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Inspiration

By Erika Dane
July 22, 2020

Own Your Voice With Giselle Anguizola, Musician, Legendary Instructor and Creator of ‘Girl Jam’

By Erika Dane
July 22, 2020

Giselle Anguizola — aka “G” — is the embodiment of artist empowerment. As a creator, she’s a force to be reckoned with, but not in the intimidating or controlling way. It’s more like she shows up and you know things are going to happen around you. You’re going to be inspired, see things in new ways, be less afraid, more free.

Believe it or not, she’s been cultivating this in the dance and arts community for two decades now.

If you’ve ever come across those YouTube videos of Mad Dog from 2003, you’ll find G there dancing among Naomi Uyama, Peter Strom, Andy Reid, Nina Gilkenson, Skye Humphries and Jojo Jackson.

Now, in San Diego, CA, Giselle performs outdoors with The Swinging Gypsies every Saturday morning at The Achilles Cafe downtown from 9:30 AM – 12 PM PST.

She’s gone from introducing the Girl Jam concept to the vernacular jazz world and teaching the follower track at Camp Hollywood for seven years straight to becoming a musician, creating shows for artists. She’s hired more than 100 musicians and dancers in the past five years, partnering with her husband, John Saavedra, who is The Swinging Gypsies’ bandleader. They are always finding new opportunities for the music and dance community to work.

“It got to the point where dancers and musicians who were coming to town would reach out to us to see if we had any gigs coming up,” she says.

Something G takes pride in is consistently providing equal pay for all performers involved and not accepting trade deals — in a sense that one would have to pay their dues because of a social hierarchy. She pays everyone appropriately for their time, energy and service. 

“I always want people to feel fully respected for their service as a human being instead of just someone that can do something for the organization,” she explains.

One of her most recent performances in February was at the Ogden Museum, a gorgeous space with a gothic library vibe.

“Swing music was easy to enjoy because, being Latina, I grew up with Salsa and Merengue. The mixtures of instrumentation in big band music called to me. I loved performing and imagining myself in another era. I could be identified outside of my culture. It was American music. It was rebellious.”

Growing up, G played softball for seven years until sophomore year in high school. Alongside, that, she had also taken piano lessons from about age 6. But at age 13, her school music teacher taught basic swing dance as part of a music class and she fell in love. 

Her music teacher swing danced socially in Gaslamp Quarter in downtown San Diego.

“Thank God for this music teacher, and for the arts. This one woman changed my life,” G remarks.

Soon after, Giselle saw a flier at a gelato place advertising a workshop taught by Catrine Ljunggren and Josie Say. Lisa Conway hired the pair to come to San Diego and teach a Lindy Hop workshop. They had both taught with Frankie Manning. Giselle learned a Swedish/American style Lindy Hop that most called ‘modern savoy.’ Unlike the California smooth style, this was bouncy and had a groove, incorporating Hip Hop elements. Later on, she discovered a smoother style in a workshop with Peter Loggins and Lisa Ferguson, another event hosted by Lisa Conway and the San Diego Swing Dance Society. 

She enjoyed social dancing in Orange County and went to her first competition, ALHC 2000. 

“I moved around a lot, and swing dancing was a way for me to connect with people,” G explains.

From the early to mid 2000s, she taught with Andy Reid, Peter Loggins, Skye Humphries, Todd Yannacone, Chester Whitmore, and many others. She continued to travel, compete and teach regularly, until a severe back injury threatened to change the course of her life.

During Palm Springs, a Lindy Hop and West Coast Swing event in 2003/04, she and her partner did a practice run of their routine right before they were supposed to go out on stage. She landed the backflip poorly and doctors told her she would never be able to dance again.

That didn’t stop G, though. She started practicing yoga and healed herself. Once she was feeling better, she saw an opportunity to work with Todd Yannacone.

Todd didn’t care about aerials — which, at the time was all the rage in the scene, along with fast dancing.

“It wasn’t the right vibe for me at the time. I was there to connect with people,” G recalls.

In 2005 G started the first all follow-focused weekend in SoCal called ‘Girl Jam,’ with the help of her friend Jojo Jackson.

At the time, most instructors were hired as a couple, where the leader would be the more prominently recognized instructor in the partnership. Girl Jams challenged that trend and organizers started hiring people as individual dancers. 

“It was normal for me to see two women teaching together, because that’s what I saw in the classes I took.”

They put together an all-lady routine called Hot Pockets, which was a response to a guys-only routine called Sausages. 

The gentlemen followed the second year with the sequel, Goldmember, and the ladies responded with the routine, Honey Pot.

Girl Jams began popping up everywhere, stretching from California to abroad.

G is somewhat of a nonconformist. She remarked how in the following years it seemed like there were patterns in the community where diversity and inclusion were not at the forefront.

“I just wanted to be out there and show: here’s someone not conforming to everyone’s style. I can dance differently and still be accepted.”

In 2010, G moved to New Orleans.

“I wanted to live every day of my life as an artist and share that with people. New Orleans fulfilled that for me.” 

Now G and her husband John have two homes– one in San Diego and one in New Orleans, traveling seasonally for work.

During her first five years in New Orleans, she started training in fast dancing and aerials again with her partner, Chance Bushman.

Later, in 2015 she partnered with Justin Zillman at Camp Hollywood and continued working with many others including Nathan Bugh, Ryan Calloway and Adam Brozowski. 

And now after many years of cultivating her own voice as a singer/solo jazz/tap dancer, you can expect to see her at some upcoming dance events — like ILHC, after the pandemic.

In the meantime, you can watch Giselle performing with the Swinging Gypsies every Saturday morning. For live videos, follow her on Facebook and Instagram.

“I’ve always enjoyed creating projects that have an avenue for artists to feel respected and valued.”

Let’s have a listen.

Learn more about Giselle at www.swinginggypsies.com and www.drqueeng.com. Catch her teaching on Facebook Live throughout the week.

By Mary McGinn
April 25, 2020

How Dancing Alone In Your Room Can Be A Revolution

By Mary McGinn
April 25, 2020

Photo Credit: Hanna Agar

Jess Grippo reinvented her life a decade ago in the solitude of her bedroom. She’d grown up a ballerina but quit when she was 19 and spent most of her 20’s not dancing. She was too intimidated to take a class. She wasn’t ready to dive back into the dance world.

But when she began to dance when no one was watching, alone in her room, it changed everything. 

Jess has had Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome since she was a teenager. “My teenage years were the most intense training time in my classical ballet life. I wasn’t getting my period at all,” Jess explains. It wasn’t until she was 23 and began working with holistic health coach Alisa Vitti that her body started to slowly heal. Then she started to dance alone in her room.

“What I noticed was dancing in this new way, dancing in a way where I was actually expressing myself — it wasn’t just following and learning choreography, it was the emotional expression through movement — the more I got into that, there was a correlation with my period getting more regular.”

Jess believes that emotions can live in the body. “They’re not just a thought in your head. A thought in your head can cause an emotion, but there’s actually this connected pathway.”

Photo Credit: Hanna Agar

Jess spent time in college studying psychology and then, inspired by Alisa Vitti, Jess became a health coach. “Training in both psychology and holistic health made me aware of the connection between the mind and the body.”

She has learned that working through creative blocks and repressed emotions then moving and dancing and activating your body can be revolutionary for your physical and mental health. Jess Grippo currently helps others grow the way she did as a dance teacher and through a book she’s published. 

“In my teaching, the main thing I’m here to do with dance is to really just be like: how can we open up that channel? How can we get you in touch with your emotional expression and the creativity that can come through that?” Her book has the same focus. It’s called Dance With This Book: Start a Revolution with Your Body, Alone in Your Room, and is meant to help unlock your creative, expressive potential through dance. 

Jess never thought her book would be as relevant as it is today. People are spending more time than ever alone in their rooms and need daily dance inspiration.

“When all of this happened with the coronavirus, I was like, okay well, the only thing that makes sense to me right now is dancing. I know part of my service is staying in because I’m not an essential worker, but I can show up for people online.”

Photo Credit: Andreea Burciu-Ballen

About a month ago Jess started hosting live online dance breaks, for daily dance inspiration. Jess is now gearing up to host her annual “Dance a Day in May” experience, a 31-day creative dance challenge that provides you with daily themes to inspire the way you move. Many choose to post daily dance videos along with it. It’s free to join and you can sign up here.

“It’s less of ‘we’re gonna learn this move today’ and more of me guiding you into your body and whatever free-form movement that wants to come out.”

The dance breaks are free if you need them to be, but there’s a virtual tip jar if you would like to donate. You can also support Jess by picking up a copy of her book. 

To jump into a dance break, join Jess via Zoom, Instagram, or Facebook. To learn more about Jess visit www.JessGrippo.com and to stay in the loop, sign up for her newsletter!

Follow Jess on Instagram:

  • @jessgrippo

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