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Third time's a charm, say many Toronto hopefuls
Lindsay Zier-Vogel, CTV.ca
Date: Tuesday Jul. 27, 2010 2:52 PM ET
Torontonians are hot on the heels of Canada's Favourite Dancer, Tara-Jean Popowich. They line up at the crack of dawn hoping to make it to the Top 20 of So You Think You Can Dance Canada's third season.
It's a chilly morning outside the Metro Toronto Convention Centre and dancers huddle under blankets and sleeping bags, wearing layers of clothes to keep them warm. But not even the mid-November chill will keep these dancers from doing what they love and up and down the sidewalk there are impromptu dance circles, beat boxing and split jumps.
"I'm always looking for bigger and better each season!" judge and choreographer Blake McGrath says, surveying the lineup. "I'm looking forward to seeing the dancers who were too young to audition last year and see what they have to offer. I can't wait to see all of the new talent."
He said last year that they could have cast five Top 20s with the dancers at Finals Week and hopes to see many of the same dancers return this year. "I really want them to be persistent and see many of them back again."
Round two
It's round two for Rodrigo Basurto, 24, who is originally from Mexico City but now makes his home in Toronto. He too, made it to Top 40 last season. "I'm more excited than ever! And I'm more prepared," he says.
Last year, the judges suggested he work on his technique and he took this criticism to heart and though he has a number of new tricks up his sleeve, he busts out a one-handed freeze to make sure no one forgets he's really a hip-hop dancer at heart.
Though contemporary dancer Sarah Vance, 22, from Waterloo, Ont., didn't audition last year, she was first in line during Season 1's Montreal audition stop and was there with Top 4 dancer Everett Smith.
"It was so inspiring to see how far he went this year. I was so proud of him. I hope this year it's my turn," Vance says, noting that her last name rhymes with 'dance.'
She arrived just after 5 a.m. this morning and says she's glad to be near the front so she'll be able to dance early on in the day. "I think the waiting around is the hardest part because then you just watch other people and start to compare yourself," she says.
Something different to offer
There are hip-hop dancers and contemporary dancers and ballroom couples ready to strut their stuff, but there are also Afro-Caribbean performers, ballerinas and folk dancers ready to show the judges what they have to offer.
Elke Schroeder, 27, originally from Kendal, Ont., is a modern dancer who specializes in floor work, a contemporary technique that focuses on diving, rolling, tumbling and using the floor gracefully.
"A lot of contemporary dance is very high," she says, demonstrating with a vertical upper body, "but this is way more into the floor and it definitely looks different than other forms of contemporary," she explains. "I'm really excited to show the judges that part of my solo."
Where Schroeder spends most of her time getting into the floor, urban street dancer Tristan Fisher, 20, from Peterborough, Ont., spends a lot of his time in the air. He's not just good at jumping, he's also studying to be a pilot. "Whenever the weather's bad, I go over to the dance studio," he explains.
He auditioned last year and says he was disappointed with his performance. Even still, he is able to find the silver lining: "Even though the final result wasn't what I wanted, I met so many people at the auditions last year and have been dancing with a lot of them."
He trained as hard as he could this last year and feels much more prepared with a solo he defines as 'mellow.'
"It has a very unique beat," he explains. "I pop, I lock, I wave and I hit the beat hard. I'm hoping it'll really impress the judges!"
First year and final year
Toronto's Tessa Vintar, 18, is thrilled she's finally reached the age of majority and is able to audition for Season 3. "I promised myself years ago that I would audition as soon as I was old enough, and here I am!" she says.
She's got a pink suitcase packed full of everything she thinks she might need -- blankets, scarves, sweatpants, t-shirts, shorts, and tons of makeup.
Though Sarah-Beth Desormeaux is on the other end of the age spectrum, at 30 years old, she is just as prepared. "I packed everything in tool boxes on wheels!" she says, showing off the stacked yellow and black boxes.
This mother of two opens it up to reveal...everything! "I've got toiletries, chocolate bars, clothes, hip-hop shoes," she lists off.
And though she'has prepared as much as possible, she knows the pressure is on. "This is my last year. This is it!" she says. "It's now or never!"
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