Get 2 Steppin' performance brings down the house
Chelsea Eakin
Issue date: 11/14/07 Section: Arts & Entertainment
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Colby Step Team Captain Escar Kusema '09 opened the show by saying that stepping is about "passion, expression and identity." Step is a synchronized, percussive movement that involves singing, speaking, chanting and drama and uses the body as an instrument for expression. Before the teams took the stage, a slide show explained two hypotheses about the origin of step-South Africa gumboot dancing and African-American fraternities at Howard University. Gumboot dancing originated in the gold mines of South Africa with rural laborers and became part of urban South African working-class culture. At the height of the migrant labor system and during the oppressive Apartheid Pass Laws, gumboot dancing provided an outlet for communication and personal expression. The slideshow said that stepping was incorporated into the pledging process of African-American fraternities and sororities in the 1940s.
First to step was Bowdoin's Unity, a team which stands for the values of knowledge, power, respect and love. The coed team started dancing to music, but once the music cut out the team didn't fail to keep the energy high and its steps synchronized.
Shapel Mallard '08 then slowed it down with a poem about step. Following his reading, two Bowdoin rappers dropped lyrics while Unity stepped a background beat. The audience clapped along and participated in a call and response of "I love hip hop."
Next up was the Colby Step Team, founded in 2003 with a focus on inclusiveness and teaching others. Emcee Peter Perry-Friedman '09 said that the team comprises members from all over the world: "China, Zimbabwe, India, Brazil and wait for it...Connecticut." The team's performance was nearly flawless as it stepped in unison, in rounds, while moving across the stage and while standing still.


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