4B - Thursday, Marchl18, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com BALLROOM From Page 1B "It's kind of like speed dat- ing, but it's speed dancing," Lian explained. "Everybody who needs a partner gets in the same room and you kind of go through everybody, talk with them for about a minute just to see if you can match up your interests in terms of, like, how much you want to practice, and commitment lev- els and that sort of thing, and then you can dance with them for a little while." Though most people join with- out any serious convictions, they're often captivated by how much fun ballroom is and quickly find themselves competing against - and often beating - the danc- ers who impressed them as new- comers. Ballroom Dance Team President and recent 'U' alum Alex Rowan is one of the best dancers on the team, but he has only been dancing for two and a half years. He joined in his junior year upon transferring to the University. "Someone invited me to the Welcome Week lessons that are hosted every fall to recruit new members and they kind ofspark an interest," Rowan said. "I didn't know what ballroom dancing was. You know, you'd heard of the dances like the waltz ... but you've never, like, physically done them." Rowan is now president of one of the best collegiate ballroom dance teams in the country and consistently takes first place at national competitions. The sport of ballroom dance It's Feb. 13, the night of the 10th Annual University of Michigan Ballroom Dance Competition, and the bleachers at the Saline Middle School gymnasium are full of spec- tators and fans of ballroom. Color- ful gowns trail serenely behind the couples as they not only move to the music but become a part of it. The dancers' body language expresses their obvious joy to be on the floor, making the scene all the more exquisite. The sheer beauty of their movement makes it easy to forget this isn't just a performance for an audience to admire - that the romantic and elegant imagery is only a small part of the evening. The competition is akin to a large sporting event, but instead of two large basketball players tip- ping off to begin the game, Tchai- kovsky's "Waltz of the Flowers" fills the gym and eight couples begin gracefully twirling and floating across the dance floor. The basketball court is dramatically lit with large spotlights, and mem- bers of the crowd cheer and yell out the numbers of their favorite competitors. The competitive air clashing with the grace of dancing creates a surreal experience where the lines separating art and sports are blurred. "My original interest in ball- room was because it was analo- gous to a sport ... I was an athlete and I saw it was a way of train- ing your body, staying in shape," Rowan said. "But at its very roots and when you really learn a deeper side of ballroom, it has to be a form of expression and it has to be very personal." Not only does ballroom improve athletic ability, it requires an ath- letic attitude and training ethic that go beyond that of most other competitive activities. While most athletes only have to train in one sport at any given time, these dancers have to master 10 dif- ferent styles of dance all at once. Every team member must perfect the basic steps, stylistic elements and additional moves and tricks for each and every dance style. The judges first focus on key criteria like whether the danc- ers are in time with the music, whether their posture is correct and whether they're natural and at ease on the dance floor. If these are accounted for, the judges consider proper footwork and stylistic ele- ments for each dance when decid- ing who will move onto the next round. In other artistic competitions like gymnastics or figure skat- ing, specific moves are required, but in ballroom the dancers have complete artistic freedom within the confines of the dance's style. And while figure skaters and gymnasts go into a competition with a well-rehearsed routine in mind, ballroom dancers don't even know what their music will be before it plays as the performance begins. Routines are formed as they dance, with moves being sig- naled by small physical cues from the male. Ballroom routines are incredibly difficult to compare and rank, considering that no two cho- reographies are the same. "A lot of it, being a guy at least, is thinking about what moves you want to do next," Lian said. "Any- thing we want to do, we have to let (our partner) know through our Ballroom routines are developed entirely on the fly in competition. bodies, thus they have to kind of pick up on it. "Many times our leads might not be perfect ... and a lot of the times their steps are a little more complicated than ours," he added. Ifrecallingthebasic steps, addi- tional moves and stylistic elements in front of an enthusiastic crowd is stressful or daunting, the dancers certainly don't show it. The com- petitors are calm, cool and col- lected both on and off the floor at the February competition. Rowan and his partner, recent 'U' gradu- ate Anastasia Alekseyev, are just as comfortable and at ease as they are gracefully flawless. Of course, accidents do happen. "I've fallen. I was doing the Viennese Waltz with my partner, and she stepped on some guy's foot and ... pulled me down, and we, like, totally crashed on the floor," Rowan confessed. "You fall and you get back up and you just start dancing again." Making champions out of newbies of course, an integral part of any team is the coaches behind it, and when a ballroom team consist- ing mostly of dancers with little prior experience is as successful as Michigan's, it's clear the instruc- tion is spot-on. Coaches Steve and Susan McFerran are responsible for taking beginner dancers and working with them until they become top competitors. They have been coaching the ballroom team since its establishment in 1997. "My mom put me in ballet, tap and jazz classes when I was four, and so I did that until I was about 15 years old," Susan McFerran said. "I found out about the ball- room dancing and disco and hustle and all these different things, and that's when I got into the partner dancing." For Steve McFerran, ballroom was always a part of his life. "I guess for me my parents just told me, 'That's what you're going to do' - I didn't really have a lot of say in it," he said. "(My parents) competed, and then I started in a class and the teacher said, 'There's a girl around your age who I think would be good,' and we went to competitions together." They said that after years as successful competitors, the move toward coaching felt right. "It was just sort of a natural pro- gression ... when you get toward the end of your career as a compet- itor," Steve McFerran said. "If you've been successful, peo- ple will call you, and they want to take lessons, and they want to have coaching from you, and you start judging and coaching (it's a) thing you do after you stop competing," Susan McFerran explained. Their reputation as successful instructors, coaches and competi- tors isn't just known in the realm of ballroom. Along with fostering a team that has won seven national championships, the McFerrans have also helped ice dancers Emily Samuelson and Evan Bates win the World Junior Figure Skat- ing Championships, take third at the U.S. National Figure Skating Championships and qualify for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancou- ver. s "These ice dancers have to do different ballroom dances on ice," Susan McFerran explained. "They have compulsory dances, and one year it might be like tango, then next year it might be jive, another year it might be waltz." The coaches of Samuelson and Bates, Yaroslava Nechaeva and Yuri Chesnichenko, contacted the McFerrans because of their exper- tise and experience with these dances. "They wanted to know what a waltz or foxtrot is really like and so they wanted us to teach them that," Steve McFerran explained. "When they go to portray iton the ice and their coaches put their cho- reography together, they can use things that really look like ball- room dancing." While they may dabble in ice dancing, the McFerrans are com- pletely dedicated to the success of the Ballroom Dance Team. Susan McFerran credits "the (coach- ing) consistency that we've been able to have with this team" as the main reason Michigan is often the best among its competitors. They approach their instruction in a way that allows the team members to practice individually what they learned in their lessons. "We try to structure it so that we're very specific about what (the style) should be," Steve McFerran explained, "so that when people come to the classes, they leave without any doubt about what they're supposed to do." Beyond the weekly instruction the McFerrans provide, the pairs meet to practice on their own as much as they deem necessary, making the dancers' commitment to the team just as important as the coaching. "Most people put in between two and six hours a week," Rowan said. "It's completely contingent on your own interests and what your schedule flexibility is like. I started putting in four hours a week; bythe end of my first semes- ter, I was doing, like, eight to ten hours a week." Finding friends on the dance floor The Ballroom Dance Team is one of the largest competitive student groups on campus, with more than 200 active members, but it started with only eight cou- ples. The camaraderie among the dancers makes the team feel much smaller. The students on the ballroom team inevitably become close. More experienced dancers help beginners learn new steps and ask for feedback on their own moves. They cheer each other on at com- petitions, hoping just as much for the success of their fellow couples as for themselves. They go to the studio not just to practice, but to relax and be with their friends and teammates. "(The dancers) really make a lot of friends," Susan McFerran said. "You really feel like you can meet so many people. It's just really positive." The friendship among the team members strengthens their danc- ing ability as they help each other perfectthe steps and styles. "The way ballroom is run here is that it's very mentor-based," Rowan said. "You always have someone to help you with danc- ing. You have just an outstanding opportunity to learn how to ball- room dance." There are many reasons people get involved with ballroom dance. But no matter what their reason is for joining, everyone finds the friendships they made to be the best part of the ballroom dance experience. "It's the social aspect that makes it fun. And also, well, obvi- ously the whole 'Dancing with the Stars' phenomenon that's spread throughout (the country), that's kind of given ballroom dancing a little jump-start," Lian said. "But when you're in the room with, like, a hundred other people and you get to interact ... you're doing something with them that's fun - that's unique - what it really comes down to is the relationships you build with other people." The dancers agree that the experiences and opportunities they've had with the Ballroom Dance Team are among the best parts of their collegiate careers. "The fact that you're a mem- ber of a student organization that takes in so many Michigan students and, like, changes their lives in an extremely unique and unexpected way is something I'll always look back on," Rowan said. "(I'll) always cherish that memory and be proud that I was a part of this team."