In a one-room studio tucked down an alley in Burbank, 4 dancers spin in unison round an orange-walled room. Two on foot and two in wheelchairs. It’s late and it’s sizzling — the AC is busted. However their unrelenting positivity and persistence are in full drive as they put together for a music video shoot.
They’re members of Infinite Circulation Dance, which employs disabled and ... Read More
In a one-room studio tucked down an alley in Burbank, 4 dancers spin in unison round an orange-walled room. Two on foot and two in wheelchairs. It’s late and it’s sizzling — the AC is busted. However their unrelenting positivity and persistence are in full drive as they put together for a music video shoot.
They’re members of Infinite Circulation Dance, which employs disabled and non-disabled dancers of various identities.
Infinite Circulation founder and CEO Marisa Hamamoto has spent her whole life dancing. She suffered a spinal stroke in 2006 throughout a rehearsal, which initially left her paralyzed from the neck down. She walked out of the hospital two months later with a brand new grasp on life. “I saw the human body different,” she mentioned. “I saw dance different.” She additionally realized that there wasn’t sufficient entry for disabled dancers. One factor led to a different, and she or he based Infinite Circulation.
Since opening in 2015, Infinite Circulation has carried out at greater than 350 occasions, from Ok-5 college assemblies to 100-person flash mobs. Their movies have been seen greater than 100 million instances mixed throughout social media.
From poignant and gravity-defying duets to electrifying group routines, the dancers’ variations make their work uniquely lovely. Typically choreography is tailored to a wheelchair-friendly format, and different instances the wheelchair is the centerpiece of the routine. The other ways you possibly can transfer in a wheelchair — with the power to roll, spin and hold a decrease heart of gravity — create alternatives for progressive choreography that will in any other case be not possible.
“When working with such diverse bodies, you by default start to become more innovative and more creative than you would otherwise,” mentioned Phillip Chbeeb, an Emmy-nominated choreographer who has collaborated with Infinite Circulation on a number of events. “You’re developing a brand new set of vocabulary from scratch, which is a really cool experience as a choreographer.”
During the last 10 years, Infinite Circulation has grown right into a change-making behemoth that rests on 4 pillars: award-winning inclusive dance leisure, youth schooling, group constructing and dance instructor coaching for incapacity inclusion.
Infinite Circulation falls into step with an extended historical past of disability-driven innovation. The typewriter was invented for a blind lady to jot down letters in privateness. E mail was created so an engineer might talk remotely together with his deaf spouse. A software program engineer made the contact pad to accommodate his carpal tunnel.
Right this moment, about one in 4 People and 16% of the world inhabitants — 1.3 billion folks — reside with a incapacity.
The ball first acquired rolling on Infinite Circulation’s improvement when Hamamoto reached out to aggressive paraplegic bodybuilder Adelfo Cerame Jr. through Fb and requested if he’d be considering changing into her wheelchair dance companion.
Hamamoto mentioned she was initially terrified to bounce with Cerame however rapidly realized it wasn’t any completely different from dancing with anybody else. “When you’re dancing with someone, you see beyond the labels — whether it’s race, color, size, age, disability, sexual orientation,” mentioned Hamamoto. “Dance is the universal language, and it belongs to everyone. We all have different bodies; we all have different identities. We can all coexist together and create something beautiful.”
Infinite Circulation founding member Adelfo Cerame Jr. holds up dance companion Marisa Hamamoto from his wheelchair, showcasing his aggressive bodybuilding energy.
(Michael Hansel / Infinite Circulation Dance)
Infinite Circulation initially dubbed itself “a wheelchair dance company” and has since expanded to incorporate “just about anybody,” mentioned founding member and hip-hop dancer Mia Schaikewitz. A spinal AVM rupture left Schaikewitz paralyzed at 15. She mentioned a big a part of constructing the corporate was determining easy methods to dance with all kinds of dancers and our bodies.
Dwelling with a incapacity, “you learn how to problem-solve,” Schaikewitz mentioned. “There’s really not a limit unless you place a limit on yourself.” After being paralyzed, she went by way of a trial and error course of to “[make] the chair work for me.” After numerous journeys to House Depot in search of the correct materials to safe her ft to the chair’s footplate throughout dances, “I finally found the perfect Velcro,” she laughed. Due to her experimentation, everybody at Infinite Circulation now makes use of the identical adhesive.
Quick ahead to immediately: Infinite Circulation is finalizing its newest routine, “Back to the Boyband.” The piece was spearheaded by Danny J. Gomez, actor turned Infinite Circulation dancer, as a part of the “concept project” initiative, the place dancers execute initiatives with extra inventive freedom.
After 5 rehearsals, ample workshopping of the choreography and music (a mashup of boy band hits from over time) and stretching a bootstrapped finances, the mission got here to fruition. The routine, Gomez mentioned, got here out of his love — and maybe nostalgia — for boy band tradition, but additionally the dearth of illustration for disabled male dancers. “Most men, when they recover from an injury, turn to sports, not art,” mentioned Gomez, who’s paraplegic.
The “Back to the Boyband” solid — Dushaun Thompson, Danny J. Gomez, Travis Ammann and Mauricio La Fuente — strike a pose in the course of the closing video shoot.
(Colin Oh / Infinite Circulation Dance)
Fellow “Back to the Boyband” dancer Travis Ammann famous that loads of discuss in regards to the intersection of incapacity and dance “can be really serious. This is just boys having fun. It’s important for people to see.”
Infinite Circulation is proud to be primarily based in L.A., however the Hollywood backdrop has its cons. The business typically dismisses dancers due to their physique kind, ethnicity or race. Many are accustomed to being informed that they merely “don’t look the part,” mentioned Hamamoto.
“I felt bullied when I came to L.A.” Gomez mentioned. However beginning at Infinite Circulation felt “like I just rolled into this family.”
Infinite Circulation has nurtured a tight-knit group and is inclusive in additional methods than one. “The dance class culture in L.A. isn’t always very positive,” Hamamoto mentioned. “A lot of these dance classes feel more like an audition. It’s intimidating.”
“We eliminate all of that and say, ‘This is a safe space. If you’ve got a chronic illness and you need to rest, you can rest whenever you want.’ We have a way to teach people with various learning styles,” she mentioned.
There are loads of dancers in L.A. who wish to stand out and be seen, Schaikewitz famous. “We naturally stand out because we are different, but we’re just being ourselves.”
To have fun its tenth anniversary, the group launched a video Monday as half of a bigger marketing campaign to make use of dance as a car to advance incapacity inclusion. Hamamoto enlisted Chbeeb to collaborate along with her on a hen’s-eye view video, a format he has been exploring all through his profession.
Hamamoto initially envisioned a top-down view over 4 wheelchair dancers. Finally, the “Envision” mission developed into a contemporary piece impressed by director and choreographer Busby Berkeley — kaleidoscopic and filmed from above, with synchronized dancers forming geometric patterns. Infinite Circulation’s model featured 9 dancers, 4 of whom used wheelchairs and 5 who didn’t.
“There is really infinite — no pun intended — potential with utilizing wheelchairs in unique, different capacities that I don’t think necessarily have been used,” mentioned Chbeeb. “Particularly on the floor, which was a really fun, different way of approaching aerial view work.”
The dance firm is utilizing its anniversary — which additionally coincides with the thirty fifth anniversary of the People with Disabilities Act — as a possibility to look towards its vibrant future. “In the next 10 years, I definitely want to expand our filmmaking, our content creation,” Hamamoto mentioned. “On the stage side, I’m always thinking, ‘How can we be the Cirque du Soleil of what we do?’”
The group behind Infinite Circulation additionally has Olympic aspirations. “My hope is that we’re fully immersed and involved in the Paralympic and Olympic opening ceremonies,” mentioned Hamamoto. “At Infinite Flow, we are disability-led, specifically BIPOC disability-led. For anything on [the Olympics’] scale, it’s really important to have disabled people, disabled artists or anyone doing this work, to be at the forefront of making decisions.”
The solid and crew of the #ThisIsDance “Envision” video smile for a gaggle photograph after wrapping up filming the mission.
(Kenzo Le / Infinite Circulation Dance)
Hamamoto and Schaikewitz share a imaginative and prescient for the corporate’s future: to get to a degree the place Infinite Circulation isn’t thought of a “different” dance firm. “I hope all dance companies are as inclusive and so it really won’t be so unique. I see that, hopefully, for the world in general.”
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