and critical thinking skills. For more information, contact Peter or see Performing Arts Workshop.

                                 

Staci Boden
has been enjoying R&M dance since 1985 and is Editor of R&M's e-newsletter. Staci is Founder of Dancing-Tree Consulting, a resource for individuals, groups and organizations to realize potential in life and business. With services ranging from individual coaching and guided visualization to copywriting and business development, Dancing-Tree Consulting helps clients transform projects, decisions and relationships.

Warm regards,
 
 Consuelo, Samantha, Dudley, Alex and Staci