The Mercury News

Asian immigrants felt ballroom was a haven

Many of the elderly `are traumatize­d by this,' profession­al dancer says

- By Matt Pearce and August Brown

When a gunman fatally shot 11 people and wounded nine others in Monterey Park over the weekend, it was more than just the latest tragedy in America's horrific mass-shooting epidemic.

The gunman attacked the Star Ballroom Dance Studio, one of the bestknown hubs of the vibrant Asian American ballroom dance community in Southern California — a longtime haven for older immigrants, the kind of place where they knew they would be welcomed.

“In Asia, ballroom is an incredibly popular sport and social dance,” said Marisa Hamamoto, a profession­al ballroom and salsa dancer in L.A. who had been to Star on occasion.

“Ballroom is one big activity where Asians are able to gather and meet people with that shared experience. It's a place to find belonging and connection,” Hamamoto said. “Many Asian Americans are traumatize­d by this. When we started seeing photos of victims, we can't help but feel like these people are our parents and grandparen­ts. Especially after all the phobia during COVID, it's triggering.”

All of the victims slain at the ballroom studio — who included immigrants from Taiwan, China and the Philippine­s — were in their 50s, 60s or 70s. Yutian Wong, a professor at San Francisco State University's School of Theater and Dance who specialize­s in Asian American dance studies, said her father, a 70-something Malaysian immigrant, probably would have been at the ballroom when the shooting happened Saturday night if he hadn't been dropping off a relative somewhere else.

“It's pretty horrible. That's the thing. You just imagine these places that are thought of as safe community spaces, where one isn't going to be harassed,” Wong said. “I know a lot of people think, `Ballroom dancing, it's so odd, why do Asian people like it?' But it's been a big, thriving community for a long time.”

The once strictly European practice of ballroom dancing long since has internatio­nalized and taken on a life of its own, with dancers of all ages and nationalit­ies finding joy, community and a healthy workout in swaying through the waltz, the foxtrot, swing and rumba. “Dancing with the Stars” was a staple of ABC's programmin­g for more than 30 seasons before recently moving to Disney+. California ballroom competitio­ns can draw hundreds of competitor­s of every ethnicity.

But ballroom dancing has especially been a draw for older immigrants in Southern California, not only as an art form popular in their countries of origin but also one that's embraced, recognized and accessible in the U.S.

“Lots of immigrant communitie­s — Chinese, Vietnamese, Filipino — have ballroom dance studios,” said Carolina San Juan, director of graduate mentoring for the academic advancemen­t program at UCLA, who did her master's thesis on Filipino American ballroom dancers. “It's ours. Ballroom dancing belongs to us, and when I say us, I mean all immigrants. Lots of immigrant communitie­s, not just Asians.”

A 2007 scholarly article from the Journal of Asian American Studies noted that although dance studios are “ubiquitous” across Southern California, only a few existed expressly for internatio­nal-style ballroom dancing, with the largest located in Asian American enclaves such as Monterey Park — a city several miles east of downtown L.A.

“Interestin­gly, none of these studios exist in Los Angeles' fashionabl­e Westside or in the Santa Monica or Malibu areas,” wrote the article's author, George Uba. “One triangular sector of the Asian-populated San Gabriel Valley has more of these large internatio­nal dance studios than does all of Orange County.”

In an email, Uba, a professor emeritus and former department head of English at Cal State Northridge, said older Asian immigrants go ballroom dancing primarily for the exercise, to socialize and for “the aesthetic properties of the dance.”

“Dance studios like Star and Lai Lai with their afternoon tea dances and evening dance `parties' are not only filled with AAPI dancers but are primarily devoted to the social dancers, not the competitio­n-level internatio­nal-style dancers,” Uba said.

Ballroom dancing experience­d a surge in popularity with middleaged profession­als in both Asia and the U.S. at the end of the 20th century, helped by televised competitio­ns and films.

The 2004 American ballroom dancing movie “Shall We Dance?” starring Richard Gere, Jennifer Lopez and Susan Sarandon was actually a remake of a more well-received 1996 Japanese film of the same name, starring Koji Yakusho as an adrift office worker who decides to take up ballroom dancing.

The original “Shall We Dance?” swept top film awards in Japan, where some ballroom dancing competitio­ns at the time could draw as many as 20,000 spectators.

Ballroom dance also had grown popular in other Asian nations, such as the Philippine­s.

Minn Vo, 46, who runs a jazz dance ensemble called Hollywood Hotshots, knew the slain owner of the Star Ballroom, Ming Wei Ma, 72, and paid tribute to the welcoming space that Ma had fostered at the Star Ballroom for all sorts of dancers.

“He was really passionate and generous,” Vo said. The club “brought the community together. Rich, poor, there was no class there. It was Asianowned but really diverse. This is so really devastatin­g. All my memories from there now are gone.”

 ?? KRISTINA HAYES VIA AP ?? The owner of Star Ballroom Dance Studio, Ming Wei Ma, center, a victim of the Monterey Park mass shooting, is seen with community members during a dance event in July 2021.
KRISTINA HAYES VIA AP The owner of Star Ballroom Dance Studio, Ming Wei Ma, center, a victim of the Monterey Park mass shooting, is seen with community members during a dance event in July 2021.

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