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Rick Hansen 25-year Anniversary Gala

So after an amazing 2-weeks in the U.K with ILL-Abilities, I flew to Vancouver (24hrs of Traveling) to participate in the final Gala dinner for the Rick Hansen 25-year anniversary tour. I have been following the tour since Toronto and have been the key-note speaker and performer for the Gala events.

I am happy to be back in Vancouver (for a day) as just a little over 2-years ago I accomplished my biggest career goal by performing at the 2010 Paralympic Opening Ceremonies.

I am already off to another trip! I am meeting the Montalvo-Hervieu Dance company in Istanbul, Turkey where we have some performances for our Orphee Show.

Melissa will be joining me and we have taken an extra 4-days to ourselves after the performances to visit and vacation the beautiful country!

Will be back at the end of this month with some more news!

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Just wanted to holla!

This past month has been one of the biggest experiences of my life. It was a moment that I truly felt the meaning of Crew. I created ILL-Abilities™ almost 5-years ago and it has been a work in progress but this past month in the U.K thanks to Breakin’ Convention for the opportunity to bring us together I got to experience the crew feeling for real. I guess it’s because I wasn’t really organizing everything so it felt good to be able to relax and enjoy myself with the rest of the boys. Thanks to Tommy, Marc, Redo, Kujo and Checho for being like another brother to me! I love you guys!

 

 

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ILL-Abilities™ performance Live Streamed @ Breakin’ Convention

Ladies and Gentlemen!

Tomorrow May 7, 2012 Breakin’ Convention will be officially live streamed. So if you can’t see our performance in person check it out online at:

http://thespace.org/by/genre/dance 

After tomorrow all the videos of our performances and interviews will be available on demand on The Space  :) 

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ILL-Abilities™ at Breakin’ Convention U.K

I am honoured to share with you that my crew ILL-Abilities™ has been selected to be a main act for this year’s Breakin’ Convention Festival. One of the world’s biggest HipHop Theatre Dance festivals. You can check us out touring the U.K this month!

We will be performing at:

Sadler’s Well Theatre (London, U.K) – May 5 and 7

Plymouth Theatre Royal (Plymouth, U.K) May 11 and 12

Birmingham Hippodrome (Birmingham U.K) May 14 and 15

 

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Why?

This past year and a half I have travelled more than I could ever imagine. I have learned so much and am so thankful of all of these experiences but no matter where I go, there is one question that keeps coming back to me all the time.

WHY?

Why do we feel we need to always fight our way to the top? Why do we let stress out on other people? Why can’t we accept our faults? Why when in crowded places we need to always cut people off? Why when getting on a plane or train we need to rush to get on or off? I mean one way or another your getting on and if your seats assigned then you’ve got that seat. Why do we make assumptions? Why are we too afraid to explain situations? Why are we afraid to communicate?

What is it with our society that constantly needs to feel rushed and stressed? It’s weird but I don’t understand this idea of having to fight for your space. I am writing this after a couple travel experiences I’ve had recently. The other day after flying into Paris there was a long line at customs but as a person with an “ill-Ability” I get to go in the employee line straight to the front. Before I went to the customs agent I was trying to be polite and let 2 people in front of me before being seen to get into the country. After the agent saw my action of letting a couple people in front of me, I was told by him that I can’t let myself get defeated. I guess he may have seen a short guy on crutches too scared to push his way through the front of the line but in reality I was just trying to be polite. My view was that we are all getting out of there and we still have to wait for our baggage so in reality there is no real rush. Why does being polite or the idea of being indifferent have to be perceived as a defeat?

I believe it’s this mentality that hurts our society more than anything else. I mean if we all have to feel that we are fighting all the time, then how are we advancing as a society, as a culture, and as human beings?

I think we all make assumptions on each other without giving each other a chance or opportunity to get know one another.

The truth is every one of us is born completely differently and we can’t automatically assume that we all think alike. I must be honest I am guilty of this too. I make assumptions on people that I see or judge them on a first impression but I do believe in giving situations multiple opportunities. As we are all different, so is everyday we are living. There is not one day in our lives that is exactly the same as the day prior, no matter how routine your life may be.  As basic and “common sense” this may seem why do we forget to see the beauty of life at times.

I feel we all complain too much (this is a Generalization) and are not appreciative of what life has to offer us. No matter how bad your situation may seem, I believe it can always be worse. It’s the opportunities, experiences, and choices we make, that we create, that decide how certain situations end up. I know there are some circumstances that are uncontrollable and/or cannot be avoided, but we need to learn to deal with them without being so defensive and feel that it’s the end of the world.

Why does asking “hello, how are you?” to a random person have to be such a shock to that person? I guess, this is more of a big city mentality but anytime I purchase something at a store or get serviced by a waiter/ess I always say hello and ask them how they’re doing before completing the transaction. I always feel like they don’t know how to respond. I mean I do understand they are working and I don’t want to start a full conversation with them but I believe that “we” acknowledge each other than I think that can show appreciation on both ends and we can learn to feel better about each other, which can help build confidence in each other.

We feel things need to be done a certain or specific way

We all face difficult times, some more than others but….

We’re all human beings!

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Feature on City TV Toronto

Check out this feature Avery Haines from the Inside Story did on me http://www.citytv.com/toronto/citynews/videos/195060

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Great article by Nelson Wyatt from the Canadian Press

Link to Actual Article http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/arts-and-life/life/breakdance-class-is-one-way-image-of-disabled-is-being-changed-in-canada-142514745.html?viewAllComments=y

LIFE & STYLE
The Canadian Press – ONLINE EDITION
Breakdance class is one way image of disabled is being changed
By: Nelson Wyatt, The Canadian Press
Posted: 03/13/2012 2:42 PM |

Luca Patuelli teaches some breakdancing moves to students at Joseph-Charbonneau secondary school in Montreal. (THE CANADIAN PRESS)
MONTREAL – Luca Patuelli’s students form a semi-circle in the classroom at Joseph-Charbonneau secondary school, most of them leaning on crutches or sitting in wheelchairs. Patuelli pulls himself into the group supported by a pair of crutches.
Then the music starts and the room is an explosion of movement.
Patuelli, known worldwide as Bboy Lazylegz, launches into a series of dynamic breakdance steps, at one point flinging his crutches aside. His charges rock along on the sidelines until one by one he turns the floor over to them and they step up to execute their own intricate moves.
Their heads rock with streetwise hip-hop breakdancer attitude. They gyrate. One spins and does a move where he lifts himself up on his hands and supports himself in the air, looking like Superman in flight.
The lunch hour activity at the school and readaptation centre puts a whole new slant on independent living for the disabled, an issue growing in Canada for the last quarter-century.
“What’s been amazing about this program is it started off as a breakdancing class and now we’ve realized it’s more like a life confidence-building class,” Patuelli said in an interview before getting things underway, marvelling at the improvement he’s seen since he started the class in November 2008.
“I have stories about some students who are literally getting out of their wheelchairs to dance and they’re learning to walk. Other dancers are becoming a lot more independent.”
Patuelli, who suffers from a rare bone and joint disorder known as arthrogryposis, has been a dancer for about 10 years now, since he was 15. He’s been a professional breakdancer for about seven years.
He’s been on crutches since he was three, was diagnosed with severe scoliosis when he was eight and has had 16 surgeries, including one where eight of his vertebrae were fused and titanium rods were inserted.
But Patuelli has developed an international following, performing, most recently in Paris, and was one of the acts in the opening ceremonies for the 2010 Paralympic Games. As part of the Canadian breakdance crew Illmatic Styles, he was featured on NBC’s “America’s Got Talent,” and in 2007, he formed ILL-Abilities, an international group with disabled breakdancers from Canada, the U.S., Chile and Holland.
Patuelli has also been featured on a host of TV shows, including NBC’s “Today Show” and “So You Think You Can Dance Canada.”
“The idea is to really help these students be able to become more independent and not to rely on other people to help them,” Patuelli said of the class. “If they want to do something, they can do it themselves. Yes, assistance is there to help you, but you have to go out and get it.”
Deborah Kennard, the chairperson of Independent Living Montreal, knew Patuelli through the positive message he sends with his performing and motivational speaking. She called his class “wonderful” when she heard about it.
Kennard was born with spinal muscle atrophy and gets around in a semi-reclined wheelchair. Her organization, which is part of the Independent Living Canada network, works to provide resources and information to the disabled to help them overcome society’s obstacles.
“We help people acquire skills and we try and set up resources that are lacking,” she said.
“We just need to have the same opportunities as everyone else,” she said. “Often it can be attitudes or stares or all kinds of barriers — economic, political, architectural and attitudinal — that get in the way. Once those are diminished, then people have lived much more productive and fulfilling lives.”
Kennard noted that Independent Living has an employment program to help people find jobs and this year will be promoting people with disabilities directly to perspective employers. It has also held workshops on nutrition, self-esteem and living with a chronic disability.
About 22 students come to Patuelli’s twice-weekly classes on their lunch break. They have a variety of mobility and cognitive challenges. One, who was left in a burning house as an infant, has stubs for legs and fingers.
Not that that stops him from turning in a jaw-dropping performance when he takes the floor. At one point, he suspends himself in the air and looks as if he’s doing pushups in time to the throbbing music.
Patuelli points out that breakdancing is an extremely active dance where every muscle is used.
“When I started to teach the class I was trying to teach them all basic dance moves and then I realized they were having a bit of difficulty,” said Patuelli, who was born in Montreal but grew up in Washington, D.C. “So I asked everyone to show me what moves they can do and then from there we’ll adapt and we’ll add to that movement.”
He pointed to one student he identified by his breakdancer name, Crazymouth.
“He drives the wheelchair with his chin. He has extremely limited motion in his arms and his legs so he has to do everything with his head. When you watch him dance, when he’s really feeling it, you don’t even notice that he can’t move his body. You really see it in his expressions and the joy in his face.
“It’s just incredible to watch that he’s been able to create movements just with the little movements that he can do. That’s the message that I want the kids to learn — that the littlest movement makes the biggest difference.”
Both Patuelli and Kennard agreed the image of the disabled is changing, although it’s happening slowly.
Kennard said Canada is ahead of many places and one of the most accessible places in the country is Vancouver. It had a disabled mayor in Sam Sullivan, who became something of a celebrity when he accepted the Olympic flag in Turin in 2006 ahead of the 2010 Vancouver Games. She added there are two handicapped members of Parliament, Conservative MP Steven Fletcher and the NDP’s Manon Perreault.
“It’s all related to political will and perspective on how people with disabilities fit into our society,” Kennard said of potential changes.
Kennard said Canada could use powerful legislation like the laws in force in the United States and that access to buildings and public transportation is still an issue.
She pointed out that employment is still a big problem and many disabled people live below the poverty line.
“We are constantly battling the medical model, that we need to be fixed or there’s something wrong with us,” said Kennard, adding that lowers self-esteem.
“What we try to do through our resources is to help them feel empowered, to see themselves as a whole.”

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2-Years ago Today one of my biggest career Accomplishments

Today I would like to celebrate my 2-year anniversary from performing at the 2010 Vancouver Paralympic Opening Ceremonies. Il ya deux ans aujourd’hui j’ai danser dans cérémonies d’ouverture des Jeux paralympiques de Vancouver 2010. Un des plus grands spectacles de ma vie!

 

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D’une semaine extraordinaire a une autre :)

Aujourd’hui, je pars a Paris pour une semaine. Je vais travailler avec la compagnie Montalvo-Hervieu sur la production “Orphee”.

La semaine dernière j’ai eu la chance de participer sur l’émission la quotidienne a Star Academie comme un conférencier. C’était un des plus beaux moments de ma carrière. www.staracademie.ca pour plus d’info.

Pour les chandails “Pas d’excuses, Pas de Limites”

Les chandails sont de 25 $ chacun, y compris expédition standard à travers le Canada. Les paiements peuvent être faits par www.paypal.com à bboy_lazylegz@hotmail.com

Les tailles que j’ai disponible sont Small, Medium, Large, Extra Large et ils sont disponibles seulement en tailles d’adultes pour le moment. S’il vous plaît envoyez-moi vos coordonnées, y compris le montant totale des chandails, les tailles et votre adresse. Les chapeaux sont actuellement pas disponibles, mais seront à la fin de printemps 2012. Dès que je reçois le paiement complété, je vous posterai les chandails.

Merci pour votre croyance en ILL-Abilities™ et votre aide a partager le message « Pas d’excuses, Pas de Limites »! Les fonds accumulés par les chandails serviront à financer des performances ILL-Abilities à prix réduit, pour des institutions et écoles en quête d’inspiration.

ENGLISH :

Hello,

T-Shirts are $25 each including standard shipping across Canada.

Payments can be made through www.paypal.com to  bboy_lazylegz@hotmail.com

The sizes I currently have available are Small, Medium, Large, and Extra Large and they are only available in Adult Male Sizes. Please send me your details including total amount of T-Shirts, Sizes, and your address. The hats are currently not available but will be towards the end of Spring 2012. As soon as I receive full payment I will ship the shirts to you.

Thank you for supporting ILL-Abilities™ and helping spread the message “No Excuses, No Limits” together! All proceeds from the t-shirt sales goes towards financing ILL-Abilities performances at low cost for places in need of inspiration.

 

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Nouveau Chandail en Français disponible!

FINALEMENT le chandail officiel de ILL-Abilities™ Pas D’excuses, Pas De Limites est disponible. 

Pour plus de détails sur comment en commander un (ou plusieurs :) ) écrivez moi sur info@lazylegz.com

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