Jason Janas: soaring with his taps through Tapestry Dance.When tapper Jason Janas takes center stage for an improv A multidimensional Windows spreadsheet from Lotus that allows for easy switching to different views of the data. Data are referenced by name as in a database, rather than the typical spreadsheet row and column coordinates. Improv was originally developed for the NeXt computer. , his florescent flo·res·cence n. A condition, time, or period of flowering. See Synonyms at bloom1. [New Latin fl green shoes tip-toe around before breaking into a storm of sound. With his long, loose ankles and intense attack, Janas, 25, blends cool classicism classicism, a term that, when applied generally, means clearness, elegance, symmetry, and repose produced by attention to traditional forms. It is sometimes synonymous with excellence or artistic quality of high distinction. with hard-hitting, hip hop hip-hop or hip hop n. 1. A popular urban youth culture, closely associated with rap music and with the style and fashions of African-American inner-city residents. 2. Rap music. adj. aggression--no surprise from someone who names tappers as diverse as Dianne Walker Dianne Walker is a world famous tap dancer known as "Lady Di." She began her dance training in Boston with Mildred Kennedy-Bradic and later studied with Leon Collins, Jimmy "Sir Slyde" Mitchell and Jimmy Slyde. and Savion Glover as influences. Now a member of Tapestry Dance Company in Austin, Texas, Janas caught the critics' eye this past summer in Derick Grant's Imagine Tap, a celebration of the art form's cutting edge that drew enraptured en·rap·ture tr.v. en·rap·tured, en·rap·tur·ing, en·rap·tures To fill with rapture or delight. en·rap audiences during its brief Chicago run last summer. The show's 16-member cast put talented newcomers like Janas and Joseph Wiggan (see "All in the Family," July, 2005) alongside some of tap's biggest names, like Dormeshia Sumbry-Edwards and Jason Samuels Smith Jason Samuels Smith, native New Yorker, was born on October 4th, 1980 to professional performing arts parents Sue Samuels and JoJo Smith. Mr. Samuels Smith began his professional performing career at an early age through Frank Hatchett's Professional Childrens Program at the . The show's choreographer and an original member of Bring in 'Da Noise, Bring in 'Da Funk Bring in 'Da Noise, Bring in 'Da Funk is a musical that debuted Off-Broadway at the New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater in 1996. It moved to the Ambassador Theatre on Broadway, opening there on April 25, 1996. , Grant created Imagine Tap in part to challenge young dancers like Janas. "A lot of people are concerned with being the best dancer they can as an individual," says Grant. "Today a huge part of being a tap dancer has to do with improvisation and being a soloist, so the idea of being part of an ensemble is a little strange. For a lot of the cast, learning to be about the group was new." Janas describes the experience as "being on an Olympic tap team." Growing up in tap, Janas did not always feel part of a group. As a kid living in a New Jersey suburb--his father is an engineer, his mother, who was his first tap teacher, auditioned for the Rockettes--he eventually performed with the New Jersey Tap Ensemble. But just before he started high school, his family relocated to Charlotte, North Carolina “Charlotte” redirects here. For other uses, see Charlotte (disambiguation). Charlotte is the largest city in the state of North Carolina and the 20th largest city in the United States. , where there were neither tap teachers nor a company. After months of three-hour drives every Saturday to Chapel Hill for classes and rehearsals, Janas tired of commuting and spent his high school years teaching himself. Memories of feeling cut off from the tap community led him, with his mother's help, to create "Hoofin' Ground," an annual tap festival in Charlotte. It was his mother, too, who spotted the Tapestry Dance Company audition notice, and urged her son to fly to Texas to try out. While Tapestry's repertoire includes modern, jazz, and tap, Janas feels most at home in the tap numbers. He remembers thinking at the end of each audition section as he worked through ballet, jazz, and modern combinations, "Now can we tap?" Acia Gray, the company's artistic director, felt his abilities would extend beyond one genre. She charts the beginning of his maturation from solo tapper to ensemble performer to within a short time after his arrival. "He started to relax," she says. "He could go on with speed and intensity all the time, but then he started leaving space and time for the audience to breathe." Still, Janas sees himself first and foremost as a tapper. While his wide knowledge of tap dancers throughout history infects his dancing, during his improvisational solos, Janas focuses on simple details. "A lot of times I just try to tell a story--imagine a blank canvas," he says. "You start dancing and maybe you make the grass. You dance a little heavier and make a tree or mountains. Or if you wanna wan·na Informal 1. Contraction of want to: You wanna go now? 2. Contraction of want a: You wanna slice of pie? make a picture of a big city, you dance all crazy fast." With discussions underway to resurrect Imagine Tap either in 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 or on a national tour, Janas stands poised to rejoin a cast of tap stars on stages far beyond his Texan home. Meantime, he's enjoying Tapestry's current season, which foregoes their usual mixed-genre format to focus entirely on tap, promising lots of opportunities for Janas to develop his style. That's fine with him. Janas cannot emphasize enough how much he loves tapping. "I try to fit eating around my dancing," he says. "The shuffle always comes first. God, then family, then the shuffle." Clare Croft is a freelance dance writer based in Austin, TX. |
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