Competition
Competition can be a great motivator
and greatly improve your dancing.
Practice at performance level.
Remember perfect practice makes - better. Don't
practice until you get it right. Practice until
you can't get it wrong.
Appreciate your partner. Forgive
their mistakes/shortcomings. Remember how lucky
you are to have a partner. A dance partnership
is a relationship that needs constant nurturing
in order to blossom. Most partnerships don't
last a year. The partners that stay together
the longest tend to have the most success. I
recommend reading, "The Five Love Languages"
by Gary Chapman. This book is a couple's guide
to working as a team, building relationships,
and making your partner feel appreciated.
Read the rules BEFORE you choose
your costume, choreography, and (if possible)
your partner! If there are rules you think are
unethical (unfortunately they are out there)
- challenge them, but don't be disqualified
out of ignorance.
Be aware of your partner when
you dance. Dance as a couple. Use one another.
Feed off each others energy. The audience can't
always tell who has the best technique, but
they can always tell who is the most connected.
If you're the follower, follow even if you
know the dance routine by heart. It looks better
and your partner may have to change the choreography
because of other couples on the floor. If you
are the leader, know what you want to do before
you do it and give clear signals to your partner.
Aside from your side by side footwork sections,
all choreography should be leadable.
Men! Don't get into the habit of counting out
loud when you practice. The counting gets in
your sense memory and you may end up mouthing
the counts on the competition floor. Instead
count in your head or play music. Your partner
doesn't need to hear your counts to follow.
Use a tripod to tape yourselves regularly.
I know for many people this is scary, but it
is one of the most effective tools you have.
Your dress rehearsals should always be taped.
How does your costume look on tape? What sections
need cleaning? What are your bad habits? How
is your energy and connection?
Have a complete dress rehearsal (and tape it)
before you compete or perform in any costume
to avoid disaster. Make sure everything fits
your body right, won't fly or rip off and it's
comfortable. Use 4 way stretch fabrics. Don't
wear colors that show when you sweat. Wear materials
that breathe, so you don't sweat so easily.
If you are a sweater, when possible take an
extra set of clothes so you can change and look
fresh.
Take private lessons at least once a week.
There is a well known formula in competitive
dancing that recommends one hour of private
lessons for every 5+ hours of practice on your
own. Coaches can give you choreography, improve
the choreography you have already, solve problems,
and be your guides to becoming better dancers.
A good coach will help you determine what areas
you need the most work on and how to accomplish
your goals. Also, constructive criticism can
be taken better taken from a respected coach,
than from your partner. Let your coach handle
this area and your partnership will last much
longer. If you are having a problem you are
not sure how to fix, save it for your lesson.
Don't waste hours of practice time getting frustrated
trying to fix something your coach can fix in
a few minutes.
Use four safety pins for your
number.
Make sure your body is warm and you have stretched
before your heat. Make sure you cool down slowly
when your heats are over.
Drink water in small amounts regularly throughout
the day.
Bring food (I keep organic food bars, organic
apples, or organic baby carrots wrapped up in
my shoe bag) with you to snack on.
Support your friends, teammates,
and people from your dance company. If they
are dancing well make some noise. The judges
will notice - and so will your friends.
Your focus should mostly be on
your partner or the audience. Don't spend the
whole heat staring at the floor because you
are nervous.
If you collide keep your composure
and get going again as soon as possible.
Choose where you will start your routine. Was
your choreography intended to start on a long
wall? Where are most of your fans? Is there
a weak couple you can dance next to, to make
you look better? Where are the judges? Don't
stand too close to the judges, because they
won't be looking at you. Move to different sections
of the floor in between songs so you can be
seen by everyone.
The competition begins as soon as you take
your first step on the floor and does not end
until you are all the way off the floor. Maintain
a positive and confident image even if you are
not happy with your performance.
Rehearsals
|at the comp| partnership|coaching | presentation
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