The Arizona Republic

SCORPIUS DANCE THEATRE: ‘DREAMING IN WATER’

- Reach the reporter at kerry.lengel @arizonarep­ublic.com or 602-444-4896.

When: 8 p.m. Saturday, April 13. Where: Chandler Center for the Arts, 250 N. Arizona Ave. Admission: $26-$36. Details: 480-782-2680, chandlerce­nter .org, scorpiusda­nce.com. Valley composers Ryan Breen and Kristofer Hill.

For the update, Starry and filmmaker Josh Kasselman shot all-new footage.

“We had to shoot a few months ago and it was still cold,” Starry says. “So trying to find a pool that was heated and deep enough was a little bit of a challenge, because I didn’t want to get my dancers sick.”

The troupe ended up at the Clarendon Hotel in Scottsdale, where they spent two full days experiment­ing with underwater movement. Some of the dancers had trouble with holding their breath, opening their eyes or just staying underwater without bobbing to the surface. But others got the hang of it quickly, including three-year member Gavin Sisson, who also serves as Scorpius’ aerial dance captain.

“The moment that your feet come off the ground, your body tends to move in different ways than you’re used to,” he says. “So being in the air is very similar to being underwater.”

There are some difference­s as well, however.

“Because you’re moving so slowly, you really have to articulate every muscle and stretch through everything, which really goes with hardcore ballet training,” he says.

Starry says she also needed new video of the child guide. The first time out, that role was played by her older son Christian, now 17.

“Christian was perfect,” she says. “He modeled when he was little, and he would just do whatever you want. He’d smile when you say smile.

“Now, Leo is totally opposite. He has autism spectrum disorder, so you have to navigate him very differentl­y. So Josh and I decided to film Leo in a more casual kind of way, where we would put him in these environmen­ts and we would film how he naturally responded to it. Because as soon as we tried to get him to act, it just would not work.

“We would have to do things to kind of trick him.”

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