Driven by a Desire to Dance

Dancing is my life and it is something I really want to pursue as a career path.  I started dancing as soon as I could walk.  As far as I can remember I always loved watching music videos on TV and listening to music in general.  I mainly taught myself how to dance; it must run in the family because my mom loved to dance in her younger days.  I enjoyed dancing so much that I thought, “Why not get better by taking some classes?”  This is where Green Street came in.

Being at the Green Street Arts Center has helped me with my goal of dancing in many ways.  The classes and workshops that I took had hip-hop teachers that were older and more experienced in the “dance world”.  I also met choreographers that gave me advice on how to enhance my dancing skills.

In 2007, I decided to start my own dance crew called ThoroEnergy.  This

ThoroEnergy from 2009

endeavor was a major one and actually helped me get my foot in the door.  My crew consisted of about 10 people and is constantly growing and evolving.  We’ve definitely come a long way.  We have had the opportunity to perform in many places, including talent shows, festivals, parties, schools, and even appeared in a music video.  After the great exposure that has come from these opportunities, ThoroEnergy is still standing, and definitely dancing.

In addition to inspiring me to start ThoroEnergy, Green Street has also provided me with a choreography and teaching job, which involves teaching hip-hop to After School students and whoever else is interested.  This has been a help because I am getting a lot more publicity with my dancing, and meeting a lot more people who can help me on my way to reaching my goal.  I now get called to different places, such as schools and festivals to teach.  This has gotten me started on reaching my goal of dancing, but I’m definitely not finished yet.  I plan to go to a college for dance, to advance myself and hopefully into the spotlight.  I am trying everything it takes to get to where I want to be and I’m not planning on giving up.

The Youth Dance Invitational that I judged was a success.  Kids from the North End came down to battle, trying to take a trophy home.  I definitely had a good time watching the battles, and was surprised to see some really talented dancers.  Hopefully Green Street will be able to host something else like that again.

If you are interested in hip-hop or other dance classes at Green Street, visit our website at www.greenstreetartscenter.org.

Submitted by Eric Quiñones, Green Street teaching artist

Breaking Boundaries through Breakdancing

Rachel recently sat down with b-boy (breakdancer) and Green Street teaching artist Bryan Giles to talk about the upcoming screening of Middletown B-boys and the Youth Dance Invitational.

Q: What is your dancing history?

Bryan dancing while student look on.


A:
I have been b-boying, exclusively, for the last 15 years.  I got into it when I snuck into a party at Wesleyan University when I was 15.  I saw it for the first time and it was just something I knew I wanted to do. I had no foresight that it would take me to the places I have been.

The opportunities and honors that b-boying has given me are huge.  When I lived in Thailand, I was asked to dance for the queen.  I was unable to perform but to be the first American b-boy asked to perform for her was a big honor.

Q: Tell me about Of Shadow and Earth.
A:
Of Shadow and Earth is a b-boy crew of 15 active members, and 30 additional members.  It’s not only that though; we are a family.  We all started together, trained together and sessioned together.  It’s great to be a part of a collective mind of people who are willing and looking to support each other, not just in b-boying, but in life as well.  The crew began in Middletown and has branched out to include members in other cities and states.  Bryan battling a fellow b-boy.

Q: What’s Fresh Obsessed?
A:
Fresh Obsessed is a youth b-boy crew of 12 members based out of Green Street Arts Center.  It started a few years ago because I wanted my students to know the other side of b-boying; not just the “academic” side of it.  I wanted them to experience what it means to be a b-boy and to work and train hard to go to battles.  More importantly, I wanted them to learn what it means to be in a crew and how to support each other.  For me, I view the team as a great leadership opportunity for the kids.  They all have their different strengths, which come through in their training.

Bryan (right) working with a student.

Q: What is it like to teach at Green Street Arts Center?
A:
Wow.  It is such an amazing experience to have.  Working with these kids helps me strive to be a better person and to be a positive influence for them, especially when what generally gets shown in hip hop culture is negative and excessively decadent.  What I show them is true hip-hop culture, where money and race don’t matter.  What does matter is building your own identity within hip-hop.

Some of the members of Fresh Obsessed have displayed such skill that they have gained the attention of members from Of Shadow and Earth and have been asked to battle in to the ranks of the crew.  It’s something that I am very proud of and I am happy to give the students this opportunity.

Q: Tell me about filming the documentary Middletown B-Boys.
A:
It was started in 2004 and was a fun experience if not a little weird at times.  I was not used to having cameras follow me and peer into the intimate moments during practices and at events.  It was a good experience for us.  We, as a crew, were happy that someone was taking an interest in us and in our culture and wanting to document the work and process that goes into the style.  And I think that a lot of people only see the end product, what comes from the time we spend training, and they don’t see what it is we have to go through to get to that point or what sacrifices we have to make.  I think the film shares some insight into this.

Q: What is the Youth Dance Invitational?
A:
The Youth Dance Invitational is a kids’ dance battle for ages 8-16.  It is meant to encourage dancing and the use of dance as a creative outlet to stay out of trouble.  First of all it, is a chance for kids to compete.  A lot of kids that are into street dance are not aware that there is a bigger dance scene than what goes on in their neighborhoods or their school dances.  Secondly, it is a chance for them to meet and compete against kids in their age groups.  And hopefully inspire them to become better dancers. We chose Green Street to host the Invitational because Fresh Obsessed and ThoroEnergy, a local hip hop dance crew, are based here.

Q: Tell me about the day.
A:
When the dancers arrive they will sign in and there will be a warm up dance session.  Then the judges will showcase their skills before competition begins.  There are two competitions, one-on-one b-boy/b-girl and hip hop freestyle dance.  All ages will compete against one another.  We have a prize package from Losst Unnown for the first and second place winners in each of the two categories and trophies for the first, second, and third prize.  We will also have DJ N.E.B who will be on hand to DJ the event.  He has over twenty years of experience playing music for these types of competitions.

Thank you to Bryan for sitting down and talking with us.  To see him in action be sure to come to the Youth Dance Invitational and the Middletown B-Boys film screening. Here is more info on the two events happening this weekend:

On Friday, filmmaker Bridget Palardy, Wesleyan University Class of ’05, will present Middletown B-Boys, a documentary following two B-Boy crews currently operating in Middletown, Of Shadow and Earth and 4-ONE.  According to Palardy, the film “is a portrait of the two crews as they negotiate religion, race, drug abuse, and life in a small city.”  Middletown B-Boys recently won an award from the Brooklyn Academy of Music and was officially selected by the Chicago International Hip Hop Film Festival.  Following Palardy’s presentation the screening, there will be a cypher, or breakdancing event, between local crews.

The following day will feature a competition between the best local youth dance groups, hosted by ThoroEnergy, Of Shadow and Earth, and Losst Unnown, in partnership with Green Street. ThoroEnergy is a newly formed hip-hop dance troupe featuring several Green Street students and founded by alumnus Eric Quiñones. Prizes will be awarded for the top dancers in a one-on-one b-boy/b-girl battle and hip hop freestyle categories.

Middletown B-Boys: Film Screening and Breakdancing Event
FRIDAY, May 21, 2010 | 7pm
$8 Non-Members; $5 members/students/seniors

Youth Dance Invitational
SATURDAY, May 22, 2010 | 1pm
$8 Non-Members; $5 members/students/seniors

For more information or to purchase tickets call 860-685-7871 or visit www.greenstreetartscenter.org.

Oh, the places you’ll go… with your Green Street Membership!

Buffet at Tandoor

Recently the Green Street staff went out to lunch to enjoy good food, good company, and beautiful weather.  They decided to take advantage of the discounts they receive at local businesses with their Green Street membership card.  At Tandoor Indian Restaurant, Jessica, Lisa, Sarah-Jane, Rachel, and Claudia enjoyed delicious food from the lunch buffet, which offered dishes such as pattar paneer, keema curry, chicken tikka masala, and freshly baked naan; there was certainly something for everyone.

Claudia had the shrimp korma and said, “It was such a nice change of pace in my work day to be able to experience the tantalizing flavors of the Indian cuisine at Tandoor”.  For dessert they all went to Cold Stone Creamery where Rachel thoroughly enjoyed her OREO Overload.  “There’s something about Cold Stone that I really like.  They’re so friendly and it’s a very welcoming atmosphere,” she said.

Cold Stone was one of the original Green Street Membership partners.  “It’s

Enjoying Cold Stone Creamery ice cream.

amazing to see that, in just a few short months, we’ve expanded our Membership program to include over 52 partners,” marveled Jessica, “and it’s wonderful to continue to support one of our original partners as well.”  In the same day, Jessica ran to It’s Only Natural Market, one of Green Street’s newest partners, and used her membership for a 10% discount. “In a matter of minutes, I used my Green Street membership card at three different places around Middletown, and there are so many other opportunities to do so.  The Green Street Arts Center Membership Program is a great way for individuals to support local businesses, community partners, and Green Street while getting fantastic deals at the same time.”

Green Street’s membership program continues to evolve and expand.  Our most recent partners are the Cardinals Nest and Tschudin Chocolates.  Visit our membership website to see what great deals you can get at all of our partner businesses and regional organizations!

To become a member call (860) 685-7871 or email gsac@wesleyan.edu and say “Yes!  I want to become a member!”

Submitted by Lisa Bruno, Development Assistant

Creating Community: The Stories of Little Caughnawaga

What makes a community?  It is not the buildings and roads of a place, but

Filmmaker Reaghan Tarbell
Filmmaker Reaghan Tarbell

the bonds between people, that create a community.  This is apparent in Reaghan Tarbell’s film, To Brooklyn and Back: A Mohawk Journey.  The film tells the story of the Mohawk people of Kahnawake, Quebec, who, for over 50 years, have occupied a 10 square block neighborhood in the North Gowanus section of Brooklyn called Little Caughnawaga.

A chance for employment is what led the skilled ironworkers of Kahnawake to Brooklyn, and their wives and children followed.  The women, too, often sought work opportunities in the “golden” city of New York.  The women were instrumental in keeping the community strong and Mohawk culture alive in the Brooklyn neighborhood.  But the people of Little Caughnawaga never forgot where they came from, and often travelled the long journey between Brooklyn and Quebec to visit their extended families.  The film also covers the tragic Quebec Bridge collapse of 1907, a catastrophe which killed 75 people, including 33 men from the Kahnawake community.

Reaghan now works in New York City and lives in Brooklyn, just a few blocks away from the Mohawk community that she heard stories about while growing up in Kahnawake.  The women who built this community were her grandmothers, aunts and other relatives.  Reaghan explains, “Never have I thought more about them than during my own time living in Brooklyn.  Although many years have passed I had a feeling, based on my own experiences, that deep down not much has changed for Mohawk women.  I wanted to learn about their experiences.  I wanted to hear about the issues they faced and I wanted to hear it from the women in whose path I was now walking.

To screen the film and learn more about Reaghan Tarbell, come to Green Street on Friday, May 14 at 7pm. Suggested donation is $5.

Submitted by Stephanie Elliott, Friend of Green Street and Publicist at Wesleyan University Press

Exploring Passions

Emma performing
Emma Z. performing Sugar Plum Fairy. Photo courtesy of www.actionpic9.com.

I actually met Sarah-Jane Ripa during Orientation week at an event on Wesleyan’s campus where she was running a booth for Green Street Arts Center. I asked her about ballet classes at Green Street and she told me that none were presently offered but that she would be glad to find me a teacher so I could continue my passion for dancing. She told me that she would make it work.

I didn’t know it then, but I would be working with Sarah-Jane just three months later. Since coming to Green Street I have found it to be the kind of place that supports people following their passions. I have had the pleasure

Students working on Homework

of speaking with many of Green Street’s adult students who tell me how much they enjoyed their teacher or their class and they want to make sure to sign up for the next session. As for the kids of Green Street, it is clear in their faces. Just yesterday I worked with a child in the after school program, who quickly finished all her homework (getting all her spelling words correct) and who then wanted to color pastel pictures with me, and the day before I watched a first-grader correctly finish his math homework in 5 minutes, and then ask me for long division problems to practice for fun.

The Community Mural Project

I have spent the past year working with Sarah-Jane and the other members of the Green Street Arts Center team on various projects, helping to run events, working in the after-school program, and organizing classes. This is a group of extremely dedicated people who truly do make it work. Despite tough economic times, Green Street has remained dedicated to its students. There are so many options available to the point where you can sign up for a class or a private lesson in nearly any creative genre you could think of. You can also attend interesting events ranging from the Sunday Salons to cultural dance events to various performances by local musicians.

I think that Green Street is a place where anyone can come to express themselves and explore their passions. Sarah-Jane made the ballet class work for me and my friends and we study on Saturday mornings with a fantastic teacher.

I love coming to work at Green Street because it is my way of being active in the community I am living in. I thoroughly enjoy working with the children and adults of Green Street to share our common passion for creative expression with the Middletown community. It has affected me in a very meaningful way and because of it, Middletown, as well as each of us, is more beautiful.

Submitted by Emma Zawacki, Wesleyan Student and Green Street Worker

Green Street as seen through the eyes of After School Student Gabby M.

Gabby and Lisa sat down one day to talk about what Green Street Arts Center means to an 11-year-old 5th grader in the After School Arts & Science program.

Learning at Green Street:

Gabby M., After School Student

I first took photojournalism because I took some pictures for my best friend’s graduation, and they came out really, really good, so I thought maybe I should take pictures when I grow up.  My mom signed me up for the class and now I’m so happy.  I’ve learned a lot.  I didn’t know how to post pictures to make a calendar, and I can do that now.  The style of the cameras is really cool; we use different kinds of digital cameras, one blue and one grey.  I have my own, so after photojournalism I can still take pictures.  My favorite subjects to photograph are people and weddings.  I want to be a wedding photographer when I grow up.

Since Marela, the mural teacher, came to talk about the mural we are about to paint, I’ve taken time to draw pictures for the design.  Now she is going to put me in the Arts & Science program that will be working on the mural.

I also learn piano with teachers David Davis and Allison House.  Even though I didn’t sign up for private lessons, they just started teaching me scales and sharps.  I know some of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata, Mozart’s Sonata in C Major, the theme from Harry Potter, and I’m working on learning how to read music.

Green Street & my life:

When I first came to Green Street I didn’t know anybody, but now, 6 months

Gabby playing with angles.

later, I know everyone by heart.  The staff is really nice and helpful.  Wesleyan volunteers even help us with our homework! I wouldn’t have been able to do it without them.  I’ve definitely changed since coming to Green Street.  I now get A+ on all my homework because of all of the academic help that I get.  I love it here.  I don’t have any friends at school, so I like Green Street because I’ve been making lots of friends.  My mom says I’m always smiling when I come out of Green Street.  When I’m older and finished with school, I would be proud to come back to Green Street to help with the kids as a staff member.

I just want to say thank you to Miss Cookie for letting me go to Green Street because without her I wouldn’t even be here writing this blog.

To view some pictures that Gabby took, visit our Facebook page.

Submitted by Gabby M., After School Student, with help from Lisa Bruno, Development Assistant

Upcoming Green Street event: Music and Dance of Bali

Come to Green Street for a musical journey to the tropical island of Bali! This Friday, Green Street Arts Center of Wesleyan University will host an evening of Balinese music and dance with performances by traditional Balinese ensembles. This dance is characterized by expressive hand gestures and intense emotion conveyed through the face as the dancers act out a story or series of events. In Bali, birthdays, weddings, and temples festivals are all occasions for dramatic performances and dance, as they are inextricably linked with the Balinese religion.

About the performers:

Dharma Swara is comprised of about 40 individuals who come from a variety of academic, professional, and artistic backgrounds.  They study a variety of forms, from ancient dances once performed to entertain the rajas in their palaces, to the contemporary kebyar ensemble.  For this concert we are joined by Green Street teaching artist Shoko Yamamuro, dance coordinator for Gamelan Dharma Swara, Noopur Singha, and students of Wesleyan’s Balinese Dance class led by Urip Sri Maeny.

Wesleyan’s Balinese Gamelan Angklung group performs under the direction of Gamelan Dharma Swara’s music and education coordinator Peter Steele. Steele is a musician, scholar and composer working primarily on Balinese Gamelan music, which he teaches at Wesleyan. With an M.A. in ethnomusicology, he is also an active performer and composer, having several of his works performed by Balinese ensembles at the annual Bali Arts festival.

Music and Dance of Bali takes place on Friday, April 30 at 7pm. Tickets are $10 for non-members; $8 for members, students, and seniors; $5 for Wesleyan Staff, Students and Faculty w/ID.

For more information visit www.greenstreetartscenter.org. To purchase tickets call us at 860-685-7871.

Submitted by Lisa Bruno, Development Assistant

Thinking About Pete Seeger

Sunday Salon Series Brings Wesleyan Professor to Discuss Legacy of Legendary Folk Singer

Pete Seeger

Pete Seeger is very possibly the most important U.S. folk singer of the 20th century, a central figure in the music of social movements from the labor movement of the 1930s to the environmental movement of today. For the past year Wesleyan Professor Rob Rosenthal has been working with Seeger on a forthcoming collection of his papers, The Pete Seeger Reader. At Green Street’s Sunday Salon Series, Rob will discuss this work, Seeger’s place in American music, and invite audience members to share their thoughts and memories of this beloved musician.

This informal lecture takes place on Sunday, April 25 from 2–4pm as part of the Sunday Salon Discussion Series, Green Street’s monthly discussion series for creative minds and curious individuals hosted by Wesleyan University Chemistry Professor David Beveridge. Each monthly salon includes plenty of opportunity for socializing as well as a reception with light refreshments.

Admission is $5 for the general public and $3 for Green Street members, seniors, and students. Green Street Arts Center is located at 51 Green Street, Middletown, CT. To register or get more information, please visit:  www.greenstreetartscenter.org or call (860) 685-7871.


More About Rob Rosenthal
As a professor of sociology at Wesleyan, Rosenthal is an expert on housing, homelessness, social movements and the culture of social movements. He received his bachelor’s degree from Rutgers University and his master’s of arts and Ph.D fromthe University of California Santa Barbara.

Rosenthal is the author of 18 published articles, seven of which cover the topic of homelessness. His book, Homeless in Paradise received the Association for Humanist Sociology Book Award in 1995.

He teaches Introductory Sociology, Urban Sociology, Housing and Public Policy, and Music in Social Movements to undergrads, and recently taught Music in Social Movements to students enrolled in the Graduate Liberal Studies Program. In this class, Rosenthal questions how the actual use of music can create movement cultures. Students listen to musicians such as Bob Dylan, Woody Guthrie, Billie Holiday, Janis Joplin, Rage Against the Machine, and Public Enemy and discuss how their music relates to movements in the United States including the labor, civil rights, new left, woman’s, and current inner city movements.

Submitted by Adam Kubota, Center for the Arts

Teaching Artist Shawn Hill connects Healthy Eating, Creative Writing, and Technology

Shawn Hill’s extensive web-design experience and creativity continue to expand the imaginations of kids in his animation class and adults who have taken his blogging classes.

After School students love Shawn’s animation class because it allows them to get silly with colors and images while exploring topics that interest them.  Walk into class, and you’ll see kids discussing how best to present the topic: “How can we show glaciers melting?”, “What colors will be the most vibrant to combine?”  Global Warming was the theme for projects two years ago, after which the students focused on healthy eating.  This year, kids are letting their imaginations go wild as they animate science phenomena, vividly demonstrating the splitting of an atom, magnets, the mixing of colors, and electricity.  Check out their video about eating healthy: Fruit is Fuel

The After School students in Shawn’s class will debut their exciting videos at Green Street’s Arts Fest on June 12th.

Green Street Community Members also benefit from Shawn’s knowledge of the blogging world.  Photographers, painters, individuals concerned with a social issue, or people who want to share their passion and experiences have all gathered for Shawn’s Web-Design and Blogging class.  Shawn is especially excited by the blogging world because of the wide range of topics that blogs can cover. One of the most unique topics he has assisted with was for people interested in duck-decoy carving.  As an expert in web-design, html, and many other intricate computer languages, Shawn thinks that these techniques are overly complicated for practical, every-day purposes.   Even though blogs are not “God’s gift to original aesthetic,” they work well for anyone wishing to share information on the internet.  Shawn hopes to continue to share this passion with interested community members this spring in his Blogging & Web Design Class on Wednesdays from 6:30-7:30pm.

Submitted by Noah Klein-Markman, Wesleyan University Class of ‘13

A Taste of Green Street’s New Membership Program

Green Street Arts Center of Wesleyan University recently sat down with

Outside Iguanas Ranas

local business owner and Green Street partner, Polo Martinez to find out more about business at Iguanas Ranas Taqueria. As a partner in our Membership Program, the restaurant offers a free soda with every $10 purchase to our Members. Read on to learn about their fabulous dishes and community connections.

Originally from Oaxaca, Mexico, Polo came to Connecticut 20 years ago. His wife, a native of Mexico City, and children followed soon after.  After years of experience in the restaurant industry, the Martinez family decided to try their hand at business.  Iguanas Ranas Taqueria opened in 2008 and has been making a name for itself ever since.

Nestled in Middletown’s North End, Iguanas Ranas offers deliciously authentic Mexican cuisine at economy-friendly prices.  Of all their delicacies, Polo tells Green Street, the burritos and the tacos are the most popular.  The Oaxaqueña a 15-inch creation, originally called “tlayuda” in Mexico, is something you have to see to believe.   Everything is homemade and fresh, which makes all the difference when you are competing with the multitude of restaurants in Middletown.  While they do have a set menu, Polo says that Iguanas Ranas is able to make other dishes to order. So if you’re craving enchiladas or mole, just give them some notice!

“We are happy, because everybody is happy.” –Polo Martinez, owner

Polo thinks that the large Latino population combined with Iguanas Ranas’ commitment to authentic, homemade foods are key in their success.  It is clear that this taqueria is in demand; Polo routinely receives requests for other Iguanas Ranas locations around the state.  While expansion is not currently on the menu, Polo hasn’t ruled it out.  When asked how he thinks another Iguanas Ranas would fare, the owner said, “I’m not scared. You make good food, people look for you.”

Are you taking full advantage of our partnership with Iguanas Ranas? If you are a Green Street member, show your membership card and get a free drink with every $10 purchase.  If you’re not a member, call us at (860) 685-7871 or email gsac@wesleyan.edu to join! Visit http://www.greenstreetartscenter.org/members/ for a full list of membership benefits.

Submitted by Lisa Bruno, Development Assistant