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Renee Wooding of Timonium rehearses a dance with her dance partner, Juan Alzamora, on April 7, at Lydia Haskell's Fitness Rave in White Marsh. They will perform at the Alzheimer's Association of Central Maryland's Memory Ball fundraiser. (Photo by Steve Ruark / April 11, 2012) |
With a week remaining before her dancing debut at the Alzheimer's Association Memory Ball fundraiser, Renee Wooding of Timonium spent her Saturday morning perfecting her salsa routine with her dance partner, Juan Alzamora.
It wasn't a time for wholesale changes — the dance is, for the most part, committed to memory — but Alzamora advised her to shorten a mid-routine leg kick and not to spin so far away in the final flourish.
Small changes, yes, but all are a long way from where Wooding began the process.
"For what she's accomplished, it's incredible," Alzamora said. "She dances like a total professional. It's really good."
Wooding, a senior vice president at PNC Bank and a past president of the Alzheimer's Association board, has been hard at work for the two months to learn the routine for the dancing competition, a process she says has taken her out of her comfort zone — and allowed her to give back to the organization she spent the better part of the last decade with.
The Alzheimer's Association's Memory Ball 2012 gala is scheduled for Saturday, April 14, at the Baltimore Marriott Waterfront Hotel. The highlight of the annual event has become the dance competition among individuals and couples who are dancing to support theAlzheimer'sAssociation.
"It's been a pretty steep learning curve," said Wooding, who rehearsed with Alzamora at The Fitness Rave in White Marsh.
"It's been fun, (but) you know it depends on the day," she said. "There are some days when I feel demoralized, but most of the time it's been a great process for me. I feel like I've learned so much in a short period of time."
Though she's never really watched "Dancing with the Stars," the television show that the competition is based upon, Wooding watched some online video clips from the show to see what she was in for.
Big mistake, she said.
"They look more like cheerleading routines," she said. "They're flipping people around, and I thought 'oh God, I'm in trouble.' "
The reality for her has been something a bit less daring.
She approached Lydia Haskell at the Fitness Rave and asked her for help, and Haskell introduced Wooding to Alzamora, a zumba teacher at the Fitness Rave who also happens to work for theU.S. Department of Defense.
Alzamora, who lives in Forest Hill and also teaches at Interactive Fitness in Timonium, agreed to train her.
Haskell provided practice space and assistance to the pair, and Niss and Alexandra Albaig of SalsaNow choreographed the dance and gave Wooding lessons at The Promenade, a facility in Woodlawn.
Some of the participants are dancing with fellow amateurs, though Wooding chose to go with a professional. In doing so, she learned just how much effort it takes to get to that level.
"When you see people who dance well, they make it look so easy, and you learn how hard it is to make it look easy," she said.
For Wooding, only the dancing part is new. She knows how important the Memory Ball is as a fundraiser for theAlzheimer'sAssociation, which she left in 2008.
"I know how much what they do makes a difference for people who are suffering with the disease," she said. "And with baby boomers aging, if we don't get a cure for this, it could bankrupt the health care system."
For several years, the organization's main fundraiser was a dinner and a silent auction. Wooding said the event required a lot of work for the staff and ultimately didn't raise a lot of money, prompting the switch to a "Dancing with the Stars" format.