So you think you can dance ... (au Canada)

Venez discuter ici des participants ainsi que tout ce qui entoure cette émission!
Stemplar
Stagiaire
Messages : 41
Inscription : lun. sept. 25, 2006 12:00 am

Message par Stemplar »

[cit]bizou37  a dit :
il est très bon ton neveu  

disons que j'en ai 3 sur ma liste....ton neveu Dany, Dario et Nicolas  :

Ca va de mieux en mieux tu te rends compte DANNY EST DANS LES 16 FINALISTES. j'ai hâte de le voir mercredi prochain . Je crois qu'il va nous surprendre.

Un enfant bâtit une tour, un village, une ville, un royaume,


et tantôt l'univers..........
felix
Immortel du Domaine
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Inscription : sam. juin 28, 2003 12:00 am

Message par felix »

Citation :So they think they can dance
Five males from Quebec have been strutting their stuff since last month

The Gazette
Published: Wednesday, October 22
Nico, Vincent, Francis, Danny, Dario.

Fans of the hit CTV program So You Think You Can Dance Canada are already on a first-name basis with the five guys from Quebec who have been a dominating force in the television dance competition since it began airing last month.

Dario Milard, a 19-year-old from St. Hubert, was eliminated last week, but not before he amazed the panel of judges with his unique contemporary style.


The remaining Top 16 contestants perform a new set of choreographies tonight at 8.

The Gazette spoke with the five Quebecers yesterday. The four who remain in the competition were on a brief break between rehearsals.

Milard spoke from his home in St. Hubert.

None of them could explain why half of the Top 10 male dancers in the show are Quebecers. Is it something in the water, the air, the attitude?

"Who knows why, but Quebecers should be proud there are five of us representing the province," 23-year-old Nico Archambault said.

It's a miracle the Longueuil native is in the competition. He didn't begin dancing seriously until he was 16 years old and was told from the get-go he'd never make it as a professional dancer because his body wasn't right.

"I was once brought into an anatomy class as the perfect example of the worst possible body for dance," Archambault said. "It didn't bother me. You have to learn what your strengths are and focus on making them amazing."

The show's panel of judges have consistently raved about Archambault's performance skills.

"I don't want to come out of this competition the same dancer or the same person," Archambault said. "I already feel like I'm evolving."

Another of the judge's favourites is 22-year-old Vincent Noiseux. The St. Jean-sur-Richelieu native was in the bottom three couples last week, but the judges saved him for another week. (The public votes, but the judges have the final say until the Top 10 dancers are selected.)

One reason Noiseux may have ended up in the bottom three - despite his considerable charisma and technique - is that Quebecers are not voting in great numbers.

"Maybe it's because the show is in English and not all Quebecers are watching," Noiseux said. "They should tune in. It's fun."

Noiseux, who began dancing when he was 9 years old, is one of the more versatile dancers in the competition. A real plus under the circumstances.

So You Think You Can Dance Canada challenges dancers to perform styles outside their comfort zone. They spend five hours with the choreographer(s) to learn each week's routine and rehearse on their own for two days before performing the dance for an average viewing audience of 1.5 million.

So far, Noiseux is taking the stress in stride.

"I'm surprised," he said. "I had no idea I could deal with the pressure so well."

The schedule is intense and there's no such thing as a day off.

"Right now we're on our one-hour lunch break," ballroom dancer Danny Arbour said. "We tend to eat in 15 minutes and nap for the rest. And we stretch a lot. But the bodies are beginning to get tired."

Arbour began dancing with his sister when he was 5 years old. The 26-year-old Montrealer came up through the ballroom-dance system to become one of the best ballroom dancers in Canada. He has performed thousands of times and won championshops. But SYTYCDC still makes him nervous.

"I'm afraid of hip hop," Arbour said with a laugh. "I think I can do it, but I still have to learn how to loosen up more."

Ballroom dancer Francis Lafrenière doesn't shudder at the thought hip hop, but the style called theatre dance gives him pause.

"I'm more of an action guy," he said. "I'm not comfortable with the acting yet."


The 28-year-old from St. Bruno danced a sizzling paso doble with SYTYCDC contestant Natalli Reznik last week that judges hailed as the dance of the night.

Lafrenière began ballroom dancing when he was 7 years old. He competes on the international circuit and runs his own studio (Studio Bahia) in Longueuil. Lafrenière's girlfriend and ballroom dance partner Claudia Primeau, auditioned with him for the show, but did not make it into the Top 20. Now she watches her boyfriend dance with one of the hottest females on the show.

"She's incredibly supportive," Lafrenière said. "She understands the nature of purely professional partnerships."

Milard has the least formal training of the five Quebecers who made it to the Top 20, but that hasn't discouraged him.

"I started taking ballet and contemporary classes this year," Milard said. "I wanted to be able to showcase my artistry on the show, but I knew I would have to train in different styles to have a chance. I got that chance and I'm happy. What I really want to do is choreograph."

As the four remaining Quebecers prepared to head back to the rehearsal studio, Arbour made one more plea.

"We need Quebecers to support us," he said. "Watch the show and vote, vote, vote."

So You Think You Can Dance Canada airs on CTV tonight at 8. The results show airs tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.


source:
http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/n ... e7719ba9fc

--Message edité par felix le 2008-10-23 22:22:17--




JOYEUX NOEL ET BONNE ANNÉE 2009!!!!
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