Piako Post

Fay Harbottle inspired many dancers

- SANDRA HUNTER

Obituary: Fay Pearl Harbottle January 8, 1934 – September 15, 2016

It has often been said of Fay Harbottle that she was probably born wearing dancing shoes.

It is certainly the case that dance was central to her life for over seven decades. She spent about six of those years teaching aspiring ballerinas, character tap, jazz ballet, ballroom, Latin American and highland dance pupils.

Fay, born in Te Aroha, began dancing when she was three years old and it was to become her life’s passion. Given her brother George’s skills on the bagpipes, it is little wonder that she loved highland dancing.

Such was Fay’s early talent that parents Vera and Robert Young tackled the metal road to Auckland in their Austin-10 weekly, for years to ferry their daughter to dancing lessons with the famed Madam Valerie Valeska.

The young Fay was an able and dedicated pupil and, by the time she was 15, was teaching dancing in Te Aroha, as well as working full-time in the town’s shoe shop.

Fay was fully qualified by the time she was 18 and, at 19, met Leon Harbottle – also a piper – at a Caledonian Society dance.

As well as committed partners in life and marriage, Fay and Leon were fluid and graceful dance partners, winning the 1957 New Zealand Rhumba title at the Society of Australian Teachers of Dancing Championsh­ips.

Fay taught in many town and district halls, taking sons Mark and Brent out of school at 2pm on Mondays to travel to Te Aroha and her pupils there.

‘‘We didn’t get out of school work, though – we had to sing our times tables there and back,’’ said Brent.

‘‘In the school holidays we were lugged around the countrysid­e to competitio­ns.’’

Fay and Leon were both skilled and perceptive judges at the Australasi­an Ballroom Dance Championsh­ips and this enjoyable task took them to Sydney, Melbourne and Perth.

Thousands of dance pupils, including son Mark and Fay’s own two granddaugh­ters, passed through her studio over the years.

Leon died in 1995 and, much as she mourned her life and dance partner, Fay’s passion for teaching did not diminish. Her contributi­on to dance earned her life membership of the Royal Academy of Dance.

Fay is survived by her two sons and four grandchild­ren.

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