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Dan Wagoner: teacher's wisdom.


Dan Wagoner doesn't just teach dance. He introduces his students to a lifestyle: the fusion of mind, body, and spirit that is rooted in a strong pelvis. He inspires students to understand why they must dance, and encourages them to bring art into a society that he believes needs it more than ever. A true Renaissance man Renaissance man
n.
A man who has broad intellectual interests and is accomplished in areas of both the arts and the sciences.

Noun 1.
, Wagoner is an army veteran and pharmacist as well as a professional dancer and choreographer cho·re·o·graph  
v. cho·re·o·graphed, cho·re·o·graph·ing, cho·re·o·graphs

v.tr.
1. To create the choreography of: choreograph a ballet.

2.
. He performed with Martha Graham, Merce Cunningham, and Paul Taylor

For other people named Paul Taylor, see Paul Taylor (disambiguation).
Paul Taylor (born July 29, 1930) is one of the foremost American choreographers of the 20th century.
. For 25 years he led Dan Waganer's Dancers and choreographed more than 50 works for them. He has been on the faculty of Connecticut College Connecticut College is a coeducational private liberal arts college located in New London, Connecticut. It is located on the Thames River, on which the College's crew and sailing teams practice. , University of Wisconsin-Madison “University of Wisconsin” redirects here. For other uses, see University of Wisconsin (disambiguation).
A public, land-grant institution, UW-Madison offers a wide spectrum of liberal arts studies, professional programs, and student activities.
, the Bates Bates   , Katherine Lee 1859-1929.

American educator and writer best known for her poem "America the Beautiful," written in 1893 and revised in 1904 and 1911.
 and Harvard Summer School The Harvard Summer School, founded in 1871, is the oldest academic summer session in the United States; that at The Colorado College is younger, but makes a distinction in that it has been continuous, whereas Harvard has not.  dance festivals, just to name a few. Julie Freese talked with Wagoner as he prepared to begin the fall semester at Florida State University Florida State University, at Tallahassee; coeducational; chartered 1851, opened 1857. Present name was adopted in 1947. Special research facilities include those in nuclear science and oceanography. .

How Do You structure your class and why?

I took bits of things from all three people I danced with and evolved a way that warms up my own body. Much of the actual structure came from Merce--the isolation of the lower, middle, and upper back. Being aware of that gave preciseness to the movement that I found exciting. The quick footwork and legwork leg·work  
n. Informal
Work, such as collecting information or doing research in preparation for a project, that involves much walking or traveling about.
 came from Paul's idea of a tremendous energy in movement. Martha believed that deep-seated feelings spring from the pelvis, and that you must exercise it. I believe in that, and incorporate it into my class.

There are basic exercises that I repeat, but I vary them each day a little bit. When too much new material is thrown at dancers, they can't fully do it through their muscles because they are thinking and grabbing for movement. By doing the same basic warm-up, the person can get the exercise right away but is still a bit challenged. Repetition is important in getting alignment and length into the body.

You place emphasis on proper pelvic alignment and strength. What are the benefits of having a strong pelvis?

I do believe that if we could all align our pelvises, wars would stop and everything would take its right place. A generous teacher, Maggie Black, taught me the alignment that I try to teach now. Trying to stack the bones tip straight--the leg bones, then the pelvis on top of the leg bones, the spine, and the head--gives you a wonderful core to start from. You can throw off that center, but you have to start by aligning the body. By dropping energy down the back of the leg, and letting the pelvic bone sit balanced on the leg bone, you free the body to move in any direction, and to move really well. Moving through space by instigating with the pelvis, whether in a contraction or release, propels the body with a physical and also emotional strength. Through the loins loin  
n.
1. The part of the body of a human or quadruped on either side of the backbone and between the ribs and hips.

2.
 passes the metaphysical energy up into the intellectual energy. If you want to do really balanced, strong, skillful skill·ful  
adj.
1. Possessing or exercising skill; expert. See Synonyms at proficient.

2. Characterized by, exhibiting, or requiring skill.
 lumping, spinning, and falling, you must be able to stand on one leg and feel the center up through the body.

Why do you incorporate improvisation into your class?

The work in class is so precise; I choreograph every inch of it. When you have done 24 counts of precise shifting-weight movement, to be able to open up is important. The first group does the phrase and, when they finish, the second group comes in. Then I give both groups a set time of improvised movement before the second group begins the phrase. To see movement and to feel it, you need a guidepost. Like when you eat sushi, there is pickled ginger, and between each different kind of fish, you eat a piece of ginger to clear the palate. The dancer builds up tension during the phrase. That tension and then the release work as guideposts Guideposts is a Christian-faith based non-profit organization founded in 1945 by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale and his wife, Ruth Stafford Peale. The Guideposts organization is headquartered in Carmel, New York, with additional offices in New York City, Chesterton, Indiana, and Pawling, . This helps both the dancers and the observers take a bit of a rest, and then their eye is refreshed and they can see again.

What should dancers do outside the studio to inform their art?

When I came to New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 in the 1950s, I began to meet compelling artists, and I realized that in trying to design something or make something you looked at form and shape. Whether you did it with paint, music, words, or movement, the basic problems were the same. All of these people were acute observers; they looked at everything around them--form, shape, sound, and taste--and they immersed themselves in their own lives in an exciting way. When you go look at other work, there is a chance for inspiration, for the muse to strike--you keep open to this energy that informs.

How can the skills learned in your class be applied to other types of dance?

If you know how to center the body up through the joints with a sense of release, that gives you a wonderful kind of clean slate Noun 1. clean slate - an opportunity to start over without prejudice
fresh start, tabula rasa

chance, opportunity - a possibility due to a favorable combination of circumstances; "the holiday gave us the opportunity to visit Washington"; "now is your chance"
 from which to start. In order to learn the movement you have to look at shape, you have to look at form. That's the way that you would approach hip-hop or tap dancing, jazz, or anything. What I teach deals with the universals of the human body--the bone socket joints, the hinge joints, balancing the muscle groups, and balancing the bones--that set you up to try anything.

How do you correct students without discouraging them?

I hope to inspire people in a culture that does not champion the arts. I think that the more dancers we have, the more healing can take place. I can sense when they are ready to take the criticism. Once I start, I am relentless in pointing out when they have done it and when they haven't. Most students seem to want that, and to go with it--it empowers them.

I hate the word teaching. I would like to think that once I have given the movement, the students put it on, as if they have made it up, and they wear it like clothing--it becomes theirs. I always try to teach with generosity. I love dancers and I love dancing, and I try to make that quality very present in the classroom.
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Title Annotation:THIS MONTH
Publication:Dance Magazine
Article Type:Interview
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:1023
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