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A PIVOTAL MOMENT
LOS ANGELES TIMES
ARTICLE ABOUT JOSIE NEGLIA AND DANCE PARTNER PETA SIDDALL
Monday, February 1, 1999
Home Edition
Section: Southern California Living
Page: E-1
PROFILE: Peta Siddall and Josie Neglia
A Pivotal Moment
The
time is ripe for a pair of Latin ballroom dancers who aim to make the big
leagues.
By: LISA RICHARDSON
TIMES STAFF WRITER
In a Newport Beach dance studio, where suburban matrons tango with clean-cut
teachers, a steamy session of sweat and passion rages.
It is a longing for stardom that pounds in every step,
as Peta Siddall and Josie Neglia, dance teachers and competition partners, lunge
and whirl to a paso doble.
Eyes glued to the studio's mirrored walls, their dance
is driven by events past and present--each step built on years of plies and
barre work, recitals in tutus for her and tights for him.
If they are to make a splash in the big leagues of
dance, if fame and recognition are to be theirs, the time is now. This month,
their competition season begins in earnest.
Only a year ago, Siddall found himself burned out,
with no desire to dance competitively. Instead, the man who had won numerous
international Latin ballroom dance championships devoted himself to coaching
others. That is, until Neglia, an old friend who had become known around
Southern California as the Salsa Princess, rekindled his love for competitive
dance.
For Neglia, 30, who left her partner to dance with
Siddall, the pairing vaults her into the big time. For him, it is a vehicle for
a riveting comeback. Win or lose, their dancing feels fresh and new.
As the paso doble ends in a flourish, the 31-year-old
Siddall, lean in black jeans and a Versace T-shirt, pulls Neglia's body to his
with a growl. She wraps 2-inch fingernails around his neck, then as she catches
his expression in a studio mirror, pants, "God, Peta, I'm almost afraid of
you when you do that."
He grins and says, "A paso doble is the man's
dance."
That they are dancing together at all is a huge gamble
in the staid world of ballroom dancing. Their partnership blends Latin ballroom
elegance with edgy street-based salsa.
For both, it is the dancing that matters most. It has
been each one's passion since childhood and a source of joy in life. Even the
rote repetition of steps cannot dim that thrill.
For years, they've lived like most professional
dancers: teaching, rehearsing, traveling and performing. They have spent 10- to
12-hour days on their feet giving private and group classes. At night, after
their own lessons and practice sessions, they massage sore feet and ankles to
ease the cramping.
It's worth it, they say, to be able to live their
passion.
"The gamble is that, at worst, we don't
win," Siddall said.
There is pressure on both of them, and they practice
ignoring it with the same diligence they use to perform their steps in perfect
tandem.
"I knew people were wondering, 'Who is this new
girl Peta is dancing with?' " said Neglia, who started jazz and modern
dance lessons at age 7.
She was in her teens when she began ballroom dance
lessons, and only because she spotted her mother's car parked outside a dance
studio in her hometown of Toronto. Inside, she found her mother whirling to the
lilt of ballroom music.
Neglia's eyes half close as she recalls the sensation
that such dancing gives her.
"To me, it's ecstasy . . . complete
fulfillment," she says. "Dancing brings out the womanliness in
me."
Siddall dances because he learned as a boy in his
native Manchester, England, that he can drown out the world when he performs.
"Most of the boys at school were playing soccer,
and there I was doing ballroom dancing," he said. "I took a lot of
heat for that.
"But dancing equalizes everything--haves and
have-nots, money, class, everything. I think we all want to be accepted, and
from the age of 11, that's where I'd get acceptance."
Siddall has had significant competition experience and
won acclaim in the Latin ballroom world. Neglia is widely viewed as one of Los
Angeles' premier dancers, almost a brand name in salsa circles.
A graduate of York University in Toronto with a major
in dance, Neglia has parlayed her top-notch teaching skills and "Baywatch"-style
good looks into instructional videos sold around the world.
Promoted on http://www.salsaweb.com,
the most popular salsa site on the Internet, her videos are in demand in Japan,
Norway, England and Germany. Her company, DanceXitement, has grossed more than
$100,000 in sales.
Now, tapping into the worldwide craze for salsa
dancing, Siddall and Neglia are incorporating moves typically performed in dance
clubs into their Latin ballroom performance routines.
They rehearse in the morning before teaching duties
begin and often meet again after work and practice late into the evening.
Siddall always seems to be limber, no matter the time
of day. But Neglia starts a session with stretches. As a warmup, they run
through five complete dance styles--cha-cha, samba, rumba, paso doble and
jive--then break each one down into component parts. It is grueling physical
work. World-class athleticism shellacked with grace, smiles and sweat.
Usually they count aloud, dancing without music.
Practices at this level are less about learning steps
than making the performance sizzle. Each pants out "sorry" when making
a misstep as they samba counterclockwise around the room.
They treat each other gently. Criticism and
corrections when dancing are proffered as suggestions and ideas.
They also study film of dancers they admire, and each
practices alone to perfect the tiniest movements.
In the studio, Neglia even spends hours polishing the
way she walks. Keeping both feet in contact with the floor, she caresses the
wood with the tips of her toes until one foot slides down in front as she moves
in a rumba walk. She does this hour after hour.
More hours are devoted to sharpening the point of her
toes.
Salsa is danced with bent knees and loose feet. Latin
ballroom, by contrast, requires straight, tall lines. She must point her toes to
create an elongated leg line, one that stretches up through the pelvis and
supports the lift of her abdomen and back.
Weeks later, apologies during practice are few. They
have met the challenge and woven two very different styles into a believable
romance.
Neglia is sultry and sinewy, seeming to uncoil more
than walk with every step.
Lean, sharp and classical down to his pinky ring,
Siddall explodes when he moves. At their best, her dancing contains a promise,
his a demand.
Their focus now is on the finer details--the dramatic
fling of an arm, a quick caress to finish a move, the desire lingering in their
eyes.
"An audience that sees professional Latin dancers
in action should always be left wondering if the couple are sleeping
together," Siddall said, affirming his belief in an old dance adage that
the man is the frame and the woman is the picture.
Both dance socially only rarely, virtually never with
strangers. When you're part of a dance couple, dancing with a novice can feel
like torture, Siddall said. He quickly he takes it back. "No, it's not
torture, but it feels like work."
The two of them go out together regularly--for drinks
at the posh Sky Bar on Sunset Boulevard or out to the Gate in West Hollywood.
In her spare time, Neglia spends hours on the Internet
updating her Web site and managing her video business. Working from her Long
Beach home, she is a self-described computer geek.
Siddall unwinds by crooning Frank Sinatra and Tony
Bennett tunes at least once a week in Southland karaoke clubs.
Neglia works out regularly with weights to stay in
shape. Siddall plays a little tennis. She eats three meals daily and never
snacks. He stops eating to dance, snacking on chips and chocolate, huge roast
beef subs and soda. Still, he is whippet lean.
"I've always been like this," he said,
eating a handful of Raisinets one evening while chatting with Neglia at her
condo.
Occasionally, to gauge the reception to their work,
they unleash their dancing in public, as in a recent occasion at the Mayan
nightclub in downtown Los Angeles.
The Mayan, where Neglia has been a teacher for four
years, is without doubt, the city's powerhouse salsa club.
For nine years, the Mayan has been drawing 1,500
dancers on Fridays and Saturdays to revel in its pre-Columbian decor.
The crowd makes room for them. Salseros, who take
their dancing very seriously, are torn between ogling Neglia and studying
Siddall's moves. They pay the highest compliment by stopping to watch.
A few weeks later, a truly critical eye scours their
dancing for flaws.
Nadia Eftedal, a world-champion Latin ballroom dancer
and one of their coaches, sees arms gesturing unnecessarily and steps where
there should be none.
She drills the pair beat by beat, measure by measure,
step by step.
They start and stop. Again and again, she shows them
what she wants.
"I need some sort of reaction," she tells
Siddall, whose face has not reacted to one of Neglia's moves in a way that
satisfies her. "You're standing there sort of unaffected."
Neglia is taking too many steps in the cha-cha.
Powerful dancing creates tension by containing steps and gestures, Eftedal
explains. "What happens is you kind of lose a little bit of attitude."
Finally, they please her.
"Better, that's better. That's it!"
Soon they will know what the dance world thinks of
their pairing. With shows, competitions and trials coming up in the next few
weeks, they leave the shelter of the studio floor for international scrutiny.
In the flurry of competitions large and small, the duo
will be spending weekends in hotels from Tokyo to Toronto, building a reputation
as a couple that excels consistently. The first tests will be Friday at the
Mayan and Feb. 12 at Los Angeles' Century Club.
There is a trick to diffusing the pressure: Focus on
the joy of dancing.
"The world is full of rules telling you what to
do--stop at this light, go at that one. Do this, but don't do that,"
Siddall said. "Only when you're on the dance floor is there total freedom
to do whatever you want."
PHOTO: (2 photos) Peta Siddall and Josie Neglia, lower
left,
demonstrate a move for students at the Mayan nightclub in Los Angeles,
left, where Neglia has been a teacher for four years.
PHOTOGRAPHER: AL SCHABEN/Los Angeles Times
PHOTOGRAPHER: AL SCHABEN
Type of Material: Profile
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