| It’s
showtime. Charity Ranger takes a deep breath and rolls her wheelchair
toward the center of the dance floor, where she and two classmates
begin performing carefully rehearsed dance movements. Soon Ranger
is perched on the back of another dancer, arms outstretched, and
begins rolling over a second dancer onto the floor before returning
to her wheelchair.
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| Charity
Ranger, balancing on Lindsey Wilson's back, prepares to roll
onto Marisa Hackett. |
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Marisa
brings Charity's wheelchair closer; Charity will soon
return to the chair. All photos by
Mary Levin.
|
The performance, attended
by an audience of about 50 guests, was the culmination of a new
course, “Integrated Dance,” offered by the UW
Dance Pro-gram during Summer Quarter 2004. The course brought
together dancers of varying abilities, including several—like
Ranger—who use wheelchairs.
“The focus is on dancing and creating,” says Jürg
Koch, Dance Program lecturer, who taught the course and has danced
professionally with CandoCo Dance Company, which specializes in
integrated dance. “The course challenges and enables students
to explore and develop their individual abilities within dance.”
For Ranger, a senior majoring in communication and diversity and
disability studies, the prospect of participating in a dance course
was nothing short of terrifying. She agreed to sign up when her
close friend Marisa Hackett, a dance minor, promised that she would
also take the class.
“Marisa hounded me to take the course,” jokes Ranger.
“My adviser did the same. Having Marisa there gave me a sense
of security. Being a student with disabilities can create challenges,
especially if you’re doing active things. I wanted someone
I trusted to be there to back me up if I said, ‘No, I can’t
do this.’”
Developing Trust Through Improvisation
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Lindsey
Wilson, Yulia Arakelyan, and Catherine Castro (from left)
rehearse.
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Koch designed the course,
which met for ten hours each week, to parallel the structure of
a dance company’s daily schedule: warm-ups, then dance exercises—including
improvisation, and finally rehearsal.
For Ranger and Hackett,
the improvisational exercises were a highlight. “For both
of us, a favorite was an exercise called ‘leading and following,’”
says Ranger. “Students worked in pairs, with one closing her
eyes. One person would hold out a hand. The other would then put
their hand under it and the first would have to follow their movements.
It could involve moving around the room or just moving parts of
your body.”
“That exercise
was really good for learning how each others’ bodies moved,”
adds Hackett. “We did it right off the bat and it helped people
become comfortable with each other.”
Jamie Stults, a dance major, says that becoming comfortable with
other dancers is always a process. But there is an added dimension
when working with dancers with disabilities, particularly when the
movements involve bearing other dancers’ weight or sharing
weight. “There was inhibition at first,” she admits.
“It was a trial and error process that required communication.
People needed to say, ‘I can take more weight,’ or ‘That
hurts.’ We all became more confident as time went on.”
Different Abilities, Different Challenges
Many movements that
emerged from the improvisation exercises were later incorporated
into the dance piece performed at the end of the quarter. Although
Hackett had studied dance for years, the freedom to choreograph
her own movements was new—and challenging. “I come from
a ballet background, where everyone follows basic steps,”
she explains. “Here we were expected to do things completely
improvisationally, on our own. It gave me a lot of anxiety.”
Ranger had her own concerns. When the class did formal exercises
each day—everything from stretching to leg lifts to leaps—she
had to find ways to adapt those exercises to fit her abilities.
She would move an arm, for example, when the exercise called for
lifting a leg.
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Jürg
Koch, center, discusses an exercise with students during the
integrated dance class.
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“This can be a
huge challenge for students with disabilities,” says Koch,
who has taught integrated dance for more than four years. “In
a more homogeneous class, a student can ‘ride’ along
with other students, following their lead. But when students must
come up with their own alternate movements, they don’t have
the same cues. They have to remember each time how the move translates
to their body. And to make things more difficult, they are often
the students with less dance experience.”
For Ranger, the challenge proved overwhelming. At one point during
the first week, she left class in tears. “It just felt so
hard,” she recalls. “Jürg was very nice about it.
He came out and sat with me, listening and talking for ten minutes.”
The tears abated, but Ranger’s frustration did not. Eventually
she and fellow student Julia Trahan expressed their feelings—rather
vocally—in class.
“We were indignant
that we had to do adaptations of exercises when the able-bodied
students didn’t have to,” she recalls. “The whole
class ended up having a discus-sion about it, which was really helpful.
Jürg explained that no matter what your ability, you’re
going to move your own way.”
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Catherine
Castro (right) prepares to climb onto Julia Trahan's walker.
The two will soon switch positions. |
Having taught integrated
dance before, Koch was not surprised by the students’ response.
But he knew that tailoring the class exclusively to the two students
was not the solution. Nor was offering a class solely for disabled
students.
“There’s a lot to be learned in the exchange between
dancers with different abilities,” he says. “Particularly
when it gets to partnering, it becomes really interesting. It involves
different centers of gravity, different holds, different grips.
And wheelchairs move and become part of the dance.”
A Final Performance
By the end of the quarter, frustrations abated and all of the students
had gained confidence in their abilities and trust in each other.
Their final nine-minute performance was testament to how far they’d
come in four weeks.
“Performing was
a different kind of scary than I’ve experienced before,”
says Ranger. “When it was done, there was a real sense of
accomplishment. I think about my body differently now.”
Would she sign up for the class again? After a long pause, Ranger
says, “Probably.”
“It was a wonderful
experience,” she explains. “but it was so far outside
my comfort zone. There was crying, there was screaming. Am I a better
person for it? Yes. Has it enriched my life? Definitely. I really
liked this class. But getting to the point of liking it was very,
very scary.”
Autumn quarter, Jürg
Koch is offering another integrated dance course. The focus is on
teaching the history and philosophy of integrated dance.
[Autumn 2004 - Table of Contents]
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