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Movement Play – “The Show Off Show”

At Movement Play on Saturday we had “The Show Off Show”. I’m not sure if I wanted to participate or if it preferred to be a passive observer but Rosie asked me to do it and I was easily swayed. I was ambivalent about performing but a little nudge and I was on board.

Apprehensively, I signed myself up on the little clip board. My apprehension stemming from the insane level of talent that had participated the year before. This talent show was not not your average talent show; nearly all the participants were professional performers sharing their skill. On top of that, I’m at a “micro-festival”, as Rosie likes to call it, full of hoopers. I had the feeling that me hooping for hoopers at a talent show, at a hoop festival was just a little arrogant and performing for Anah, Christabel, Rosie, Jasmine, Dawn, Jamie and many of the other hoopers that I hold in high regards, always ups the anxiety level. Despite that, Anah and Rosie performing helped me give myself the permission to put all the internal dialogue aside and I went for it.

Then I had to decide what to perform with?!? One full-size hoop? Double minis? Double mini fire hoops? The obvious choice seemed a full size single and demoing all the isopop stuff. I know others love to see that but I feel it would be limiting to continue performing that realm of movements all the time. I’ve been very into my double mini’s lately, especially the moves I call “unified axial isolations”. I want to share that stuff. I’m also really into these linear isolations that I can’t do very well but conceptually excite me. Then again…. I could firehoop. Crowds love fire. It’s a crowd pleaser every-time. It’s not my passion though. In the end, I decided to start with double minis for the first two minutes, then move on to a single hoop.

I chose one of my favorite tracks, Cockney Violin by Caspa. It’s an older track with an asian violin and heavy dub baseline, perfection if I’ve ever heard it. It’s melodic with the whomp that makes me move with passion.

As it came time to perform, I warmed up outside the performance area. I’ve recently found that I perform best when I keep my mind completely off the fact that I’m going to be performing. I ignore all aspects other than knowing when I go on. This time, the order got switched up and Rosie called me up one act ahead of time. It actually worked well for me because I had no time for nerves. I yanked my shirt off and ran on stage, having not even planned the exact placement of my hoops for the transition from doubles to single.

As I stepped on stage, my hooping went into autopilot. I’ve repeated every single motion 1000′s of times now. It feels funny that on stage I felt no flow and I almost didn’t feel the hoop. I was aware of the audience and that I was guiding the motion of the hoop. The intricacies of the moves disappeared completely. I’ve heard people talk about how they channel a higher energy while performing. This is the closest I’ve come to that feeling though autopilot is a more exact description of my experience.

When I stepped off stage I didn’t really know how the hooping went. I was aware that I had evoked a strong audience reaction and that I pulled everything off but it all felt mildly disconnected. I immediately went to Lauren. Lauren always holds the outside perspective for me. Without her, I couldn’t do anything. So when she said I nailed the performance I knew it went well. Lauren said the performance was the best she’d ever seen me do. Christabel and others said the same.

It was surreal and exciting experience. Each new performance gives me new insight to what it means and what it takes to perform. I always feel an indebtedness to my audience for them allowing me to perfrom and I strive to live up to that. I’m stoked that this time I did.

Facebook comments:

  • http://www.hoolamonsters.com Abby

    Congrats, Rich. Sounds like a positive experience. Hopefully I’ll be able to join you all at Movement Play next year. I was bummed that I couldn’t be there – looks like an amazing event.

  • http://hoopgoddess.wordpress.com Ariane

    Interesting. The autopilot I experience when hooperforming always feels like a negative thing. Are you saying it’s the ultimate flow moment for you, transcendent? Do you want it to be more like this in the future, or do you want to be more present/aware? This stuff fascinates me.
    *ps* i am of course chagrined to have missed seeing it live. Looking fwd to videos….

  • rich

    Not the ultimate flow moment it was more like the ultimate absence of the feeling of flow. I wouldn’t place a value judgment on it. It didn’t feel immediately rewarding like flow but it worked for the audience. Do i want to be more like this in the future? Hmmm…. I wish I could perform that well every time but performing still feels like something I do for the audience rather than for myself. I guess that is how it should be. I see some people who get on stage and love the limelight. I don’t mind it but I don’t have the same immediate jubilation.

    I’m getting way off track now and this really should be another blog entry but a large part of the reason I perform is to diversify the expectations of what a hooper is. Andy from Table Nectar helped Grant and I construct a shade area at Movement Play. We were being guys: ropes, caribiners, extension ladders. Andy didn’t know Grant hooped. An hour later Andy saw Grant in some frilly panties rockin it with his hoop. Andy said that it totally blew is mind that a man like that could move like that. I had the same experience the first few times I saw Grant hoop.

    Performing is the ultimate opportunity to share that mind melt moment. By getting on stage with an audience, I get to break their stereotype of what a hooper is. Nonhoopers have a constantly reinforced stereotype of what it is that we do.

    ( I guess there are two stereotypes actually. The uninitiated are still thinking 50s hooping or kids hooping. Those who’ve seen modern hooping are often thinking hoop performers are attractive women in skimpy clothing, wearing leg warmers and a wig.)

    I mean no disrespect if that is someone’s authentic expression but I get a pretty big kick out of breaking that expectation every time I step on stage.

  • http://shantistudios.com Kira Trinity

    you did rock. despite your self judgments and apprehensions beforehand, you absolutely rocked my world (and everyone else’s). one of the most important things i’ve learned about performing over the years is that enjoying the experience is the most important thing you can do. worrying about your skills is pointless, because autopilot kicks in and whatever you’ve practiced up until that point is what’s going to come out. so all that’s left for you to do is simply enjoy being up there.

    you’re an inspiration, rich :)

  • http://twitter.com/kentbye Kent Bye

    Awesome performance.

    It’s interesting how some of the experiences we feel internally are a lot different from how other people perceive them — like the how the crowd-pleasing moves may feel fairly mundane internally and the technically challenging ones fall flat.

    Then there’s the other element of avoiding the extremely risking moves for fear of breaking the flow, and you end up in a little box. Anyway, I haven’t done any performing beyond friends and family, and so I’m curious to hear if you ran into that as well.

  • Jessica Wagstrom

    I think I saw this post way back but for some reason either didn’t read it or didn’t comment. It’s extra interesting to me now since I started performing (for very small audiences in a very cramped location, ceiling-wise) a few months ago.

    I think what Kent said holds very true for me, since I haven’t even been hooping a year yet, so I have to curb what I would normally play with during practice if I’m performing for people who expect me to be at least semi “professional”. The first time I performed, I went for the one shoulder move which I’d done repeatedly in practice and thought I had down, and I ended up flinging the hoop into the audience, so I guess nerves also have to be taken into account, IE: What level of difficulty can your nerves handle? And it also showed me I need to practice a LOT more. I thought I sucked, but the audience thought it was the greatest thing ever, and the girl I hit with the hoop told me she was thrilled to get to touch the hoop, ha. :) (This was an audience full of people who were used to seeing belly dance but had never seen hoop dance.)

    Anyway, I love that you try to push the envelope, I show your videos everyone who takes even the slightest bit of interest in hooping, so they can see how many different and unique styles and techniques there are out there. I’m never sure if they’re as impressed by it as I am, but then most of them have never tried to do an isolation themselves!

    This has gone on too long, I’m shutting up now. :)