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Movement Of Mind, Body And Soul

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  • Movement Of Mind, Body And Soul

    MOVEMENT OF MIND, BODY AND SOUL
    By Kelly Corrigan, [email protected]

    Burbank Leader , CA
    Oct 28 2011

    A born dancer and a choreographer create an emotion-packed show for
    the Alex Theatre

    To celebrate its 10th anniversary, the dancers of Karavan Dance
    Studio are collaborating with the Los Angeles Ballet Theatre, Israel
    National Ballet, National Ballet of Armenia and Burbank's Creations
    Dance Theatre in a show featuring nearly 100 dancers. Some are as
    young as 3 years old, under artistic director Edgar Nikolian, who
    also started dancing as a child.

    Nikolian's first dance teacher was his father, Rouben Nikolian,
    who founded the dance studio. The elder Nikolian fathered two sons,
    raised them in Yerevan, Armenia, and taught them dance despite
    initial resistance.

    "Because my father is a dancer, my family said, 'You have to dance,'"
    Nikolian, 25, recalled on a recent afternoon, as he rehearsed a ballet
    duet with 21-year-old Amara Baptist at the South Glendale studio.

    "First I thought, 'I'm not going to dance. Ballet is for girls. It's
    not for me.'"

    At 8 years old, with a body sculpted from five years of gymnastics
    classes, Nikolian was left with no choice but to try. By age 16, he
    was granted a full scholarship to an elite ballet academy in Munich
    and went on to perform for the Bavarian State Ballet and Vienna
    State Ballet.

    His family and his wife, Karine Nikolian, brought him back to Glendale,
    where he divides half of the day dancing and the other to teaching
    in the studio he now oversees. When asked what it takes to perform
    a dance brimming with both emotion and remarkable physicality, he
    replies with another question, "Hard work?"

    Then he consults with Karine in words just above a whisper. "He wants
    me to translate, if you don't mind," she said. "Something along the
    lines of 'Mind, body and soul have to be in sync. It's a portrayal
    of your thoughts, your emotions, your physical ability.'"

    The show, on Nov. 12 at the Alex Theatre in Glendale, is sure to pack
    an emotional punch. One of its dancers and choreographers is Raquel
    Cordova, of Burbank, who choreographed a piece titled "Faces of
    Regret," inspired by the aftermath of her father's death from cancer.

    Her Burbank studio, Creations Dance Studio, was in part established by
    Cordova to cope with her father's loss. She needed to express herself
    through movement. "Especially dancers, they can't express with words,"
    she said.

    A year prior to his passing, Cordova moved her family to Texas to
    care for him, yet when he died she still thought to herself, "'I could
    have done this better, I could have done that better,'" she remembers.

    "That's what this piece means to me - trying to go back in time and
    then realizing you can't."

    The first time her dancers rehearsed the piece at Creations Dance
    Theatre, they were in tears when the music finished. They knew
    Cordova's inspiration for the piece but as she had requested, they
    each performed it with their own regrets in mind.

    When they perform it before an audience, bracelets on each of the
    dancers arms signify those personal regrets.

    "I don't like to place movement on dancers," Cordova said. "It
    became theirs."

    --

    INFO BOX

    Karavan Dance Studio performs at 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 12 at the Alex
    Theatre, 216 N. Brand Blvd., Glendale.

    http://www.burbankleader.com/entertainment/tn-gnp-1030-edgar-nikolian,0,983372.story

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