July 2020 | Page 2

PR for People® The Connector is published monthly by Xanthus Communications LLC, 2212 Queen Anne Avenue North, PMB #615, Seattle, WA 98109. Please send any address changes to [email protected].

Copyright ©2020 by Xanthus Communications, LLC. All rights reserved. Written content and original photos in this publication must not be reproduced in any form without permission. Requests for permission should be sent to Patricia Vaccarino [email protected].

The first time I walked into a dance studio I did not know how to place my feet in first position. I felt as though I was a laughingstock. Only no one laughed. The dance world grants a quiet dignity to a dancer who is new but not young. I came to this powerful art form at an age when most professional ballerinas have long retired. Imagine being fifty and doing something brand new and so physically demanding. But I stuck with it and once I got into it, I could not stop and looked for every opportunity to train.

Even as a new dancer I knew I had to dance often to see incremental improvements. It takes years to develop the fine muscles, strength and grace needed to do ballet. As for the artistry inherent in dance—that can take a lifetime. Dance taught me many things beyond moving across a floor, about my life, my business, branding, and about all of those things I am passionate about, especially writing—that is what led me to write a book called STEPS.

At home in Seattle, I took at least four ballet classes a week. At my other home on the Oregon coast, there are no suitable ballet classes, so I created my own strict Pilates routine in conjunction with Zumba. I found dance classes wherever I traveled: New York, Boston, Denver. Everywhere I go, I keep moving.

Dance studios shut when the pandemic hit. After years of training it is terrifying to just stop dancing. The dance community is small and news travels fast. I learned about ballet classes streaming on Facebook. This is what led me to find Robert Dekkers, who is the artistic director of both the Berkeley Ballet Theater and the dance company Post:Ballet. I was so inspired by Robert Dekker’s live streaming classes via Facebook that the only way I know how to express my gratitude is by writing about him. My article Robert Dekkers | Dance Moves On presents a new way of looking at dance in the digital age.

This month, our library profile is a rerun of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, which had been previously published in February 2020. Since this library archives great works of choreography, we think it is a good complement to our article about Robert Dekkers.

Remember to stay safe, secure, and vote! -Patricia Vaccarino

PR FOR PEOPLE®

THE

CONNECTOR

Editorial Staff

Chief Content Creator:

Patricia Vaccarino

Published by PR for People®

Brand Manager:

Josue Mora

Copy Editor:

Lars Brockner

Chief Photographer:

Ilya Moshenskiy

Design and Layout:

Josue Mora

Photo Credits:

William Lulow, Josue Mora, Ilya Moshenskiy,

Patricia Vaccarino, and a special thanks to

Robert Dekkers,

the Berkeley Ballet Theater, and Post: Ballet.

Additional photo credits: Natalia Perez, Tricia Cronin, and David DeSilva.

A special thanks to

Richard Calmes for the cover photo of Robert Dekkers.

Contributors:

Edith Lynn Beer, Lynn Berger, Gregg Bertram, , Dave Bresler, Peter Corning Ph.D, Rongqing Dai Ph.D,

Bernadette Erasmus,

John de Graaf, JoAnne Dyer, Anna Faktorovich, Ph.D.,

Ron Flavin, Michael Fliegelman, Randy Friedberg, Esq.,

Manny Frishberg,

Linda Jay Geldens ,

Henri P. Gaboriau, MD,

Sally Haver, Alison Harris,

Roger Hillman, Lorraine Howell, David L. Laing, Linda Jay,

Nick J. Licata,

Chef William Lulow,

Dean Landsman,

Barbara Lloyd McMichael,

Joe Puggelli, Oliver Roth,

Jerry Sander, Annie Searle,

Steve Sears, Hall Stuart-Lovell, Jordan Riefe, William Thomas, Patricia Vaccarino, and

Serena Wadhwa.

NOTE FROM THE EDITOR

Dear Friends & Colleagues: