16yearold pivots from kenyan slum to ballet stage
Last Updated : GMT 05:17:37
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice
Last Updated : GMT 05:17:37
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice

16-year-old pivots from Kenyan slum to ballet stage

Emiratesvoice, emirates voice

Emiratesvoice, emirates voice 16-year-old pivots from Kenyan slum to ballet stage

Young ballerinas practice under the instruction of Kenyan ballet dancer Joel Kioko in a room at a school in the Kibera slum of Nairobi, Kenya. Kioko has come home for Christmas from his training in the United States.
Nairobi - Arab Today

 In a country not usually associated with classical ballet, a 16-year-old dancer leaps onto the stage, his gravity-defying turns taking the audience’s breath away.

Joel Kioko is arguably Kenya’s most promising young ballet dancer. Currently training in the United States, he has come home for Christmas — and is dancing a solo in a Nairobi production of “The Nutcracker” while he’s here.

“He’s the real deal,” said Dance Centre Kenya’s artistic director, Cooper Rust. “I’m pushing him to go for the stars. Paris Opera, Royal Ballet, here we come! Even if Joel ends up in a more regional company, it will be incredible.”

Kioko grew up in Nairobi’s Kuwinda slum and took his first dance class five years ago in a state school classroom, with bare walls, no barre and no mirror, the desks and chairs pushed outside

 

Now he’s teaching holiday classes to aspiring dancers in Kibera, the Kenyan capital’s biggest slum.

“I don’t know what I could have done without ballet, without dancing,” Kioko said. “I don’t even know if I could have been existing, it’s weird to say, but dance, it’s everything to me.”

His encounter with ballet happened by chance when he was 11. He was discovered by a fellow dance student who at age 14 was teaching a class at his school and told her teacher, Rust, about him.

“From the beginning, when he joined the ballet, there was nothing else he could talk about,” said Kioko’s mother, Angela Kamene, who raised him and his sister in a one-bedroom shack shared with an aunt and a grandmother. “It was just ballet, ballet, ballet. So I saw that he was happy, and so I was happy too.”

Now others are pursuing dance as a way out of poverty. At the beginning of the school year, children in Kibera try out for the ballet classes, which are funded by charities Anno’s Africa and One Fine Day.

Michael Wamaya, a finalist for the 2017 Global Teacher Prize, teaches dance to around 100 kids a week in Nairobi’s Kibera and Mathare slums.

“At the end of the day, we’re not just training them to have dance for fun, we’re doing it in a serious level,” Wamaya said. “We are doing it to make them have a career at the end.”

But not everyone is applauding.

“I can see it gives young people opportunities,” said Christy Adair, professor of dance studies at Britain’s York St. John University and a prominent voice on ethnicity in dance. But she added: “I think there’s a kind of arrogance in the ballet organisations, where they think theirs is the way for training for dance. ... Contemporary technique is more open to other people’s movement patterns and practices and experiences and heritages, which ballet isn’t.”

Wamaya acknowledged the criticism. “People say sometimes, why are you not teaching them, for instance, African dance or hip hop?” he said. “Yes, it’s a Western thing coming in, but it’s dance, and dance is diverse, you know? To me, it’s not about ballet as a dance style, but it’s about the discipline that ballet has in itself as a dance technique.”

As the only son in a family growing up without a father, Kioko laughed at the notion that some people might consider a man in tights, dancing classical ballet, to be unmanly. He was teased by some in his neighbourhood about the dancing, he said, but he never had to fight.

“Where I came from there is poverty, there is stealing, there is drugs,” Kioko said. “You have to be a man to live in where we live. ... It’s like a lion in the jungle, you have to show that you are the male there, you are the one who roars and everyone follows

source : gulfnews

Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

16yearold pivots from kenyan slum to ballet stage 16yearold pivots from kenyan slum to ballet stage

 



Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

16yearold pivots from kenyan slum to ballet stage 16yearold pivots from kenyan slum to ballet stage

 



GMT 11:45 2017 Friday ,03 November

Flag Day an occasion of loyalty to nation

GMT 00:19 2011 Tuesday ,25 October

More evidence that coffee cuts skin cancer risk

GMT 09:15 2011 Monday ,11 July

Indonesia raises red alert at volcano

GMT 10:23 2017 Monday ,13 February

Race for kilowatts empties Bosnian lake

GMT 12:14 2017 Saturday ,04 March

Big names shine as Hurricanes humiliate Rebels

GMT 15:34 2017 Wednesday ,19 July

Three cups of coffee a day keep the doctor away

GMT 00:39 2011 Tuesday ,04 October

Everything on line for sprint with iphone

GMT 10:15 2017 Wednesday ,08 March

Nowitzki joins 30,000 club against Lakers

GMT 22:31 2017 Tuesday ,07 November

Citizen killed in Saudi airstrike on Saada

GMT 12:06 2017 Wednesday ,08 November

HRH Premier thanked by Amir of Kuwait
 
 Emirates Voice Facebook,emirates voice facebook  Emirates Voice Twitter,emirates voice twitter Emirates Voice Rss,emirates voice rss  Emirates Voice Youtube,emirates voice youtube  Emirates Voice Youtube,emirates voice youtube

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

emiratesvoieen emiratesvoiceen emiratesvoiceen emiratesvoiceen
emiratesvoice emiratesvoice emiratesvoice
emiratesvoice
بناية النخيل - رأس النبع _ خلف السفارة الفرنسية _بيروت - لبنان
emiratesvoice, Emiratesvoice, Emiratesvoice