CHAPTER 1
I have a plan. I, Sammy Lieberman, am going to study hard, get straight As in every year at school. Then after Iâve blitzed my Year Twelve exams Iâll go to medical school, become a doctor and then a specialist, probably a cardiologist like my dad. Along the way Iâll have just enough time to get serious with Mia, my beautiful girlfriend. Iâll propose, sheâll accept and weâll have a huge Jewish wedding. My dad will have tears in his eyes as he claps along to
Havah Nagila
and my mother will be so happy she bakes every cake in the secret Jewish mothersâ recipe book.
It really is a great plan. Thereâs just one problem â it isnât my plan. Itâs my dadâs plan for me. Itâs what his heart is set on. My heart is set on something else.
I blame
Tap Dogs.
If Iâd never seen those brilliant tap dancers, heard the thunder of their boots and the smash of those metal sheets, got lost in their dazzling moves and felt my heart pound, then I might never have said those fateful words, âMum, I want to learn to dance.â
I wouldnât have gone to dance classes and learned I could actually dance. I wouldnât have practised day and night. Today I wouldnât be here at the National Academy of Dance.
The Academy is amazing. Apart from being the greatest place to learn dance in Australia, itâs located on a wharf that juts right out into Sydney Harbour. Every day at the school café we can look at the Harbour Bridge, gaze across the water and know that just around the corner is the one place we all dream of performing â the Sydney Opera House.
Thank you,
Tap Dogs.
But itâs not all a massive brilliant head rush. The Academy is a long way from easy street. Itâs harder than I ever imagined, in ways that I never dreamed of. I didnât expect so many humiliations, piled onto embarrassments and served with a heavy sauce of cringe.
The one thing I was really looking forward to was not being the only male dancer in my class. I thought finally I could actually have some friends who were boys. Is it too much for a dancer to hang out and do regular guy stuff? Apparently, yes.
First off, some joker in admin at the Academy puts me down as Samantha Lieberman so I have to share a room with Kat. Sheâs great â fun, good-looking, blonde hair with an appetite that would even please my mother â but she is completely and utterly female.
Thatâs bad enough, but the day before our first dance she comes in from the shower while Iâm putting my contact lens in and takes advantage of my blurry eyesight to strip off and get changed. Howâs a man supposed to perform delicate eye surgery under those conditions? I jump, the contact dives down the sink and Iâm stuck wearing my glasses to our first mixed classical dancing class with Miss Raine. Thereâs a first impression I didnât want to make.
Miss Raine is the scariest teacher ever. I think sheâs physically incapable of smiling. From day one sheâs taking no prisoners. Her class ends and Iâve made it through without too many fumbles or mistakes. At least thatâs what I think.
âSamuel? Tara? Please see me before you go,â she asks.
Tara and I look at each other. I met her at the auditions. Sheâs from the country, is gorgeous in that fresh, innocent way: soft skin, a hint of freckles and pale brown hair. We bonded over the bad feedback we both got. I matched her âbehind, technicallyâ with âproblem shoulder bladesâ and âweak anklesâ. Now our problems at the auditions are coming back to torment us.
âSamuel, you must go with the girls to be fitted for
pointe
shoes,â Miss Raine announces, as if itâs perfectly normal.
I gape in horror. âWhat do you mean
pointe
? Boys donât do
pointe
.â
âThey do when their ankles are weak and yours are from all those years of
Norman Winski
M. M. Kaye
Meghan Quinn
John Michael Godier
Khloe Wren
Emme Burton
Elle Jasper
Randi Everheart
Anna Abner
Garry Kilworth