Little girl spirit

Encourage someone today. Be an angel to somebody today. Be a blessing to those who deserve it and those who do not, because you may never know whose life you are turning around. Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see.

– Unknown (via shannonjai) Via MyMJJTribute

(Source: acr0mantula)





(Source: king-of-music)




Mike Frawley: Will You

mikefrawley:

So many souls take away
will you be the one to give

Fearfully hiding in the shadows
will you show them how to live

Faceless millions weep for love
will you love them with your smile

While many faint at the starting gate
will you go that extra mile

They never will, they’re too afraid
will you…

Via Mike Frawley


(Source: happyfitness)



alchrista:

“I had danced with MJ in two videos. I was the gang leader in Beat It, and a zombie dancer in Thriller, as well as being the assistant choreographer for Michael Peters. I was at home one night and got a phone call. A very soft voice asked for Vincent Paterson. I thought it was someone playing a joke on me, using a voice like Michael Jackson. “Who’s calling? “ I asked. “It’s Michael Jackson,” was the reply. “Who the hell is this?”, I asked. Same response. “I’m gonna hang the f*** phone up if you don’t tell me who is calling,” I said. It really was Michael Jackson. I profusely apologized. MJ was working on his latest CD at a recording studio in Hollywood and asked if I could stop by. I rushed over hoping he wanted to ask me to dance in another video. We went into the studio and he played the music to “Smooth Criminal” for me, and asked me what I thought. I loved it. He then asked me if I could come up with an idea for the video and would I choreograph and direct it. I was floored and honored and excited beyond belief. MJ suggested a swanky club with 10 men in long tails and top hats. But he wanted me to conceive my own ideas and he also gave me advice I have used ever since, “Don’t try to impose an idea on the music. Let the music tell you what it wants to be.I knew Michael liked the movies of Fred Astaire, so I researched movement from Astaire’s musicals, usually choreographed by Hermes Pan. Michael was in the recording studio during much of my initial creative process with the dancers. He gave me a soundstage on which he had had a wooden floor constructed for the safety of the dancers. The bottom floor of the set that we had discussed was on the soundstage. He also gave me an incredible sound system, a video camera and 10 dancers with whom to begin choreography. Every morning, we would have a dance class, then I would begin to choreograph movement on the dance floor and then move the dancers into the set. At the end of the day, I would video what I had done. I would go to Michael’s house and we would watch the work. MJ usually said, “That is really great. I think you need 10 more dancers.” I would hire more dancers and the daily routine would begin again. This happened until I had a second floor built on the set and had hired about 50 or so dancers to be in the video.I don’t remember exactly how long the process went on, but I would say for about a month or 6 weeks. What began as a music video became part of the film, Moonwalker. I worked with Michael to extend the song and it became a 10 minute piece in the movie. After creating the piece, I worked with MJ alone.His rehearsal technique was mind-boggling. I would teach him a section I had choreographed, he would play with some of the rhythms and we would adjust the movement. Then Michael would stand in front of a mirror and perform one section of dance over and over and over until it was not only perfect, but also looked as if he was improvising the work at that moment. He had ceaseless energy and focus.

I adored Michael as an artist and as a collaborator. He trusted me. I would create the movement for him and the dancers - every dancer is moving on every beat throughout this entire song. I would leave space for MJ to create his own movement and do his thing. He worked hard to come up with his own specific way of moving and I wanted to always afford him the opportunity to highlight his dancing. In all the years I worked with Mike - over 16 years, I never heard him say anything cruel or unkind to anyone. In the collaborative process, he would always say to someone, “This is very good, but I was thinking we could try something a little more like this…” Whether this was about costumes, sets, lights, whatever. He was a unique and brilliant man and he will always be missed.He was gone too soon.”  Vincent Paterson-American director and choreographer



jessnevins:

Nikola Tesla’s letterhead, circa 1900.


If you are humble nothing will touch you,neither praise nor disgrace,because you know what you are.

– Mother Teresa (via alchrista) Via MyMJJTribute

(Source: thegardennymph)





Autistic artist Stephen Wiltshire draws spellbinding 18ft picture of New York from memory… After a 20-minute helicopter ride over city.


Via sleepy time ♥



[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

ohlydiane:

Kelly Sweet, Raincoat

(Source: lydianea)

Via sleepy time ♥

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