During the weekend of April 19-21, Tango Pulse, a local group that promotes Argentine Tango, is sponsoring workshops for beginners, intermediate, and advanced tango dancers at the Lenox Community Center Ballroom at 85 Walker St.
The workshops will be taught by Carolina Zokalski and Diego DiFalco, who are prominent figures in the world of tango. They joined the original cast of the show Forever Tango, which was on Broadway in June 1997 for 14 months. The couple was nominated for a Tony Award for “Best Choreography†and the artistic image of Diego was used in all the show’s promotional materials. They have performed in more than 30 cities worldwide.
Friday’s workshop from 8 to 10 p.m. features an introduction to Carolina and Diego’s style. This will include position, connection to the floor and partner, balance, walking, and lead and follow. This workshop is open to all levels of dance experience. Afterwards, from 10 p.m. to midnight, there will be a practice where participants can take what they’ve learned and integrate it into their dance. Admission for the practice is $3 if reserved by April 1 and $5 at the door.
Saturday’s workshops will include two workshops for all levels. The first class from 1 to 2:15 p.m. will cover technique for men and women, and the other class from 2:30 to 3:45 p.m. will cover Argentine tango turns with different dance combinations. The last Saturday workshop from 4 to 5:15 p.m. is open to intermediate and advance dancers. Carolina and Diego will help attendees analyze the basic step using different possibilities to improvise and link steps.
Three workshops for the advanced tango dancer are scheduled for Sunday from 1 to 5:15 p.m. Technique, combinations, and improvisation will be the focus of Sunday’s classes.
After the workshops on Saturday, Tango Pulse will host a Argentine Tango Milonga (Party) in the ballroom with music provided by Tito Castro on the bandonson and Pancho Navarro on the guitar. Carolina and Diego will also give a tango performance. Admission is $15 if reserved by April 1 and $20 at the door.
There are several packages available for the weekend workshops. The entire weekend (not including the milonga and practice) is $150 preregistered or $185 at the door. Friday and Saturday are $105 preregistered or $125 at the door. The beginner package, which includes Friday’s workshops and two Saturday workshops, is $90 preregistered or $105 at the door. For more information on the packages that are available or for a registration form, please visit the Tango Pulse web site at www.tangopulse.net or call Jackie at 637-2026.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
Your Comments
iBerkshires.com welcomes critical, respectful dialogue. Name-calling, personal attacks, libel, slander or foul language is not allowed. All comments are reviewed before posting and will be deleted or edited as necessary.
No Comments
Study Recommends 'Removal' for North Adams' Veterans Bridge
By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Nearly a year of study and community input about the deteriorating Veterans Memorial Bridge has resulted in one recommendation: Take it down.
The results of the feasibility study by Stoss Landscape Urbanism weren't really a surprise. The options of "repair, replace and remove" kept pointing to the same conclusion as early as last April.
"I was the biggest skeptic on the team going into this project," said Commissioner of Public Services Timothy Lescarbeau. "And in our very last meeting, I got up and said, 'I think we should tear this damn bridge down.'"
Lescarbeau's statement was greeted with loud applause on Friday afternoon as dozens of residents and officials gathered at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art to hear the final recommendations of the study, funded through a $750,000 federal Reconnecting Communities grant.
The Central Artery Project had slashed through the heart of the city back in the 1960s, with the promise of an "urban renewal" that never came. It left North Adams with an aging four-lane highway that bisected the city and created a physical and psychological barrier.
How to connect Mass MoCA with the downtown has been an ongoing debate since its opening in 1999. Once thousands of Sprague Electric workers had spilled out of the mills toward Main Street; now it was a question of how to get day-trippers to walk through the parking lots and daunting traffic lanes.
The grant application was the joint effort of Mass MoCA and the city; Mayor Jennifer Macksey pointed to Carrie Burnett, the city's grants officer, and Jennifer Wright, now executive director of the North Adams Partnership, for shepherding the grant through.
Nearly a year of study and community input about the deteriorating Veterans Memorial Bridge has resulted in one recommendation: Take it down. click for more
The new thrift and consignment shop on Marshall Street is a little bit "Punky" with an eclectic mix of shiny, vintage and eccentric curated items. click for more
Federal pandemic funds made available during the Biden administration were critical to ensuring the continuation of Berkshire East, a major employer in the hilltowns. click for more