4 photos byRemco van Blokland - Vida in Bata de cola, The Rose, Tiny Dots, and Arms in deep shadow
Vida. The very first workshop I took with Vida was in Chicago, and she was teaching a Tangos. I was slightly beyond a beginner level but hardly at an intermediate level, and the class was perfect. Of course, Vida’s husband, Jacco Muller, was accompanying the class, but I had no idea at that time what a special treat that was. (See my blog post on Jacco!)
There was this one arm movement that she taught in the choreography, an outward slicing movement about chest-high, and she described it as “like you’re slicing someone’s head off!” Wow! My now-ex-husband and I were going through some very rough patches, and I was liking this imagery! It was the first time that I connected dancing flamenco with my personal life. And I have never lost that connection, thanks to Vida.
What else can I say about the woman who has had the most influence on me as a dancer, who helped rebuild me physically after a serious back injury, and who showed me how beautiful it is to be a strong, powerful woman at a time when I was fumbling through my own divorce?
Vida first learned Sevillanas in Chicago in 1976, and she hasn’t stopped dancing full time since. She’s done it all: company dancer, principal dancer, soloist, and guest artist in companies ranging from the Paco Romero Dance Company in Barcelona to the Jose Greco Dance Company in New York, and in choreographies by none other than Jose Granero in Palma de Mallorca. She is a globe-trotting teacher and choreographer for solos, partners, and groups using manton, fan, bata de cola, cape, hat, baston, castanets… she even sews costumes for herself and her students in Amsterdam! Stylistically, she is strong, forceful yet controlled, and with a perfection of technique that fully manifests a goal that she once set for me: “Your technique should be so perfect that a photographer could capture you at any instant and you would never look awkward or ‘in between’ movements.” To this day, that is what I still strive for.
Vida has created performances and choreographies for everything from a rumbas-style pop song of a local artist at a concert for more than 10,000 fans to “La Vida Breve” with a full symphony orchestra to theater productions. And many, many of her choreographies owe their inspiration to musical arrangements by Jacco. For Vida’s full biography, check out her website: www.vidaperal.com
Vida has this gorgeous back and these exquisite arms that she herself describes as using like “the wings of a bird of prey.” They’re breathtaking. Well, towards the end of my year in Amsterdam, I was in a private class with Vida working on her siguiriya, the first one I had ever had, and a truly poignant piece. Then smack in the middle of our hour together, she asked me to run the choreography again, but “this time don’t dance like me.” When I picked my chin up off the studio floor and started breathing again, I thought to myself, But isn’t that why I’ve been here for a whole year? But in the next instant I realized what she was saying, what she was doing: she was letting me go, entrusting me with all of the technique she had taught me. In fact, she was pushing me off the edge of the cliff, knowing that I had grown a set of wings of my own that were strong enough to carry me – as me.
When I returned to Chicago, I had to perform a classical solo for the company I was still a member of, Teresa y Los Preferidos. It was the same solo I had performed a few years earlier, Ciro’s “Intermedio” from Enrique Granados’ “Goyescas.” At the company’s first rehearsal after my return from Amsterdam, Teresa, the director, had me run the number, and one of the men in the company, Miguel Salinas, said to me afterwards, “It shows that you spent the year with Vida. But you know what? Where it really shows is in your face.”
And that’s what it is, to dance like Vida.
Again, please visit her website www.vidaperal.com where her Amsterdam class schedule, student performance, and contact info are posted.
Vida will be in the States in June, July, and August – grab her while you can!