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Dancer/Choreographer Parris Goebel. |
Parris Goebel is the reigning queen of the international hip hop dance scene. The triple award-winning dancer and choreographer from New Zealand has
several times won the world championships with her The Royal Family megacrew and famed all-female crew ReQuest at competitions held in the U.S. Her
explosive, exact and erotically charged movement style pulsates with the rhythms of Maori and Polynesian dance traditions she learned growing up in
Auckland: hip hop as ancestral soul.
Jennifer Lopez, who saw Goebel dance on video, was so impressed by her elbow-popping, foot-stomping, hip-circling moves she hired the 23-year-old
diamond-toothed Kiwi with the bleached blonde hair to choreograph her 2012 Dance Again world tour. Since then, Goebel has worked with Canada’s Cirque du
Soleil, choreographing its 2013 Michael Jackson tribute show in Las Vegas, hip hop’s Missy Elliott and Korean pop star, Taeyang. An electrifying performer
in her own right, Goebel danced with J-Lo on the season 11 finale of
American Idol and appeared in the fifth installment of the U.S dance film franchise,
Step Up. Earlier this year, Goebel choreographed Nicki Minaj’s PinkPrint tour and a video for Beyoncé.
Her latest venture is
Born to Dance, New Zealand’s first hip hop dance film, directed by actor Tammy Davis of
Whale Rider and
Black Sheep fame from a
script by acclaimed Maori writer Hone Kouka, Steve Barr and Casey Whelan. Goebel choreographed the energized dance sequences performed by members of her
own Palace Dance Studios, including Tia-Taharoa Maipi making his screen debut as Tu, the film’s dance-mad male lead. Goebel dances herself in one sequence
in which she raunchily fronts a female crew that decimates the men in a forward-charge dance battle.
With a pumped up score by Auckland DJ P-Money,
Born to Dance had its world premiere at the recent edition of the Toronto International Film Festival which
Goebel attended with Maipi and the film’s other male star, Australian/New Zealand recording star Stan Walker, in tow. The sold out screenings were followed
by rave reviews in
The Hollywood Reporter and
Variety, both of which downplayed the pot-boiler plot in favour of the dancing. The latter singled out Goebel
for praise, calling
Born to Dance “an astonishing Kiwi choreography showcase, the biggest and by far more impressive of its kind to originate Down Under.”
Opening in New Zealand at the end of September where, after four weeks, it topped $1-million at the box office,
Born to Dance is looking to get a North
American distribution deal following its participation in the American Film Market, Nov. 4 to 11. Meanwhile, Goebel continues to dance in ways that are
earning her legions of admirers.
In Toronto, together with Walker and Maipi, she judged a hip hop dance battle featuring students of Jade’s Hip Hop Academy and afterward was besieged by
dozens of young dancers wanting to pose with her in fan selfies and get her autograph. Stepping away from the adoring crowd for a quick in-the-street
interview, Goebel told me that hip hop dance is not just a series of body locking moves, it’s a communal movement. “And we in New Zealand,” she said, “just
happen to be the ones leading it.” Here’s more of that conversation.