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Sixty-seven-year-old Wang Guoyu,
a hua-gu (flower drum) dancer from Shanghai, exchanges dancing tips
with America's Sweethearts, one of the most famous cheerleading troupes
from the US, at the city's Xiangyang Park on Friday. (Photo:
chinadaily.com.cn/Gao Erqiang) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, April 18 -- As one of America's
most famous cheerleading troupes performed at a park in downtown Shanghai on
Friday morning, puzzled bystanders were more likely to associate it with the
city's new flagship Barbie store than flourishing Sino-U.S. ties.
Waving pompoms and gyrating in blue and white
costumes and replete with white cowboy boots, the official dance troupe of the
Dallas Cowboys (a National Football League team) practiced tai chi with elderly
Chinese, and swapped dancing tips with hua-gu (flower drum) dancers.
"We're hoping to mix our cultures a little bit," said
Meagan Sharp, 20. "We're going to give them our pompoms and let them play around
and see what they can take from us, and maybe try to add our power and punch to
their gracefulness."
The girls, who go by the moniker America's
Sweethearts, are as famous as it gets in cheerleading circles. They have at
least two movies named after them - the first starring Jane Seymour in 1979 - as
well as a recent reality TV show called "Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders: Making the
Team".
While their forebears performed for the U.S. troops
in South Korea to celebrate Christmas in 1979, the troupe had never visited
China - until American Airlines (AA) flew them over to celebrate its third
anniversary in China.
The aim of the weeklong jaunt, which ends on
Saturday, is to break down cultural and other barriers using sports and
entertainment as a hammer, said Victor Lee, AA's Greater China regional
director.
"It's good to get people from our home base in Dallas
to mix with people here," he said. "On a broader level, all kinds of sports can
be without borders, and we want to show how everyone can participate and enjoy
them, even if they cannot understand or play them."
Similar to Major League Baseball's historic China
debut a year ago - when the San Diego Padres played a two-game series against
the Los Angeles Dodgers in Beijing - the emphasis was on fun and cultural
integration.
Lee said the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders (DCC) were
made for Shanghai, if not made in Shanghai.
"They are full of passion, enthusiasm and energy, and
Shanghai has that kind of character in China. It's a booming city looking to the
future, and the people are very receptive to this kind of cultural impact," he
said.
Three-year veteran American Sweetheart Tobie
Percival, who put China on her to-do list after watching last year's Beijing
Olympic Games, was shocked at the sight of metropolitan Shanghai.
"I wasn't expecting all the skyscrapers," she said.
"I was thinking more like this park, kind of more greenery and trees, that kind
of thing. But no matter which direction you look in, there's a high rise."
Whitney Isleib, 21, said she could see cheerleading
taking off here in a big way as China starts to integrate U.S. trends with its
own.
"I definitely think it could get incorporated into
Chinese sports. I think the Chinese would love to learn cheerleading. I mean, I
saw their kicks. They're getting pretty high."
"We'll definitely have some competition in the
future."
China sent its first modern cheerleading squads to an
Olympics when it played host in August. It is also starting to branch out from
the traditional State-led sports system by embracing the U.S. college sports
model, a move being pioneered by Beijing's Tsinghua University.
Percival said the squad would be taking home more
than just the cuddly blue Shanghai Expo 2010 mascots they got during a gift
exchange with the local drum dancers, some of whom were in their late 60s.
"We'll try to incorporate as much of what they do as
we can. It's definitely amazing to blend different cultures and traditions into
what we do, because we like to be diverse and include everybody," she said.
The DCC's maiden appearance in China was, to all
intents and purposes, an unqualified success.
"This is quite different from Chinese culture," said
Fan Guangfa, a middle-aged Chinese man who climbed up a lamppost to get a better
view. "But I wish they would come here more often."
Some things got lost in translation, but the message
of cultural exchange, however garbled, ultimately made its way to the masses.
"Wow," said one man from Xi'an, Shaanxi province, who
was carrying his grandson on his shoulders. "American Airlines' stewardesses are
really stunning, aren't they?"
When the toddler grows up, the difference between the
two will no doubt be much clearer.
(Source: China Daily)