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must
used to sit up nights wondering what it would be like to
handpick
the characteristics I could inherit from my parents.
Why should I be content to accept the ones that had been
dumped on me in some devious game of genetic Plinko? I wanted
my father's sense of self, my mother's unfettered passion.
For the most part, my Plinko balls have bounced favorably;
however, one bad break has resulted in an irrevocable life
sentence of humiliation at wedding receptions and trendy
clubs.
As a kid, my mother was plucked from the performance halls
of the San Fernando Valley to become the youngest-ever recipient
of a coveted Ford Foundation Ballet Scholarship and shipped
out to New York for the summer. Every day, she would head
across town, dance bag in hand, to a studio underneath Lincoln
Center to train and dance with greats like Edward Villela
and George Ballanchine. Villela, who later became the first
ballet dancer on the cover of Sports Illustrated, was so
taken with my mom's skill that he specifically made her an
example for the class to emulate.
Thirty-seven years later, and with the burden of inheritance
weighing heavily, I walked intoWilson Recreational Center
for my first "Social Dance" class. My girlfriend,
Amanda, and I had decided to take the class together--it
was a mutual decision, I swear--but I still was not completely
keen on the idea. With windows on two sides and a full-length
mirror on a third, the dance studio was an unforgiving chamber
of intimidation. Passersby could stare in on their way to
the parking lot or see me in all my graceless glory en route
to their treadmills. My only previous public dancing had
consisted of stumbling through the Electric Slide at my bar
mitzvah.
"
One, two, three. One, two, three. Break step," called
out Liliya Shcherban, a recent Russian immigrant who was
attempting to teach us the Shag. "One, two, three. One,
two, three. Break step." The instructions seemed simple
enough, and I grabbed Amanda authoritatively, hoping that
a little swagger would compensate for any deficiency of talent.
The swagger instantly dissipated, however, as my feet turned
into non-compliant entities.
Liliya pulled me aside and took it upon herself to resolve
the conflict between my head and my feet. Instead of coming
to a reasonable compromise, my feet steamrolled the negotiations
until, after five minutes of ineffectual instruction, Liliya
exclaimed loudly in her broken English, "UGH! YOU NEED
PRIVATE DANCING LESSONS!"
The entire class, working so diligently on their own Shags,
halted in midstep as her words reverberated off the walls.
With the stares of my classmates digging into me, I contemplated
a number of reactions: anger at Liliya for embarrassing me;
self-loathing for stumbling over the most elementary of steps.
Instead, I felt a begrudging acceptance.
"
You really are your father's son," my mother said when
I called home looking for consolation. I knew what she meant.
Weddings, bar mitzvahs, cocktail parties--he's a good sport,
because he does dance. But he's just kind of uncoordinated.
The man dances like, well, a construction attorney.
"
Keep at it, though," my mother said before she hung
up. "Maybe you've inherited some of my dancing genes."
If I did inherit any of her skill, it wasn't showing. But
the end was in sight: After that disastrous first class,
all I had left was twenty-five more--and the Fox Trot, Cha-cha,
Tango, swing, waltz (Viennese and traditional), Rumba, and
Polka--until I could receive my "Pass" and walk
away. According to the class syllabus, I would one day grow
to develop a "lifetime enjoyment of dance and physical
movement." In the meantime, every Tuesday and Thursday
at a little past noon, I would stroll, bad attitude in hand,
to class and, seventy-five minutes later, I would leave,
Amanda in hand, acid on my tongue.
It was the same routine every time, and I grew to dread it.
Learn a step. Practice the step with multiple partners. Step
on some poor girl's sprained left foot. Learn another step.
I became famous. My fraternity brothers began making special
trips to the gym just to watch me stumble over a cross triple-step
or get caught in a reverse underarm turn.
Time dragged on. Class 9. Class 16. The fraternity brothers
lost interest. There was no moment or class I could point
to and say, "That was it!" But slowly--real slowly--I
began to improve. First, I developed the ability to count
time in my head. Then we moved on to more structured dances
like the Fox Trot and Waltz, which, instead of requiring
that I coordinate my whole body, allowed me to memorize basic
foot movements. I could do that. About two months into the
class, Liliya even went so far as to say that I had "nice
posture."
Toward the end of the semester, pressure began to mount as
our final--a two-minute, fully choreographed performance--loomed.
At first Amanda and I were dumbfounded. Then, I realized
another trait that I had inherited from my father: a loving
acceptance of self-mockery. Liliya had taught us the Polka
as a lark on the final day of class, and the dance's sheer
ridiculousness drove nearly half the class off the dance
floor. So, the choice for our final dance was easy. To save
a little face, Amanda requested that we at least start with
the Tango, and as long as I got to keep my Polka, I was in.
I arrived at the final in a sleek, black suit; she, in an
elegant long dress. When our turn came, we earnestly and
cleanly executed a fairly challenging Tango routine. Then
the music switched from strings to tubas. She threw off her
heels, and we polkaed ourselves silly. I even squatted down
and did a series of mini-hops as Amanda pranced in a circle
around me, patting my head. The crowd whistled and hollered
in delight.
After catching our breaths, we were handed a sheet evaluating
our performance: "Beautiful dress, Amanda. I never thought
I'd see Greg move, much less like that."
Edward Villela might have scoffed, and I have yet to receive
an invitation to perform at Lincoln Center, but Amanda gave
me a kiss after our performance and told me how much she
enjoyed taking the course. Maybe the Plinko ball bounced
the right way, after all.
Veis, a senior from Pacific Palisades, California, is editor
of Recess, The Chronicle's weekly arts and entertainment
supplement.
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