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Burbank: Giving it all for their art

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  • Burbank: Giving it all for their art

    Burbank Leader , CA
    LATimes.com
    Aug 11 2004

    Giving it all for their art

    Contestants go for the gold at the World Championships of Performing
    Arts this week at Hilton Burbank.
    By Jackie Conley, The Leader


    MEDIA DISTRICT NORTH - Scattered around the Hilton Burbank Airport
    and Convention Center on Tuesday morning, vocal competitors and
    aspiring actors patiently sat waiting for their turn to represent
    their country and impress the judges in the second day of the
    competition at the World Championships of Performing Arts.

    "The primary thing to do is to develop competitive material," said
    CSM Words and Music producer Shele Sondheim, a judge for the
    competition. "The highest high is to come prepared and be really on
    top of your game."

    Sondheim said he hopes this competition will spark international
    interest in the arts and encourage people to embrace performers like
    they do the athletes in the Olympics.

    "Music and art is an international language," Sondheim said.

    Ilhama Gulkiyeva has participated in more than 200 competitions
    internationally and is a popular singer in her native Azerbaijan,
    located between Iran and Russia. But for her, the World Championships
    of Performing Arts could bring a significant change in the way the
    arts are perceived in her country.

    "My president said if we do well here, he will have big prizes
    waiting for us when we return," she said.

    Gulkiyeva said the president of her country encourages the performing
    arts, and she hopes this will reflect a positive change in the way
    artists are viewed around the world.

    "It seems like everything is done for athletes and not enough for
    performers," said Griff O'Neil, founder and director of the World
    Championships of Performing Arts.

    Gospel rap artist Emmanuel Edili, of Nigeria, said out of all the
    competitions he's been in, this one is important because it's global.

    "It helps you to appreciate different artistic styles," he said.

    Edili, 29, said the hardest thing for him in competition is the few
    moments before going on stage.

    "Because it's in that moment there that you make a decision whether
    or not you're going to go out there and get through it," he said.
    "But you realize this is the opportunity to show them what you're
    made of."

    Singer Andrey Hovnanyan knows all about these types of opportunities.
    At 25, he said he has already performed in several international
    competitions in Germany, Japan and Belgium, and has performed in
    front of crowds of 8,000 people.

    This is the first time the Armenian singer will compete in the World
    Championships, and he said he hopes to break into the American
    market.

    "There's something special about America," Hovnanyan said. "It has a
    strong influence around the world."
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