Friday, November 6, 2009

Kolb's Learning Cycle




Kolb’s Learning Cycle can apply to every day living. We are constantly Learning, Reflecting on experiences we have, concluding from and planning on what we can do to make them better in the future.
As a dancer, I constantly use the Kolb Learning Cycle when I audition for a show.



Concrete Experience


I’ve been to many auditions in the past. They all tend to follow a similar format. You have to be at the location by a certain time to register, get changed into your audition clothes, warm your body up and then start the audition. Some auditions have been ballet only, some jazz and some ballet tap and jazz. I auditioned for Disneyland Tokyo 3 years ago and got down to the finals. During the audition the head of casting pulled me aside and said he loved my dancing but Disney employ performers and without good stage presence he cant employ me. I really tried hard to smile and perform more but this is one of the first auditions I did before graduating and I was quite nervous. I got down to the final round, which was a tap audition and then was told I’d be called if they could place me in a show. After a few weeks they contacted me to tell me they had cast all the shows but would keep me in mind.



Reflective Observation

After that audition I reflected on my experience that I’d had in one of my first major auditions in my 3rd year. I didn’t have the correct dance attire with me. In the advert for the audition it said “you will be required to do ballet and jazz” and so I didn’t take my tap shoes. In the final rounds of the audition we had to tap so I had to do it in my jazz sneakers. I don’t think this would have been a reason for not getting the job but it certainly didn’t help. I also think what I was wearing wasn’t suitable. It was fitted enough so you could see my body and technique when I danced but I wore a black vest and black jazz pants. I thought this looked simple and professional but all the other boys were in bright colours, which made them stand out. Because it was one of my first auditions I was so busy making sure I was doing the correct routine that my face wasn’t performing and so like the casting director said, it doesn’t matter how good I dance, they wont employ someone who doesn’t perform on stage.



Abstract Conceptualisation

Most people say “we learn from our mistakes” and this statement is very true. No matter whether an audition advertises ballet only or jazz only I will always take all of my dance shoes just in case. A prepared dancer looks professional and therefore makes them more employable. Depending on the type of audition, I have learnt to wear dance gear that is appropriate. Sometimes plain is simple and for a ballet company you wouldn’t wear garish clothes to make you stand out, but for something like Disney, nice bright colours would have been perfect. Especially when they are deciding who to cast in the show from pictures they are left with, you want them to be able to remember you and something you wear can make you stick out in someone’s mind. Of course in any audition it is important to show how well you can dance but learning from the Tokyo audition and from observing in other auditions, casting directors often pick the ones who perform the best but don’t necessarily have the best technique. In future, in any auditions I take, I will always try and embed the choreography into my mind as quick as I can so I can really perform for the panel when we are dancing the routine in smaller groups. This could be the difference between getting the job or not.



Active Experimentation

After the Tokyo audition I put into practice everything I felt I had learnt and have carried on using that experience in all my auditions to date, whilst constantly reflecting on newer situations and incorporating anything else I have learnt which may aid me to become a better dancer. When I graduated in 2007 I had successfully been offered 4 jobs. The one I accepted was the European tour of Fame The Musical. The audition for Fame was only 2 months after Tokyo. When I arrived at Pineapple Studios there was a mass of dancers and I instantly thought I had no chance. But I told myself to think positively and psyched myself up ready to perform. I wore black baggy joggers with a bright yellow vest, a wristband on each wrist and I spiked my hair a little. I’ve seen fame so I knew what kind of look they wanted. Whilst learning the dance I kept a smile on my face so it would almost become second nature when performing. I really focused on what the choreographer was doing and saying and didn’t half-heartedly learn the routine. I wanted to make sure I could learn it quick so I wasn’t worrying about the dance moves when performing. By the time we came to perform it I felt very confident and I danced the routine as if I was in the show with a big smile on my face and lots of dance attitude. I could see the panel was drawn to me and watched me for the majority of the dance. After getting through all the rounds and singing in the finals I found out 4 weeks later that I got the job! I’m almost positive that it would have been a different story had I not of attended any auditions previously and put into practice the things I learnt from those experiences.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Links Of Interest - Health and Fitness

Being a dancer it’s very important to keep fit, especially when out of work. I got to the gym at least 4 times a week, as my personal fitness is very important to me. When I'm in a show I can be required to do a lot of partner work where I have to life girls so having strength is important.
When I have done musical in the past you wouldn’t believe how hard it is to sing and dance at the same time. When you go to a show its made to look so simple but physically it is so challenging as you need very good breath control to sing but you also need all of the air you breath in for your muscles when dancing so putting the two together put such a strain on your body. In ‘Fame’ I used to see some of the cast run off stage at the end of a number and collapse to the floor they had exhausted themselves so much.
So going to the gym and keeping onto of your cardio fitness is also very important.

The thing we eat can have a big impact on our health too. I eat a lot of protein and carbohydrate fuelled dishes as the protein is so important for your muscles and muscle repair and carbohydrates give you a lot of energy

http://www.nutrition.gov

This is a great website that includes lots of different information about nutrition in food and how you can improve your diet.


You can also you YouTube to search for dance workouts to keep fit at home. This is a dirty dancing work out currently sold in the shops.



http://www.gl14.com/manchester

This is a link to the gym I go to in Manchester. It’s important that you find a gym that has a good range of equipment and fascilities. A swimming pool is also good to use, as this is a great way of keeping cardio fitness. If a gym offers fitness classes it’s always best to try and attend at least one or two of them, as they will offer exercises you possibly wouldn’t think of using. You can often feel more disciplined in a class that’s being led by someone.

Links of Interest - Musicals

My absolute passion in life is Musicals. I can’t get enough of them. I tend to know about all the new musicals coming out and I generally get an audition through my agent for most of the UK tours and west end shows.

I’m forever going online to watch musical preview clips of shows yet to come or just generally watching clips of shows I've already seen. YouTube is my top resource for watching the videos.

3 Musicals I am mad about at the moment are Sister act of which I saw the previews in May 2009, Wicked of which I've seen numerous times in the UK including the original UK cast and on Broadway and legally blonde which I flew to New York to see the original cast. Legally Blonde is soon to open at the Savoy Theatre in London.

I'm so passionate about musicals and spend a lot of my free time reading up about them because its what I do. The feeling I get when I'm on stage performing is just immense. Being part of a group of performers all passionate about creating an art and having fun doing it. When I watch musicals I can instantly feel what the artists feel and that’s why I devote my time staying interested in the art.
Below are some video clips from YouTube of these shows.


This is the Promo Video of 'Raise Your Voice' from the new musical Sister Act. This was realised as a little sneaky peak before the show previewed. When i saw this i knew i had to book my tickets straight away!



Legally Blonde was a BIG hit on Broadway, It's soon to open its doors in the West End this coming December. Here's a clip form the end of ACT 1 on Broadway.





This video is the last song of ACT 1 from Wicked the musical. Its a special video as its the last performance from Kerry Ellis (Elphaba) She was the original Elphaba in the UK and has been so successful in the part that she was asked to play the part on Broadway for 6 months.
I have seen this actress play this role so many times i made sure i was there for her final performance. The atmosphere in the theatre was electric. Ive never seen anything like it!

Thursday, October 22, 2009

People I Admire - Katy Harris


Katy is currently the main show director at DisneyLand Paris. She started her career with Disney in 1994 dancing in the stage show of beauty and the beast and then went onto doing many of the other shows that were created in the park.

After a 5 years dancing for Disney she became an assistant show director and then eventually became the show director of Disney Land.

Katy was my director for the Winnie the Pooh show. I first met her on the show I did before Winnie, which she also directed. It was the Disney on Ice show ‘Mickey’s Winter Wonderland’ in which I played goofy. She was such a fantastic director to have on the Winnie show as she had entered Disney the same way I had. I was the first English boy to play the bi-lingual role of Christopher Robin and she helped me loose my northern accent when delivering the French lines. She herself moved to Paris not being able to speak a word of French and is now fluent in the language.

I admire how far she has come in 15 years and although I haven’t been on the journey she has I started in the same way and can see why she would stay with the company for so long and climb within it to achieve greatness.

She has a list of shows she has directed for Disney now and has even travelled to Florida, California and Disneyland Hong Kong to direct. What an achievement to say you are the entertainments director for a Disney Land park, one of the largest corporations in the world!

http://www.dlrpmagic.com/interviews/katy-harris-disneys-once-upon-a-dream-parade/

http://www.linkedin.com/in/katyharris

People I Admire - Laura Churchill


Laura is a friend of 7 years. We both started working for DisneyLand together at the same time and lived in the same house. Originally from Liverpool she danced from a tender age and carried it on through her teen years into her adult life. She has so much passion for dance and you can see this when she performs.

She left Disney to pursue further dancing and travelled to different countries to do this.
Laura decided quite early on that she wanted to settle down in England with her fiancée (from London) and so moved to London to set up her own dance school. A very big ambition for a young girl in a big city!

She started off in a church hall where she advertised a Saturday school for young children, advertising it in local shops. She now has over 300 students, 10 staff and a timetable of dance classes that run from a Monday to Saturday.
She invited me to teach a few classes whilst I was living in London and it was then I felt so proud of my friend and the achievements she had made. The children aged 4 – 18 were all very talented and were really enjoying being apart of her school.
It was also teaching at her school that made me realise I had a passion for teaching as well as performing and this is what has sparked me to study for my degree.

All of this was achieved in as little as 5 years and through the success and hard work she will soon be able to give her school its very own building. All this hasn’t come easy though and she has sacrificed so much to make it work. I really admire her for having a dream and making it reality. I cant wait to watch it blossom even more.



www.honeyzschoolofdance.com

Disney Holiday Memory Music Video

I thought i would demonstrate how useful Youtube is (one of my top 5 resources) by sharing a video i edited myself of different clip from my holidays to Disney World in 2001/2002/2004.

I used to do video editing as a little hobbie and Disney is something that has always been in my life and inspired me (People I Admire)

In the video you can also see how i age from being a spotty teenager into a young adult.

Im really glad i took the time to edit this 5 years ago as i can look back on it now and realy smile at the fantastic times i had at Disney with my best friend.

I hope you enjoy it!

People I Admire - Walter Disney

Born December 5th 1901
Died December 15th 1966

The man who made dreams come true!

I can still remember Christmas 1990 when I received my first 2 Disney movies. I can still remember the feeling as I opened the presents to discover I had been given The Little Mermaid and Fantasia. There aren’t many childhood memories that are so vivid so I ask myself why I remember this one so much. Disney has played such a key role in my life, I have always been a dreamer and Disney let me dream through his art of animation and telling us “A Dream Is A Wish Your Heart Makes”


I grew up collecting every Disney Classic Animation that came came out.
I remember at the end of The Little Mermaid there was a short film where a child fell asleep and in his dream he drifted off in a balloon to a magical land, DisneyLand Paris. It was basically an advertisement of the new park that was soon to open in a year. That video only made me dream of being there and enjoying all the magic that all the other kids were enjoying.
As I grew up and became a lot older Disney never faded in my life, I applied for a job at the Disney Store and was over the moon when I’d got it. For years id watch the Disney shows and parades on videos and wished that I could be in one. Id always put my music on and fantasise that I was in the Disney film.

In August 2002 I auditioned to be in the Disney parade knowing that before I started the audition, if I got the job it would mean the world to me. In September 2002 I started working at DisneyLand in the Parade department.
My work for Disney only grew from there, I played goofy on ice and my proudest achievement was playing Christopher Robin in the Winnie The Pooh Show. I was the only real boy on stage surrounded by the characters who’s voices were on ‘playback’. To perform that role really was a dream come true.



I eventually left Disney having created a bigger dream in my life. To better myself in the entertainment industry and to perform in bigger things. That’s when I decided to go to The Northern Ballet School to better myself as a dancer so I could enter the Musical Theatre industry and on graduation that’s when I got into my first musical ‘Fame’
Without realising, Disney has helped me achieve the wonderful things i've achieved in my life because he taught me “all our dreams can come true if we have the courage to pursue them”

My favourite Disney Quote - "I only hope that we don't lose sight of one thing - that it was all started by a mouse."

www.justdisney.com
www.brainyquote.com