5th Element Dance & Entertain at INNOVATE NZ awards night

Posted under 5th Element at events, Testimonials by admin on September 30th, 2010 10:34 pm

With an Arabian Nights theme at the TSB showplace,  we were engaged for the awards night to entertain and ‘energize’ over two hundred and twenty guests. Conducted by ACENZ, The Association of Consulting Engineers, “INNOVATE NZ” was an annual award evening in recognition of our countries’ best consulting engineers. New Zealand’s engineering and consulting profession gathers for an evening to honour winning projects with a series of awards winning projects. Held on 31st July 2010, the evening was hosted by Mike McRoberts, award winning journalist and reporter with TV3.

Rosalina Pang of 5th Element Bellydance responded, we were really rapped as we had the previlage to share a prestigious evening and share the joy with nation’s best and their winning projects.

We also had awesome testimonial and feedback from the performance:

You were all excellent! It was a great way to start the night-Such vibrant and entertaining performance. It was thoroughly enjoyed by all our guests. Thank you so much for all your help.”-ACENZ Executive Officer

5th Element’s performs next :Let’s hear it for the Girls Expo on 5th & 6th November 2011.

See events for more details.

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Josephines hen’s party- 13th Feb 2010

Posted under 5th Element at events by raizel on March 29th, 2010 5:37 pm

I was contacted by Selena Ekdlah, good friend and bridesmaid of Josephine de Wall, to come dance and instruct a private bellydance session as a hen’s party gift.

With a “Masquerade” theme, everyone was dressed to the night and clad with mystery.

“The belly dancing went down extremely well. Had a blast!”- Selena

Hope to see you ladies in our  bellydance for Fitness sessions!

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Dance and Drum to a different beat in 2010!

Posted under 5th Element at events, Music & Rhythm by raizel on December 20th, 2009 1:37 pm

Yes its finally summer! A time where our associates, friends and family gather together.

A time we have more daylight, weddings, work do and summer home parties… A time where the entertaining part of the year comes into full force.

Yes, it the time of the year for the usual entertainment mantra: “Eat, Drink and Be Merry”.

If you are searching for something different to excite your guests, associates, friends and family, how about bring some drumming and dancing to the table? (Excuse the pun.)

bellydance events

5th Element Dance Company and Rhythmik Journey would love to bring and share another culture, music and rhythm with you!

Last year, in November they were engaged in bringing interactive dancing and drumming for TDHB (Taranaki District Health Board) on their Health Information Association of New Zealand Conference Dinner at Waiau Estate Winery. Delegates came from all over New Zealand in the health professionals simply loved it! Everyone got up and danced, a few tried their hand at drumming. Even the guys got up to have a go at belly dancing!

Rosalina Pang of 5th Element Dance Company would love to get more people to experience different forms of dance and culture.

Originally from Singapore and now residing in Taranaki, she used to hire belly dancers as entertainers for events and entertainment.  “I was intrigued by the subtleness of the dancers; strength and coordination. Since I was a kid, I loved dancing. I decided to take up belly dancing as a form of fitness and art. I love to share it with others! Since 2004 she has been performing and conducting Bellydance for Fitness sessions in Singapore and since 2008 arriving in Taranaki.

“It has been one of my most exciting and rewarding pursuits.”

Kaali & Allan from Rhythmik Journey have been conducting weekly drumming circles. Allan is dedicated to the benefits of drumming, “It is really good for tuning into yourself.” By drumming to African and

Middle Eastern beats, the rhythms are both joyous and meditative. “It’s great for health, meditation and fun.” he proclaims. “It also allows you to listen, feel and drum to your inner beat.”

As collector and lovers of assortment of drums, we can bring Djembes (African), Darbuka (Middle Eastern) drums and other percussion instruments for your guests.

You may have caught both 5th Element and Rhymthik Journey in action at the TSB Festival of Lights early this year. Together with traditional oriental dance, “We are all about putting a big smile on your face and having a great time!”

So to get your hips moving, arms snaking and fingers drumming: Give us a call!

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Bellydancing aids childbearing and healing process

Posted under Benefits of dancing by raizel on October 1st, 2009 4:46 pm

I heard of ladies in pregnancy practising belly dance to prepare them for the childbearing and post natal healing process. In a Shine 2008-Alternative health and beauty exposition,here in Taranaki, Oakura, I briefly chat with Stephanie Hopkins, who distributes a line of botanical perfumes and organic skincare products for babies. She said that she bellydanced after she had her child and found it helped her with her healing process. Tightening her pelvic muscles with hip circles and undulations.

I chanced upon this article and a testimonial. Thought it will be great to share it with you all!

Source: Bellydance for Birth-An excerpt from “Dance of the Womb” By Maha Al Musa

Bellydance for pregnancyMegan; 37 years old, on birthing her second baby
“Maha is a dear friend of mine and I feel blessed she was my doula at the home-birth of my 7-month-old daughter Melody in January this year. I had attended several workshops with Maha during my pregnancy and found the movements to be highly relaxing and I felt they also helped me to “tune in” to my baby. They seemed such natural movements to make while pregnant – very different from some of the unnatural yoga poses I had been taught!

When it came to the birth I was lucky enough to have Maha with me during both pre-labour and active labour and she guided me through many of the movements during this time. I found when I was in labour the movements gave me a focus and helped me to have a sense of opening up. In the early stages of labour using Maha’s guide of spiralling my hips rhythmically in a figure-eight style really helped ease the tension building in my lower back. We danced our way through the birth! I just had to keep moving – whenever I stopped the pain would be unbearable.

I am a strong believer in active birth – and the bellydance fitted in perfectly with that.

Source: Wall Street Journal.

dance baby“I danced my way through labour”

Helping Jennifer Wright through labor in the delivery room of a Columbia, Missour (USA), birthing center in February were her doctor, her husband — and her belly-dance instructor.

With the teacher, DeeDee Farris-Folkerts, by her side reminding her of the moves, Ms. Wright stood holding her husband while doing the hip circles and pelvic rotations characteristic of the ancient Arabian dance. She had readied a compact disc with classic Egyptian music, but didn’t have a chance to play it before her daughter, Aubrey, emerged.

“I danced my way through labor,” says the mother of three, who had been given painkillers and labor-inducing medication during her oldest child’s birth and wanted a natural alternative. Her husband, Joe Walls, says he learned that belly dancing ‘is more than just entertainment. It has a much higher purpose.’

These days, alternative techniques to ease labor run the gamut from hypnotherapy to “water births” in a large bathtub. But some women disillusioned with routine use of drugs and medical interventions during labor are turning to an unusual solution — belly dancing. They’re restoring the titillating dance of seduction — frequent entertainment fare in night clubs and Middle Eastern restaurants — to what they say were its origins in childbirth, while enhancing maternity wards with swirling motions and mesmerising music.

Expectant mothers can choose from an increasing array of prenatal belly-dancing classes and educational materials. The first instructional prenatal belly dance DVD in the U.S. was released 16 months ago, with a pregnant dancer named Naia leading the class.

“Most of the women who come to me have given birth before and they want something different,” says Ms. Farris-Folkerts, who typically has three to eight pregnant students in her belly-dance courses.

The belly dance arrived in the U.S. in the 1890s, according to bellydance lore, when impresario Sol Bloom brought an “Algerian” village to the Chicago World’s fair and introduced the dancer Little Egypt, who cavorted to improvised snake-charmer music. Incorporating elements of striptease and so-called “hootchie-cootchie” dancing, the belly dance gained its come-hither reputation.

British anthropologist Sheila Kitzinger, author of numerous books on pregnancy, says belly dancing originated as a ritual of childbirth as well as seduction. Among Bedouin Arabs, she says, girls are taught a pelvic dance during puberty to celebrate their budding sexuality and prepare for the physical marathon of childbirth.

Some belly dance moves mirror those of labor. The idea is that the pelvic gyrations help disperse the pain of contractions, orient the fetus and propel the baby into the world. In early labor, when contractions are relatively mild, the expectant mother may find comfort in dancing slowly and hypnotically, using hip circles, crescents and figure eights. As labor gets more intense, the movements may progress to a rapid rocking of the pelvis from side to side – a technique known a the shimmy – to help position the baby correctly and relax the pelvic floor. In the final phase of pushing, a full body undulation known as the camel roll can help the baby move into the birth canal.”

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