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June 18, 2004 |
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The lady of the dance
By
Spc. Benjamin Gruver
Staff Writer
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| Youth Service Dance Instructor, Marisa Paull, puts makeup on Lindsay MacLeod, a participant in this year's annual dance recital. Marissa Paull/Youth Services |
If
you were surprised recently when you tuned to the post command channel and saw
young dancers prancing and twirling onstage, listen up. That was just a taste of
what West Point’s Youth Services instructional dance classes brings to the
community.
Dance
instructor Marisa Paull, who spent most of her childhood training for a
professional ballet career, is the driving force behind the 142 young dancers.
“The
rewarding part for me is when I see them so proud of themselves for having
achieved something over time,” said Paull. “It took time and they had to
keep coming back to it. They didn’t get it at first or on the second and third
try, but four months later you do see a difference in them.”
Paull,
24, began a career in ballet at age eight when, just for the heck of it, one of
her instructors took her to New York City for an audition at the School of
American Ballet. She ended up getting accepted.
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| Paull took over the Youth Services dance program here in 2003. She brings more than 10 years of professional dance training and experience to her students. SPC. Benjamin Gruver/PV |
“One
of my teachers asked, ‘are you serious about this?’” explained Paull. “I
thought about it for a minute and said, ‘yes, I am a 100 percent serious.’
From then on ballet training was what I did and you fit school in to the cracks
in your schedule.”
Her
dance career led her to study at the Kirov Academy in Washington, D.C. Then the
years of ballet and dance training just became too much.
“It
was my entire life and I burned-out,” Paull explained. “I just craved a
normal life and I was unhappy.”
One
of my teachers told me if I was not going to do ballet, I was going to college,
she explained. Within a matter of months they helped her get into Smith College
in North Hampton, Mass.
“That
was a life changing event because I thought that dance was all I had,” she
said.
College
took her completely away from dance and gave her the time to do other things --
like photography and sports -- for the first time in her life.
“I
had a sort of infusion of normal life,” she explained.
She
graduated in 2002 with the highest honors in her major. But like many graduates,
she had a hard time deciding what to do next.
Amid
her transition from college life, she moved to Cornwall, got a job as a waitress
and signed up for dance classes at a local ballet studio. It was there she met
Marybeth Ritkouski, the YS dance instructor at the time.
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| Dance students line up to perform the "Cotton Candy Dance" May 15 at the annual Youth Services Dance Recital in Robinson Auditorium here. Marissa Paull/Youth Services |
Ritkouski
befriended Paull, and it wasn’t long before Paull was helping her with dance
classes.
Ritkouski
left in 2003 and Paull took over the program.
“It
is the other side of my passion for dance that I never knew existed,” Paull
said. “It is what got me into it first, but the training squeezed that out. It
is so much fun to put on a show and to discipline yourself, it’s very
rewarding.”
Paull
inherited a program she considers “bursting at the seams.” She teaches 19
classes a week with student’s ranging from three to 15.
One
of her goals, she said, is to add more classes to separate the older students
from the younger ones.
“We
would do two different versions of everything in class,” she explained. “It
is a shame because they could learn so much more and be so much more involved if
every five minutes they weren’t sitting down.”
According
to Paull the program needs more time and space. The current room is also a
recreational room at the YS, so she has to move the furniture around twice a
day.
“I
want them to have it as good as possible and if that means that I move the
furniture a gazillion times then I move it a gazillion times,” she said.
Summer
sessions begin as early as July 12 and registration for fall classes begins July
26. For more information, contact Youth Services at 938-3727.
“My
other goal is to teach them some of the majesty and the mystery of the dance,”
Paull explained. “What ends up happening is they come in with some of that
majesty and mystery and what I really give them is a little bit of a technique
or a language with which to explore it.”