The Day

30 years in, Arthur Murray dances on

- By LEE HOWARD Day Staff Writer l.howard@theday.com

East Lyme — Jessica Megargle moved to town at age 17 to live with her grandmothe­r and take lessons at the Arthur Murray Dance Studio in downtown Niantic.

Five years later, she bought the place at the former location of a car repair shop with the help of a partner.

“I was a student for two years and taught for four years,” Megargle recalled this month during an interview at her Main Street business.

Her grandmothe­r Claudia Post, she said, “saw the spark in my eyes” and encouraged her ballroom dancing despite Megargle having only a couple of years of ballet under her belt.

“It wasn’t too late to start,” she said.

She found a partner in 2008 to buy the business, she said, because the Arthur Murray franchise has a rule that a studio owner must be at least 25 years old. But two years ago she bought out her partner to become sole owner.

Now, the studio is gearing up for its 30th anniversar­y celebratio­n next Saturday, July 1. The event will include four free one-hour workshops starting at 3 p.m., followed by a ribbon cutting at 7:30, and the Rock and Soul Review Band playing until 11 p.m.

“We’ll be dancing through the night,” Megargle said.

And that’s nothing new for the Arthur Murray studio, which regularly invites walkins to come out and enjoy an evening of dance for $15. And lest anyone get the wrong impression, Megargle said the Niantic studio may be the only one in the state that regularly has more men than women drop in — plus, three of the seven dance instructor­s are male.

Megargle said she is hoping to bring back the allure of ballroom dancing in an era when manners and romance seem to be on the wane.

“There is a connection dancing with partners that doesn’t exist when dancing with yourself,” she said.

One of the main motivators of taking dance lessons, Megargle said, remains couples wanting to improve their moves for upcoming weddings and cruises. Empty nesters whose children have all left for college and people looking to add a spark to their marriage also are often attracted to ballroom dancing, she said.

Some of the favorite dance steps these days include the West Coast swing and Zouk, a Brazilian street dance. The Niantic studio teaches more than 20 of the 30 favorite ballroom dances, Megargle said, and she estimated about 15 percent of her clientele enjoys competitiv­e dancing.

“We travel a lot for competitio­ns,” she added

Megargle said the studio does a ton of private lessons, which cost $98 an hour, but it also has group lessons at $15. While the studio used to charge by the month, it now offers drop-in dancing and parties to entice more people to see what they’re missing.

Megargle said a common concern is finding enough time in a busy week to enjoy dancing, but she pointed out that even local doctors have decided to work Arthur Murray into their schedules.

“If you find something you love, you make the time,” she said. “This, to them, is their therapy.”

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Students Brent Hostetler, right, and Nina Franco work through new moves during a Tango Class on Thursday at the Arthur Murray Dance Studio on Main Street in Niantic.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Students Brent Hostetler, right, and Nina Franco work through new moves during a Tango Class on Thursday at the Arthur Murray Dance Studio on Main Street in Niantic.
 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Dancers move through practice during a Tango Class on Thursday at the Arthur Murray Dance Studio on Main Street in Niantic. The business is celebratin­g its 30th anniversar­y on July 1.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Dancers move through practice during a Tango Class on Thursday at the Arthur Murray Dance Studio on Main Street in Niantic. The business is celebratin­g its 30th anniversar­y on July 1.

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