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tv   Kenyas Dance Discovery  BBC News  May 31, 2020 8:30pm-9:01pm BST

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hello, this is bbc news. the headlines... the government has defended the easing of lockdown measures in england from tomorrow, despite the country's covid—19 alert system indicating high levels of transmission. we're reasonably confident that the steps that we've taken, and will be taken on monday, are manageable. but we have to all continue to play our part in that. after ten weeks at home, more than two million people in england and wales who've been shielding during lockdown are told they can go outdoors.
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protests in the us over the killing of george floyd spread from minneapolis to at least 30 different cities, despite a number of curfews in place. riot police use tear gas and rubber bullets. on the beaches, how people and the authorities in the uk are dealing with the challenge of covid—19. and school's back for some pupils — primary schools in england get ready for socially distanced classes starting tomorrow. nasa astronauts doug hurley and bob behnken have docked with and entered the international space station. before the coronavirus lockdown, professional dancer joel kioko returned to his home city of nairobi, meeting dance students emerging from a thriving classical ballet scene in kenya, in kenya's dance discovery.
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one month since the coronavirus lockdown started, 19—year—old joel kioko completes daily ballet classes at his home in london, with instructions coming in from his teacher via zoom. demi—detourne. derriere. stretch out a little bit. switch davant fondu. second. let go of the bar. front reverse the port de bras... back in february, joel was taking his final classes at the english national ballet school and preparing for a major challenge — the leading role in romeo and juliet at the kenyan national theatre. with classical ballet, you're always learning something. that's how i see it — i don't know how other people see it — and especially for me, because i started late, i have so much to learn.
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joel has come a long way since his upbringing in the kuwinda slums, where his incredible talent was spotted. he's the first student from an emerging classical ballet scene in nairobi to train professionally in london. sometimes, when i am in class, i am like — i have never seen that before but i have to play with it because later on, i'll go into the studios and i'll play with a certain movement that i've seen that i've never seen before and i'll practice and i'll do until it will be perfect. but i think i'm comfortable to go out there and start dancing. i just want everyone to just get a job and dance. to reach this stage in the competitive ballet world has been hard work, and the dancers will take up places in international companies when the current isolation period ends. so our third years will be taking auditions for companies outside, so they would have finished,
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they would have got — they would get their diploma injuly, after a school performance. they are already auditioning for all sorts of different companies all over the world so, you know, in order to find a job. that's everybody. head of year and joel's tutor mr yow has guided them throughout. ok, so last time we got to see you doing nutcracker... this afternoon, the class rehearsed pas de deux. piano plays. it is quite scary for the students to go out there in the big world after being in a school for three years with the same friends.
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but once you're out there, you have to look after yourself. so we actually, as a school, try to prepare them for that. joel is one of our students. he is very professional. after hours of technical classes, later in the day the students get to practise their own choreography. third—year innis‘s piece is based on swan lake. five, six, seven, eight! you can choose any music and then you get four dancers — or more, if you want. i have three. i don't have a name for it yet but i've chosen indian music.
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it is based on contemporary and kathak. you need that... i need that passe. oh, wait, shouldn't we do this? we did a pas! yeah, yeah, we did it. this is the beginning. yeah. as well as the movements, joel is working out the soundtrack with his classmate ludmila. it's one of their last projects together before they leave college. it's a bit sad, because we've known each other for a long time and knowing that from next year, we're not going to have each other to come to talk to, so it's going to be very sad. as this chapter of their lives ends, the bonds formed during their halcyon days at college will stay with the students long after they have left. we are very close. we — i think we've grown more into, like, very good friends. when i first metjoel, it was so interesting to hear stories of, you know,
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where he'd came from. it is really quite amazing and inspiring how far he's come and how lovely he is as a person and a dancer. we share a passion. i think i've gotten closer with most of my school classmates. everyone has started getting close but in the beginning, because it was new competition, no—one really wanted to talk to anyone else, it's really lonely. sometimes you get homesick, i am not going to lie. sometimes, when i've been walking around london and i see a picture of my mum on facebook while i'm on facebook, and i am like, "oh, yeah, i miss my mum". yeah, i miss my mum." for three years, joel has been living with a london family, so he has four new surrogate sisters. but now, joel will soon be reunited with his family as he has been offered a unique opportunity
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to return to nairobi to play romeo, with the dancer who first discovered him playing juliet. it is going to be boiling all day long doing ballet. it's going to be emotional because we share so much and, especially with romeo and juliet, it's like — it's all about love. i know something good is going to be created. soon, joel will once again meet the dancers who discovered him as a boy. touchdown! so we're going to one of the studios, which is in hardy — that's where we're going — but we're going to rehearsal because we only have a week to put this on. romeo and juliet is being staged under the directorship of american ballet dancer cooper rust, who founded dance centre kenya. dance is taking over nairobi and even spreading beyond.
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the employment opportunities in the city that has 40% unemployment and now all of a sudden, there's dance teachers and it is an opportunity for people to make a living through dance and i am just as excited about training future dance teachers and having more of these little studios around nairobi and around kenya as i am about training dancers that are leaving kenya and going abroad, like joel. annabel shaw, playing juliet, from the northern and manchester city ballet is on hand to greet him. romeo and juliet is my favourite ballet. i think the score, prokofiev's music, isjust to die for. i think it's gorgeous. when cooper told me kind of, yeah, only five weeks ago, "oh, you're going to do romeo and juliet. you're going to be juliet. joel is coming but he is not arriving until a week before the show," i was kind of like, "oh, 0k!" the cast have already been
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rehearsing for three weeks asjoel arrives, with the opening night just seven days away. for now, i want you to get your tights and your dance pointe on. i don't have to put my tights, no? uh, yeah, we have rehearsal until seven. go ahead, next section. everybody go with your partners. michelle, you work with pamela, but michelle can help you discuss a lot. joel is thrown straight in at the deep end as the company begin rehearsals for the ball scene, where romeo falls forjuliet. i learned a lot of the choreography beforehand because at least, if one of you knows it, you've got at least something to fall back on. but what's really nice is that, because we do know each other so well, a lot of the figuring out has kind of already been done over the years, so a lot of the kind of partnership and predicting where the other is going to be and how we're going to fit together, we've kind of already done all of that, so that definitely makes it easier, as well. do it again. back up and set her back down.
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i would recommend not trying this the first time with a skirt on. 0k. joel and annabel have just six more days to learn a one hour and 50 minute ballet. let go of your dancers around... things do not always go quite to plan, even for experienced dancers like joel. so let's hear this musically, this whole section. step, up, up. dance. music playing. by the end of the first day, joel has already learnt the first pas de deux. i do not even think about it. i see it's just a dance — that's it. as long as i keep on repeating it,
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that's why we have rehearsals, it will be there. the movements, i have seen them, and that's — i think that is why i remember them. i have seen them before, you know the names, you know the terminology and i guess that is why it is easier to remember. through artists for africa, a charity set up by cooper, more children from the slums are hoping for a career in dance. cooper fosters eight of them, including 12—year—old michelle and 13—year—old lavender, who regularly travel to rehearsals after visits to their families in kibera. i'm from kibera slums, which is one of biggest slums in kenya, and i love it there because i was born there and i'm from there. and that is why i started dancing. you, like, have to do everything correctly, like, arms and put your legs where they are supposed to be but then africa is like, you are just free, you can do anything. for now, i want to be a professional dancer when i grow up,
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yeah, because i love it so much. keep them — it's very hard... withjoel as their role model, the young people cooper has fostered from the slums, and others like them, believe a career in dance and an escape from poverty is possible. joel's friend silas is the first certified male ballet teacher in kenya. it is a growth for me. i see it as a growth of talent and growth of art in our country, not only here at dck, but as a country at large. it shows that there is a bright future ahead. dance teachers going out into schools around nairobi through artists for africa are inspiring the next generation of children from the slums. 1,2 -i, 2... sometimes the kids come from slums, they have a lot in their heads so when they dance they free up their minds. the kids can choose what they want after a dance.
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maybe others want to be an engineer, maybe others want to take dance as a career. so it is up to us to show them the way. today the cast are learning the scene where tybalt kills romeo's friend mercutio and, in turn, romeo exacts his revenge and is banished from verona. five, six, seven, eight. one, two, three, four, down, up, down up. learning the fights is hard, not to mention the acting. you want him and them to be friends now after 20 years of hating each other. so don't grab it. na—uh—uh! it's even the fingers in the... don't. i'm serious. details matter. it's not fingers in front as if you're grabbing it. it's fingers in back as if you're saying "hey, excuse me". it's a very different gesture. as well as the fight scenes, joel must learn the harlot‘s dance
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with benvolio and mercutio. romeo &juliet - morning dance. when they're not in the main rehearsals, joel and annabel practice in a side studio. it has gotten on ok. tiring. but i'm getting there. almost done with, like, with the first act — almost finished. by the end of the third day, joel almost has the ballet done. this is absolutely insane. him learning all of romeo and juliet in three days. we've got about six
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minutes left here. an hour and 56 minutes or something like that. he just has a few minutes left to learn. and it'll be done this evening. with the castjust needing to fine tune their routines, joel is absolutely exhausted. getting the show onto the stage at the kenyan national theatre seems a long way off. finally, there's a break in rehearsals for romeo and juliet, so annabel is taking joel to visit his mother. it's going to be nice. have dinner. hang out with my mum. because i haven't done that in a while. mum! many of the families here were forced to relocate after a massive fire, including angela.
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angela has seen her son transformed since the days he started dancing. he told me he was going to dance and then he was dancing, everyday dancing. at first i wasn't taking it seriously. i didn't know that dancing was done for, maybe, for a career. joel regularly returns to kibera, where he used to give ballet classes to the children at the angel kindergarten. me teaching the kids was always fun, stressful sometimes, because i didn't know how they would react to it. you see them smiling, you see them happy. they are talking, they are dancing. i was very eager to learn in the beginning when i started doing ballet. it was through an outreach programme like this thatjoel first met
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annabel. we were both really young. i was maybe 11! and joel was 13 or 12. but i sort of spotted joel. he was always coming in, he was always on time, and he had this beautiful elevation and his long legs when hejumped. annabel decided to invite cooper rust in to seejoel dance. and immediately i sanoel. so i started home—schooling him so he could both learn to read and learn to dance. asjoel‘s skills increased, cooper secured an audition for him at the english national ballet school. she has pretty much changed a lot of lives. she's a mum to a lot of people. she's my best friend. whilejoel trained, he spent most of the time with his ballet friends at cooper's. these are home—grown zucchinis? yes. cooper's really amazing that she does all of that. i don't think i've met anyone else who can do such brilliance that she does.
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it really brings us together. emotionally we talk about everything. and we just really understand each other. so let's get everything cleaned up tonight and teeth brushed and ready for bed and we'll make some plans. cool? after dinner, cooper has some last—minute notes forjoel. in the death pas de deux. more emotion. a lot more emotion. by putting your own worst nightmares into it. when you're acting it out you have to take it all the way. when you're in the moment it's ok and annabel won't mind. it'll help her. i think sometimes you're like "what comes next, what comes next, what comes next" — it's natural. but you have to think "what comes next, what comes next, what comes next..." laughter. after a late night there's just time to grab some breakfast. it feels surreal, because,
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first of all, i would never have imagined performing romeo and juliet here. it's something that never crossed my mind even as a role that i would ever get to perform. so i'm just thankful. i don't know. it's crazy. it is crazy. while the theatre technicians get across the lighting and stage cues, the company have a chance to get used to this space, including a renowned actor john sibi okumu playing lord montague. it is a wonderful story and i wanted to be on the same stage asjoel. because what he has achieved is phenomenal. to get where he is, and annabel, these are home—grown superstars. at the kenyan national theatre, the public arrive for the opening gala. the show must go on. applause. places for act one!
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romeo &juliet, dance of the knights. over the next few nights, the nairobi audiences are in for a treat. people are freaking out, joel. they thought that this was the best show ever. but that's only cause they weren't here for last night. yeah, and they don't know when it's not good or not. we can only pray. romeo &juliet, balcony scene.
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it was amazing to watch, honestly. just spectacular. from the last time i saw him dance to now, his skill level has improved. it's just fascinating to watch. i thought it was amazing. i enjoyed every second. and it was such a pleasure to look at. the first night of the performance, opening night, my mum was there, my sister was there. and i didn't know that she was going to come onstage and give me flowers afterwards the performance, which was pretty cool, because i had never gotten a chance like that. so it was lovely for herjust to be on stage with me and give me flowers at the end of the performance in nairobi at the kenyan national theatre and it was pretty cool. i enjoyed it. back in london just a week later,
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the harsh reality of exams, assessments, and auditions is beginning to hit home. today i'm doing a class with alexander whitley at the wayne mcgregor studios, because i'm graduating in three months‘ time. basically the students are auditioning for certain companies, ballet companies, contemporary companies. considering this is the first time he's done class with us, i think a lot of it isjust being familiar enough with the kind of exercises to be able to learn them and do them quickly, you know. one, two, three, back... he's got the willingness and the aptitude to try and take risks and explore new things. when we're out there just doing our thing, you're happy, you're smiling, so i think — no, i know that it's going to be amazing. whether he decides to do ballet or contemporary, one things for sure, joel's dancing career will take off once this lockdown is over.
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but, for now, as with most of us, joel and his friends in kenya spend their time online taking classes and looking forward to the day they can take to the stage again. joel, would you like to be our first guest teacher next week? um, sure, yes, please. actually, no, i've changed my mind, because they've had you recently for romeo and juliet. all the boys. ten push—ups. face your camera down. you ready? ready? laughter. and one and two... oh, i miss this. i used to do this! four, five, six... seven, eight... nine... come on!
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ten! oh, no. you only get ten. you're only getting ten. all right. that's fine. that's about nine. hello there. it's been another warm day, with nationwide sunshine. in wales, the warmest day of the year so far, with temperatures reaching 27 celsius in porthmadog. you can see the extent of the clear skies nearby on that weather watch picture. overnight tonight, we will keep that clear weather for the most part, although late in the night, there could be a few patches of low cloud and mist and fog around eastern scotland. but for most of us, it is clear and starry overnight, with temperatures 6—13dc, a little bit colder potentially out in the countryside. tomorrow, it's another fine and sunny day coming up nationwide. there will be a bit of cloud developing as we head in the afternoon but not really
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spoiling the sunshine. it will be very warm once again. temperatures in scotland will probably reach the mid 20s in the warmest areas. glasgow, 2a celsius. 2a as well in western areas of northern ireland and across western wales. 25 potentially in porthmadog. similar temperatures in bournemouth. on tuesday we will start to see the weather front approach the far north of scotland. that will bring some rain across the northern areas, maybe up to ten millimetres of rain. as the northerly winds begin to work in, it is going to start to feel cooler as well. temperatures quite a bit down on recent days in stornoway and lerwick. elsewhere, it's another warm and sunny day, temperatures, low to mid 20s. heading into the middle of the week,
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we are going to see outbreaks of rain for some of us and it will be turning cooler as the more northerly winds begin to push further south. with rain or showers for many of us. along with that, the northerly winds dragging in some much cooler air. instead of the mid—20s, towards the end of the week, we're looking at temperatures generally in the high teens perhaps just into the low 20s. not everyone will see rain but the amount we do get will vary quite a bit. but at least for some, there is rain on the horizon.
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this is bbc news with the latest headlines for viewers in the uk and around the world. major cities across the us have been gripped by another night of protests decrying police brutality following killing of an unarmed black man. there is a point of being policed where we just reach our wits and is oui’ where we just reach our wits and is our wits end. thousands of people also gather in london to protest against the killing of george floyd. the government has defended the easing of lockdown measures in england from tomorrow, despite the country's covid—i9 alert system indicating high levels of transmission. on the beaches, how people — and the authorities in the uk are dealing with the challenge of covid—i9

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