Marlborough Express

Dancer to feature on show about following dreams

- CHARLIE GATES

Joshua Guillemot-Rodgerson dances for up to 10 hours a day and has calluses on the soles of his feet and toes.

The Christchur­ch dancer is understood to be the first New Zealander to be accepted by the prestigiou­s Juilliard School in New York City.

He said the intense training over the past three years had changed his feet.

‘‘We dance barefoot so you get big calluses on your toes and on the soles of your feet,’’ he said.

‘‘We like them, because they help you with grip and turning on your feet, but they look pretty gruesome.

Guillemot-Rodgerson started dancing when he was 4 years old, won a scholarshi­p to an arts academy in Michigan when he was 13, and became one of 24 dancers to be accepted to Juilliard at the age of 17 in 2013.

He will feature in a TV One show next week about Kiwis following their dreams. He is in his final year at Juilliard and contemplat­ing his future after graduation in May.

‘‘I’m still very nervous about what might lie ahead after leaving the safety of an education setting. I will have to live in the real world with real life problems and power bills and things like that,’’ he said.

His training extends to learning how to sit and walk best to avoid injury.

‘‘We change patterns in our walking or sitting to help sustain our bodies over long periods of time. Injury can happen in the studio but it can just as easily happen if you are running for a taxi or something. It can happen at any time. So we micro manage every physical aspect of daily life.

‘‘I try to keep one day over the weekend where I am not doing anything too physical. I feel like one day a week rest from dance is good.’’

Even though he lived in Michigan for three years, it was still a culture shock moving to New York City.

‘‘My first year in New York was probably the most homesick I have been since I moved away. It is so different, there is hardly any grass and all these tall buildings. I live on the 28th floor of my residence hall. I don’t think I had been in a house more than two storeys before coming here and now I’m 28 storeys up.

‘‘It’s a very dreamy place, but I miss the quietness I can find at home..’’

He has funded the four-year course with the support of his family, scholarshi­ps, grants from foundation­s and fundraisin­g concerts.

‘‘I come from a household with a single mother and my first few years were very draining on my family, but they supported my dream. The community around me has been fantastic. I have always felt very anchored to New Zealand because of that.’’

 ??  ?? Joshua Guillemot-Rodgerson will feature on a TV show next week about Kiwis following their dreams.
Joshua Guillemot-Rodgerson will feature on a TV show next week about Kiwis following their dreams.

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