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Joe tap dancing in "Born to Sparkle" in Palm Springs, CA 2022.

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 Teaching, Consulting, and Directing

Hi...this is Joe G...."How can I help you?"

Are you winning enough 1st places in competitions?

As a teacher/parent, do you have questions that need answers?

Teachers - Do your male students need a mentor?

Dancers - Do you have questions?

Remember - "Steps are learned...style is taught...I can do both" - Joe G.

"I can be your personal coach/consultant ...I have over 30 years experience as a dancer, performer, choreographer, director, judge, motivational speaker and in musical comedy theatre. I am recently "off the road" as director of the #1 dance convention and competition in the United States!"

Master Classes - TAP, BALLET, YOGA, and MUSICAL THEATRE. Available for travel.

Let Jag Co. Productions take you to the next level!

 Tap Dance Classes Keep Malibuites on Their Toes!

by Ward Lauren

"Flap, flap, flap, ballchange, shufle, hop step, flap, heel-drop!" Not just the unique percussive sounds but the words as well echo rhythmically from the fitness center at Zuma Beach Plaza three times a week as Malibu's adult tap dance hoofs it up with veteran dancer and choreographer Joe Giamalva.

The class is drawing a growing number of women and yes, a man or two, to tis Monday and Wednesday sessions. With seemingly unbridled enthusiasm they enjoy a three-phase participation in the veneralbe Amercian dance form: learning the basic steps, performing them in a group dance routine, and, far from last, getting valuable pound-dropping cardiovascular exercise while having a whale of a good time.

Students have come to the Malibu class for a variety of reasons, none apparently having anything to do with serious hopes of future fame on the Broadway stage.

"The greatest joy of my life is tapping," said Malibu resident Joan Steiger, who first set foot to the dance floor at age seven. "You can never tap and not smile."

Although she has tap danced occasionally in television commercials, Steiger said she didn't have much time to practice her art during the years she and her late actor husband Rod Steiger traveled extensively. He urged her to take it up again when they settled in Malibu estates shortly before his death.

Hair stylist Bernie Safire, on the other hand, put on his first pair of tap shoes only eight months ago. An ex-gymnast, he occasionally works out on the trampoline and high bar to keep in shape, but now gets most of his physical conditioning in tap class.

"It's just about the most fun of anything I've ever done," Safire said enthusiastically. "People in the gym don't know what this is all about; this is great!"

Giamalva's teaching method is strictly hands-on, or feet-on in this case, with liberal applications of fun and encouragement. He stands at the front of the class and demonstrates every step, then joins in practicing them with his students, slowly at first and gradually building up tempo to the accompaniment of familiar, lilting melodies played from the CD sound system.

The action starts with basic warm-ups: a simple shuffle on one foot for awhile, then the other, then circling the room behind the teacher, doing basic "flap." One by one, other basic steps are shown and practiced as the class circles the room in rhythm to the CD. Then, getting down to business, the students stand in horizontal rows behind Giamalva as he puts the warm-up steps together in combinations. As the hour-long class progresses, more steps are added unti, almost surprisingly, they become an entire dance routine.

Teaching, as well as performing, is nothing new to Joe Giamalva. For several years before moving to Malibu, he held classes in Agoura, and he still conducts a class in Woodland Hills on Tuesdays. He also teaches jazz, ballet and musical theater, and serves on judges' panels at many major dance competitions.

Giamalva has a long and diverse career in show business as a producer, director, choreographer and performer. He has toured the world in shows with such stars as Raquel Welch, Tony Martin, Cyd Charisse, Donnie and Marie Osmond, and Cher. He choreographed many theater productions and the original L.A. Laker Girls learned their cheerleading/dance routines from Giamalva. Through his own production company, Giamalva continues to mount shows and special programs fro film, television and industrial and commercial corporations.

Phone: 818.585.2658

email: Jagco1@aol.com