Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Ballroom Dancing - Not As Easy As It Looks

From the Chicago Tribune:

By Jeannine Stein

The show [Dancing With The Stars] is about dancing, for heaven's sake. How dangerous can it be? Consider this: Before Season 8's "Dancing With the Stars" debuted last week, two celebrity contestants were already on the injured list and off the program."Access Hollywood" co-anchor Nancy O'Dell suffered a torn meniscus, requiring surgery, and singer Jewel sustained fractures in both tibiae (shinbones). But wait, there's more: In the current cast, actor Gilles Marini reported a left shoulder injury, and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has injured his foot, according to an ABC representative, and was recently photographed wearing a removable cast. And ballroom might have gotten the best of Steve-O, survivor of innumerable outrageous "Jackass" stunts. In a statement he released last week, dancing might be responsible for torn muscles causing inflammation and pinched nerves in his back.

They join a growing and almost alarming list of the show's previous celebs-turned-dancers who have been injured during practice, rehearsals or taping: Olympic volleyball player Misty May-Treanor ruptured her Achilles' tendon, actor Christian de la Fuente ruptured his biceps, actress Susan Lucci sprained her ankle and singer Marie Osmond fainted onstage.

As Jewel hobbles on crutches and May-Treanor continues rehab, viewers are left wondering what the heck is going on. Injuries aren't racked up this fast on "Survivor," with its camping and wilderness shtick, or "The Biggest Loser," which looks to be torturing the morbidly obese. This is only ballroom dance, right?

The "only" is the rub. Don't be blinded by the blinged-out costumes. The discipline is far more demanding—both physically and mentally—than most people realize, even for the fittest competitors. Champion dancers make it look effortless, but the audience never sees the years of blood, sweat and training."

A lot of people come into the sport and think it's so easy, that anyone can do this," says Efrosyni Iosiphidis, a Rhode Island-based champion ballroom dancer. "I'm not going to go out on a football field and think I can play football. When I ask people to do it with me, they realize it's much more difficult than they thought. The goal is to make it look easy and fun."

Celebs go from zero to 60 when they begin working out, training several hours a day (often in high heels) for about four weeks leading up to the show, then continue training during it. The regimen is more intense than that for beginners or even pros, putting enormous demands on bodies and psyches (witness Denise Richards' mini-meltdown during a practice session with partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy). It's a perfect formula, say health experts, for overuse injuries. One misstep or mind-wandering moment, and pop! There goes that tendon.

Even for those in peak physical shape, practice is arduous, taxing less-used muscle groups and forcing new movement patterns.

"I knew it was going to be hard but not that hard," says May-Treanor, who was at the top of her form and fresh from the Summer Olympics when she started training for Season 7 last fall. "Physically I felt good, but [dancing] lets you know your weaknesses, like body control."

The injuries could almost be expected, says Ken Richards, vice president of DanceSport for USA Dance, which is the national governing body of DanceSport, the competitive version of ballroom dance. Ballroom dancing isn't the same, physically, as running on a treadmill, jumping around during aerobics or even dancing by yourself."

Moving with a partner takes a different kind of coordination, and that may be taking [contestants] into a different comfort level," he says.

The difficulty factor ratchets up when you add dancing in hot, restricting tuxedos or skimpy costumes and elaborate head wear; having stage fright; learning complex choreography; looking graceful; and keeping the beat while smiling. Oh, and those heels: It's one thing to walk in them, quite another to rumba.

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