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Keisha Clarke: from The Lion King to featured dancer with Garth Fagan, this long and delicate beauty has captured audiences' and critics' attention.


You can't watch Garth Fagan Garth Fagan (b. 1940 in Jamaica) is a modern dance choreographer is the founder and Artistic Director of Garth Fagan Dance, a modern dance company based in Rochester, NY.  Dance these days and not notice Keisha Laren Clarke. She is the tall and model-slender beauty with the Modigliani-like neck, and she graces Fagan's work with extraordinary serenity. Anna Kisselgoff of The 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
 Times once called her "a Cubist Josephine Baker," and Fagan uses her to great effect. In his duet for her and his longtime muse, Norwood Pennewell, in DANCECOLLAGEFORROMIE, she emphasizes her extraordinary length by riding on Pennewell's bent back with one leg extended out or up. When she turns, she's so long she appears to leave behind her own afterimage afterimage /af·ter·im·age/ (af´ter-im?aj) a retinal impression remaining after cessation of the stimulus causing it.

af·ter·im·age
n.
. She suggests a goddess, not super-refined or over-trained, but natural, a fine match for Fagan, who has always gravitated toward unusual movers. And elsewhere in his fusion choreography, which is unlike anyone else's, she clearly enjoys doing the contrasting, more weighted polyrhythmic African work.

Offstage Clarke is radiantly healthy-looking, downright bubbly, and at 5' 8" not actually as tall as she appears onstage. Her parents are Jamaican, although she was raised in Brooklyn. She started dancing at about 7 or 8 at Gotta Dance, Inc., a local school on Coney Island Avenue Coney Island Avenue is a roadway in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, that runs almost parallel to Ocean Parkway. It starts at Brighton Beach Avenue (in Coney Island), and goes all the way to Parkside Avenue (at the south-west border of Prospect Park), where it becomes , went on to Shelbank Performing Arts Junior High School and then to New York's La Guardia High School for the Performing Arts, attending The Ailey School on fellowship at the same time. Bolstered by a supportive family and an abiding religious faith, she did her high school dance classes in the morning, academics in the afternoon, and finally in the evening and on Saturdays her own Ailey classes. Although she now has very close-cropped hair, in high school she had a curly Afro, which caught the eye of a scout for Spike Lee when he was looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 dancers for Malcolm X Malcolm X, 1925–65, militant black leader in the United States, also known as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, b. Malcolm Little in Omaha, Neb. He was introduced to the Black Muslims while serving a prison term and became a Muslim minister upon his release in 1952. .

One of her inspirations is Debbie Allen; another is Sarita Allen, then a member of the Ailey Company. "When I was in high school, she was my girl. She was strong. Her light shines so bright onstage, but even after all the technical things that she could do, it was about 'I want to show you my soul.'"

Clark, 30, started college at SUNY SUNY - State University of New York  Purchase, originally intending to be an accountant. But when she found that the program at Purchase wouldn't let her take drama classes as well, she turned to the back pages of DANCE MAGAZINE and discovered the California Institute of the Arts California Institute of the Arts
 known as CalArts

U.S. private institution of higher learning in Valencia. Created in 1961 through the merger of two other art institutes, it was the first in the U.S.
.

After graduation she joined the Lula Washington Dance Theatre. "Lula helped to get me out of my shell in performance, helped me to blossom." On the spur of the moment Adv. 1. on the spur of the moment - on impulse; without premeditation; "he decided to go to Chicago on the spur of the moment"; "he made up his mind suddenly"
suddenly
, she auditioned for the L.A. cast of The Lion King, which Fagan choreographed. ("It was around the corner," she says.) Having studied Fagan's work in a dance history class, she was startled star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 to actually see him at the desk.

He eventually pulled her aside and said, "I've never seen anybody dance like you before. I would like you to be in my dance company."

"What about The Lion King?" she protested.

"When you're ready, call us," he replied. After a year and a half of performing The Lion King she was ready. That was three years ago.

"The beginning was like boot camp. They say it takes two years to really get his technique down. It's a different way of thinking, moving; even though you can see the ballet or different types of modern, African dance, or yoga or tai chi Tai Chi Definition

T'ai chi is a Chinese exercise system that uses slow, smooth body movements to achieve a state of relaxation of both body and mind.
 in it, you still have to open your mind. We do a lot of balances; there's a lot of control. I had to learn how to do all that--I went through aches and pains. My extension was not very high when I came, but I just kept fighting for it.

"He molds. When he gets a dancer who is willing to allow him to mold, it's all the more joy for him and for that person working with him. Garth takes care of us like we're his children."

After all the classes and the rehearsals and the preparation, physical and spiritual, the journey that is a dancer's life, Glarke says, "Once you're onstage, that's when you should just enjoy it and live."

Amanda Smith is a longtime writer for DANCE MAGAZINE.
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Title Annotation:On the Rise
Author:Smith, Amanda
Publication:Dance Magazine
Article Type:Interview
Date:Jun 1, 2005
Words:701
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