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Gene (GeBa ne s <br />4 <br />113fitaill<aly <br />.men. .' nu. 2Zl <br />T. <br />cwt -�i;p� 1B3talss hi <br />I.,.v ,,..tn, l - <br />,:.,: f.. sz. rr:,. <br />'Motu u tall) •JtalW 1,MI �Ii lltl, rU.W.I... r. <br />tar<Yr. ♦p taw t•I. w. rob <br />In New York, GeBauer (second from left) found himself In hit Broadway shows like the musical Sugorwith top talent such as tapper <br />Steve Condos (center) Former students traveled from near and far to attend GeBautr's 75th Birthday Tap Bash in 2009, <br />quickly. "I got a job with the Jewel Box Revue instead, <br />which was (performed by] a troupe of female imperson- <br />ators. I didn't know this until I got there and saw men <br />onstage in heels," he says. "I didn't care. I so needed the <br />job —and it was show business." <br />The Jewel Box Revue did more than pay the bills; it <br />gave GeBauer a new worldview. "In Salem there were no <br />openly gay people and only one black family. And here I <br />was dancing in a show with both. I'd said I needed to get <br />educated in life. Well, this really helped," he says. "The <br />people in the show became my best friends." <br />After two years, GeBauer got a break —a job as a re- <br />placement in Once Upon a Mattress, followed by a three - <br />year stint with the original cast of Camelot, starring Julie <br />Andrews and Richard Burton. GeBauer took acting lessons <br />and eventually landed roles in No Strings, Sugar, Hello <br />Dolly! and Oh! Calcutta! He shared the stage with Carol <br />Burnett, Carol Channing, Robert Goulet, and Steve Condos <br />and worked with choreographers Gower Champion, <br />Hanya Holm, and Alvin Ailey. <br />After 20 years in New York, GeBauer and his wife, play- <br />wright Judy GeBauer, wanted a change of scene, so they <br />returned to Salem to raise their daughter. "I was well known <br />there and thought it would be a good place to start a school," <br />says GeBauer. The husband -wife team ran an acting, singing, <br />and dancing school called The Players Center for five years <br />before moving to the Midwest, where GeBauer simultane- <br />ously served on the faculty of the University of Iowa as a tap <br />teacher and earned a BA in theater arts at age 57. <br />After graduation, GeBauer pursued learning Alexander <br />Technique as a way to rehab a back injury that had <br />plagued him since Hello Dolly! He found a training pro- <br />gram in the Denver area and again taught tap to support <br />his family while he studied. "But by the time I graduated <br />three years later, I was enjoying tap so much that all I <br />wanted to do was dance," he says. At 60, GeBauer decided <br />to hang his hat exclusively on tap dancing —where he had <br />begun more than 45 years before. <br />Dance is for everybody <br />GeBauer's teaching philosophy is rooted in his belief that <br />dance is for everybody, not just the gifted. Calling tap "gen- <br />erous- spirited," he recalls benefiting greatly from experi- <br />ences with tap masters and wanting to pass his knowledge <br />on as well. "I learned tap dance history, correct technique, <br />terminology, many different styles, different footwork, ideas <br />on counting, and stories about other dancers and teachers," <br />he explains. "Tap almost faded into oblivion at one time. <br />Tap dancers, perhaps more than other dancers, need to <br />pass it on in order for it to survive." <br />Student Malissa Spero sees the value in this philosophy. <br />"He keeps numbers alive by teaching works like the Joe <br />Louis Shuffle— pieces I would never otherwise have the <br />chance to learn." (According to GeBauer, the Joe Louis <br />Shuffle was a shim sham number created by Leonard Reed <br />for a nightclub act he did with former heavyweight boxing <br />champion Joe Louis.) <br />Another longtime student, Karen Long, agrees. "In a few <br />lessons I realized I would learn technique and rhythms I <br />had never seen before, and that I'd be taught choreography <br />that he had learned from the greatest tappers of all time." <br />Although GeBauer has done workshops with almost <br />every tap master of note, including Savion Glover, Ted <br />Levy, and Brenda Bufalino, his personal approach is "back <br />76 OANCE /r ikUFE • dedicated to quality dance eduratinn • March /April 2812 <br />CON <br />AJ KUNB <br />