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By
Stephen Choo Quan
Joe Figueroa
is one of Philadelphia's most prominent Salsa teachers in the lower
Delaware valley. Joe has taught several hundred students the basic
step and more in states such as Delaware, Philadelphia and New Jersey.
He mostly teaches at La Luna Dance studio in PA. He also has a class
in Delaware on Wednesdays. He can be seen traveling several hundred
miles to support the culture of Salsa in other cities like DC where
he is well known and received. Joe was the first salsero to perform
in LA congress from the Philadelphia area. Joe is making his 2nd
consecutive debut in the LA Congress this year 2005.
Stephen:
When did Salsa first touch your life?
Joe:
I remember it like it was yesterday. It was Easter Sunday 2000 and
I was driving to Dinner at my parents place. I never was really
fond of Salsa but I liked Merengue. The radio was playing Willie
Colon's El Gran Varon and right there I knew I wanted to learn Salsa.
The next week I registered with Salseros International.
Stephen: First Social Dance?
Joe:
Her
name was Itchy, Joe's bar 8 weeks after Salsa came into my life.
Stephen: First Admired?
Joe:
Anthony,
a smooth dancer back in the day, Wanda Pagan, Chris "Toby"
Rivera who was Wanda's partner at the time and was someone I aspired
to dance like one day. Wanda was the hottest local at the time and
it took months to gather up the courage to ask her to dance. I met
her a week before I actually asked her to dance. I am a shy person.
Stephen: Favorite Leads?
Joe:
Super
Mario, Fernando Sosa, Francisco Vasquez!
Stephen:
How did you make Salsa your full-time job?
Joe:
July
2001, I went to PR for the Salsa congress. That was an Eye opener.
Seeing people from Japan, Korea, Australia, S. America, Italy, France
and Africa. . . .ALL of them dancing Salsa. The idea that I could
meet a person that may not even speak English, but for even just
five minutes be able to communicate through a dance we both know.
. . .that was amazing to me! It was seeing that Salsa was not only
an East Coast thing. It was a Global thing! I knew when I got back
that I had to teach this to everyone I could.
Stephen: Rocket Fuel?
Joe:
I
had now been dancing for 1 year. I recall Evelyn, my teacher at
the time, commenting how Philly was so far behind compared to the
rest of the world. I felt that we needed someone to teach how to
be a strong lead and she got Joey Feltio. Things really started
to change for me then.
Stephen: Star Dust?
Joe:
I
live with regret that I did not dance there more in my hay day.
I was out dancing for a year before I first went to the Star Dust.
I was totally amazed and had a fantastic time dancing the night
away. Unfortunately, the vibe of it faded after the music changed
and the price started to rise. For me, it was as if the organizers
were more interested in making money than providing what was the
hottest social dance in the Tri State Area. I had friends that would
drive from DC or even Connecticut just to dance there. I know you
were there for the closing night. The Vibe in the place that night,
that's what it used to be like. Many of us that are out today met
there. I got close with Jessica, Lilly, Mike, Alex, Jose Rodriguez
and many more at the Stardust. It's also where Sonya and I met.
Stephen: Secret Weapon?
Joe:
I
don't know what you're talking about. . .That's a question better
left for the ladies to answer. But if I use anything, It would have
to be "the stare." When I see a woman I want to dance
with, I feel primal, like the way a baby looks at something it really
wants. Or the way a Lion watches a herd of Elk. The intense look
that a baby has just before putting the shiny attractive object
into it's mouth. That is the stare. Does that make any sense?
Stephen: When did you feel your dancing took a quantum leap?
Joe:
Josie
Neglia broke the ice for me after I won the contest that she judged.
We danced after that, which helped me build confidence and then
I danced with Edie "The Salsa Freak" at my first LA Congress.
She sponsored my congress package for me without even meeting me.
So when I got there, I introduced myself. She told me that I owed
her a dance and yanked me onto the floor. When I saw people gathering
around and video taping, I knew they were all looking at her but
I also felt like I could dance with anyone now. So after that, no
one was intimidating to me. Well, almost no one.
Stephen: What was your most embarrassing moment?
Joe:
I
have never socially danced with a man before so you can imagine
how I felt when Jason Molina asked me to dance in Brazils. Needless
to say, I WAS STILL THE LEAD!
Stephen: What is it that keeps you into Salsa?
Joe:
Teaching,
if I don't dance as much socially I surely will want to continue
to teach.
Stephen: What are your hopes for the Future of Philadelphia?
Joe:
No
boundaries, bridging all dancers in all locations so we have more
events like the Philly All Stars. I also hope to see dancers come
out to dance more often. Today we only have a fraction of our dancers
that go out to clubs and participate in the dance scene. I foresee
that one day Philly will become a significant city on the Salsa
map. All I ever really wanted was for Philly to see and embrace
Salsa on a Global Level the way that I have. I figure, if seeing
what Salsa is like around the world can do all this for me. . .
then what can it do for you?
>>>>
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