Los Angeles Times

25 years on, kids step to success with a dedicated crew

Young dancer’s legacy lives on in grooving students at Gabriella Charter Schools.

- By Kimberly Aguirre

The Angelus Temple megachurch in Echo Park was the unlikely venue (and largest to date) for the Gabriella Charter Schools’ year-end dance recitals.

Friends and family packed the 5,300-seat, threestory theater for two performanc­es on a Saturday in June that transporte­d them from California’s redwood forests and Central Valley farms to the schools’ home of Los Angeles.

Sixth-grader Annabelle Soriano took the stage as a voice-over in English and Spanish told the story — inspired by José Cruz González’s play “Two Donuts” — of a Guatemalan American girl who doesn’t see the beauty in her L.A. neighborho­od.

So in her dreams, she embarks on an adventure through the Golden State in search of meaning. Students explore California through classic dance styles including tap, hip-hop and ballet mixed with moves popularize­d on TikTok and by the video game “Fortnite.”

Audiences lined Glendale Boulevard hours before the two performanc­es. Rhonda Baldenegro, executve director of Gabriella

Charter Schools, said this is the norm for the schools’ annual recital — even though it’s only their second in-person performanc­e since the COVID-19 pandemic.

The event’s popularity is a testament to Liza Bercovici’s decades-long commitment to dance education.

Bercovici, a former attorney, founded an after-school dance program for low-income communitie­s in 1999 in honor of her 13-year-old daughter, Gabriella Axelrad, who was killed that year by a distracted driver while bicycling during a family vacation. Gabriella was a dancer and dreamed of becoming a teacher.

In 2005, the program grew into a charter school

for students from kindergart­en through eighth grade. The Echo Park campus that is now its home opened in 2009 and spawned a second location in South L.A. in 2017. About 400 students are enrolled at each school.

Twenty-five years later, Gabriella’s legacy lives on.

“We serve a pretty impacted population, and any experience that can be offered them that enhances their lives, to me, is just really, really important,” Bercovici said. “We as an organizati­on have made this commitment to provide arts and dance at a very high level and a very frequent level, and that’s very atypical.”

Baldenegro said Gabriella Charter Schools is one of the few public schools in the country to teach dance as a part of the curriculum multiple days a week. For many of its low-income students, it’s their sole opportunit­y for formal dance training.

Even after their recital, as summer vacation loomed, the kids kept dancing.

For five students, that will continue through the summer at the Theatrical Education Group’s Summer Arts Conservato­ry at the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts.

While enrollment costs more than $1,200, Gabriella students received full-ride scholarshi­ps.

GCS dance instructor Antavius Ellison was the catalyst in connecting the school and the program.

“The more I’m able to introduce [students] into those spaces now lets me feel like, ‘Hey, you’re doing your job. You didn’t have this growing up and now you’re able to pay it forward [in] a very hopeful way,’ ” said Ellison, a profession­al dancer who’s appeared in music videos for SZA and Hozier.

“I feel like that’s one of my purposes for being at GCS right now . ... I take it as a sign from God that you are doing just what you need to do.”

One of the conservato­ry scholarshi­p recipients is rising eighth-grader Madison Pinon, whom Ellison personally selected. He calls her his “little assistant-mentee.”

“As soon as she found out, I’ve never seen that smile,” said Madison’s mother, Berlin Pinon. “[It was] ear to ear that whole weekend.”

The young dancer joined Gabriella Charter Schools in fifth grade. She hadn’t taken classes since she was 8. As her dance skills progressed, Madison began assisting Ellison in leading classes for younger students at the Echo Park campus.

The 13-year-old hopes to learn new styles of dance during the three-week program in July.

“In sixth grade, I discovered dance is something I can pursue in the future, something I can do for a living,” Madison said. “I feel like if I believe in the fact that I can — and in myself — I probably would be able to get there.”

Fifth-grader Nathan Sandoval is one of the scholarshi­p recipients from the South L.A. campus. His mother, Nora Martinez, was “in shock” when she found out about the opportunit­y.

“I feel so blessed because they see my son has talent,” she said. “These are achievemen­ts that he’s doing himself because he loves [dance].”

Martinez said the 11year-old was a born performer who finally shed his shyness at GCS.

“He always tells me before he goes onstage, ‘Mom, I’m doing this for you because you cheer for me and I know you’re going to like my dance,’ ” Martinez said.

Even as the COVID-19 pandemic forced schools into virtual learning, the dancing never stopped.

During the spring 2020 semester, dance instructor­s recorded videos for students to watch, said Echo Park principal Stephanie Piazza. The school still put on its recital — although that year’s took the form of videos stitched together of the students dancing at home.

“In a lot of places, the pandemic stopped stuff that schools had been doing. And we just were like, ‘No, this matters. This is important. We’re going to figure out a way to do it,’ ” Piazza said. “Anytime I see a clip of the [2020] performanc­e we did, it’s really emotional because we were all so lonely and sad, and we still found ways to connect like that.”

The schools’ commitment to dance earned them a California Pivotal Practice Award for innovation during the shutdown.

“Something I’m really proud of is that we never stopped doing any arts, even as budgets go everywhere all the time in California, that’s just because it’s our mission and vision that will never get touched,” Piazza said. “[Dance is] such a powerful way for kids to express themselves . ... It’s really amazing for kids, as young as 4 at our school, to have this other space where they can shine.”

Dance classes have been shown to help students’ physical and emotional wellbeing. In 2016, the Copenhagen Consensus Conference found that physical activity improves scholastic performanc­e and brain function. Meanwhile, children’s arts education has been linked to improved grades and attendance.

“We really, truly believe in sort of the transforma­tive power of dance and how it can help kids learn better and just be more competent, poised individual­s who have this great mind-body connection when it comes to learning,” Baldenegro said.

Walking through the Echo Park campus, everyone knows everyone else’s name. The common theme among students, family and faculty: a love for the community the schools have created.

“A lot of kids at my old school, they all kind of stick to their own group and they aren’t so happy,” Madison said. “But here, a lot of people are happy; they get really happy through dance.”

The schools’ dance classes mix classic cardio exercises such as jumping jacks and high knees with choreograp­hy. The students move to popular tunes from artists such as Kali Uchis and Harry Styles. One dance to Drake’s “Controlla” was choreograp­hed — and, for the first-grade class, led — by Madison.

Previously, Madison “stuck to choreograp­hy” that was familiar to her. She has since felt empowered to choreograp­h original dances in order to “express more” through her own movements, she said.

“I’ve seen a lot of growth within her, not only in her dancing skills — obviously with more practice that’s bound to happen — but just leadership skills and discipline. She really is committed and sets plans for everything,” Berlin said. “I can see she’s shaping up to be a great young woman.”

After the class concluded, two second-graders wanted to show off a dance they made up, complete with acrobatics.

“I couldn’t have paid them to have done that last semester,” Ellison said.

While the dance instructor­s at the schools are in charge of choreograp­hing the recital, Ellison said he makes sure to incorporat­e his students’ moves.

“I want to give my students more agency to be able to create because I feel like that allows them to be more confident within themselves,” Ellison said. “They are taking up space in a very healthy way . ... A space is given for them to trust in their natural abilities, and to understand that movements and creativity will always look different, based off the person, and there is no — to me — right or wrong way to move your body, to dance.”

 ?? Emann Mallorca ?? YOUNG performers dance at Gabriella Charter Schools’ “Cali Dreams” recital.
Emann Mallorca YOUNG performers dance at Gabriella Charter Schools’ “Cali Dreams” recital.
 ?? Heather Seybolt ?? KIDS show off their moves during Gabriella Charter Schools’ recent Golden State-themed dance recital.
Heather Seybolt KIDS show off their moves during Gabriella Charter Schools’ recent Golden State-themed dance recital.

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