Art Chowder May | June, Issue 21 | Page 42

Photo credit:  Scott Martinez Photography A nd in spite of all that, she turned out 75 top dancers!” The CPYB website lists more than 80 alumni who have gone on to such prestigious companies as New York City Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, Boston Ballet, and Pacific Northwest Ballet, among others: https:// www.cpyb.org/about/profile. Weary became one of the foremost dance instructors in the nation and her vision still drives the school: “Changing lives through dance.” Five years ago, Mimi adopted the CPYB’s syllabus for BAA because it spoke to her own dreams of teaching valuable life skills as well as developing technical strength and artistic development in young dancers. None of her own teachers had used a syllabus, and she considers her pupils especially fortunate to have one. She said it is, “So simple — almost like what the karate people do. 42 ART CHOWDER MAGAZINE They have the same sequence of steps they do every day, so they are constantly adding to it. There is such a logical way of putting all those steps together.” She sees the results in students who are advancing much more rapidly now. Swelling with pride, she considers some of her older students who began with her as small children. “I have waited all these years to see their beauty — they are gems,” she said. She pulls out a BAA promotional ad with a red-haired girl in a white dress. “Focused, Committed, Confident, Kind, Disciplined, Inspired, Healthy, Compassionate,” it read. Mimi believes the quality is observable. She noted a recent competition the girls had entered. “People saw,” she said. “They can dance classical, contemporary, flamenco, classical Spanish.” As pleased as she is with their skill of execution, she seems equally pleased with the quality of character they have developed. Aire, performance February 23, 2019 by Quiero Flamenco at the Bing Crosby Theater, Spokane, directed by Monica Mota. Monica teaches ballet, flamenco, and classical Spanish dance at BAA. “They were so kind to all the other kids,” she said. “They were telling them, ‘Good job!’” So what are her dreams at this juncture? “To have a very well-established and well-attended school, where it would be the place to come for many children — many, not just a few — to find thorough training, moral values, humbleness [sic]. That’s my dream school. I know I am there now, because that’s what parents want when they come here.”