Interview - How She Move
By Clint
Morris
Interview with Tre Armstrong
Star
of How She Move
Everything eventually comes back
into style, so they say, and they'd be right.
The Record Player has made a comeback, Rambo
is back on our screens, Leo Sayer is back in the charts, Strawberry
Shortcake dolls are back on the shelves, edible chocolate undies are
all the rage again, and now, the dance movie (something the 80s thrived
on) has discoed back into theaters.
Thanks to films like Center
Stage, Save
the Last Dance, Step Up, Honey
and Take the Lead,
the dance movie is back and bigger than ever (and, if I do say so
myself, the new catalog of hits are a little more proper and polished
than some of those daggy 80s pics, like Breakin 2 : Electric Boogaloo, Girls Just Want to Have Fun,
and – at the risk of being hurt – Footloose).
Further verification?
As we speak, one of the top films at the box office is Step Up 2 : The Streets,
a film that (five years ago) would've got squashed by Pie Rooters and
Spider-Men.
Tre Armstrong, star of the new body-jiving feature How She Move,
thinks the dance-movie resurgence I back because, quite simply, “Dance
is the best!” and everybody loves to watch people doing it.
“Step Up 2
did similar business here [in America], it's just amazing how well it
has done. It's the best”.
Armstrong discovered her love of dance when she was younger – to the
merriment of her mother.
“I
was a bit of a tomboy when I was little – riding around on BMX's with
the boys, and so on – and Mum didn't want me to get too butchy, so she
gave me the opportunity to attend dance classes. I just loved it, and
have been dancing ever since. Twenty years now!”.
The dancer cum actress now gets to showcase her talent on the big
screen – not that she ever expected How She Move to do
anywhere near the business it has.
“It
was a little independent Canadian movie that MTV and Paramount Vantage
picked up! We even took it to Sundance!”, says an enthused Armstrong,
who has toured with Missy Elliot.
Opening in Australia on April 10, How
She Move
tells the story of a high school student who is forced to leave her
private school to return to her old, crime-filled neighborhood where
she re-kindles an unlikely passion for the competitive world of step
dancing.
Armstrong, who has danced everything from Ballet,
Tap, Urban Dance, Ballroom and Salsa, had originally joined the
production as a choreographer until the filmmakers encouraged her to
audition for the vital role of the lead character's rival, Michelle.
The
role was tailor-made for Armstrong – and not just because both
dance. ''The way [Michelle] wants to get something, and just
does
it, that's the same as me. We're both very self driven. As for her
attitude and bitchiness? I'll hold it in most of the time, but if you
push me, I'll show you that side of me”, she laughs.
“I
like choreographers who know what they're doing. I also like
choreographers that get inspiration from dancers. If someone says 'Hey,
that organ would look better there', and the choreographer listens to
that, that shows promise.”
Aside from Armstrong, the rest of
the film's cast were actors and found it a little difficult to grasp
the dancing at first. “It was really hard for them – especially the
guys. They were thrust into doing what I do five-days-a-week. They were
great though – just a little sore”.
The budding actress made her entrance into film with a role as a dancer
in the Jessica Alba movie Honey (“I
killed that audition!”, Armstrong recalls) and later, a speaking part
in the direct-to-video sequel Save the Last Dance 2
(“That was my first acting job. It was a surprise attack. We weren't
sure how that one was going to turn out, since it was a new actress [in
the lead role] and it was going direct-to-DVD, but it worked out well”)
but is dead-keen to act in something that doesn't require her to flip
her body parts about. “Dance, I will never leave, but I wouldn't mind
playing a soft-hearted teacher or action-hero next”.
In the
meantime, Armstrong, who says “dancing is the best form of exercise,
besides walking”, is headed down under to teach Aussie kids how to
dance.
“April 7th around the country I'll be hosting dance
classes called Step 'n' Move. Google 'Tre Armstrong Myspace Australia'.
Tickets are on sale now. Its a great event. I'll be there two weeks
only!”.
Starting in Sydney then heading to Melbourne, Adelaide
and concluding in Perth, Tre's workshops will teach dancers
the
art of Step and Hip Hop Choreography. You don't have to be fluent in
bop to register, either - the workshops will be open to dancers of all
levels from beginners through to advanced.
And when she returns to home soil, maybe a How She Move
sequel?
“Not
that I know of!”, laughs Armstrong, “But you'll be the first person to
know. I would love to be involved in it if they did it.”
HOW SHE MOVE is in
selected cinemas from APRIL 10, 2008
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