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The
Gilded Serpent presents...
Amina Goodyear
Amina
began dancing professionally in 1966 at San Francisco's famous Bagdad
Cabaret, where she was a principal nightly dancer for twenty
years. Amina's teaching career began in 1971. Soon after, she founded
The Aswan Dancers, the premiere Egyptian dance company. She also
founded The Cairo Cats Band and co-founded The Arabian Knights
Band. As a master teacher, Amina also teaches percussion and Arabic
song translation, pointing out understanding the music and the meaning
of the music is key to understanding the dance. She has played backup
percussion for musicians such as Susu Pampanin, Reda
Darwish, and George, Elias and Tony
Lammam.
Amina continues to
study, to teach and perform. She has five regular dance classes a week,
bimonthly Drumming Workshops for Dancers, biweekly drum classes and weekly
cabaret performance classes. She has troupe rehearsals twice a week and
continues to dance with and choreograph The Aswan Dancers for
their weekly appearance at an Egyptian club. As a favorite of the Arabic
community, she always has
a venue at Middle Eastern nightclubs where she dances and performs percusson
with the Band while spotlighting her student dancers. Amina sings with
Aswat, San Francisco's only Arabic choir specializing in classical
Arabic music. In addition, she has a full schedule of private classes
focusing on training dancers for professional performance.
In
1991, Amina created The Giza Club, an Arabic cultural organization
that sponsors dancers and musicians, cultural lectures and performances.
Giza Club members are worldwide and guide The Giza Academy of Music
and Legends of Middle Eastern Dance Videos (The Giza Awards). Amina
has produced two videos: the documentary "Hizz ya Wiz," and
"Nadia in America," with the Egyptian star Nadia Hamdi.
With more than thirty-five
years of Middle Eastern Dance experience, AMINA feels that she had just
now reached her full teaching potential. In 1994, AMINA was inducted into
the Middle Eastern Hall of Fame in New York, (AAMED).
Visit us at
www.giza.org
www.aswandancers.org
Articles by or about Amina
on Gilded Serpent
Dance
Career Memoir
- 1-25-04
Chapter 1: One Ad Changed My Life
by Amina Goodyear
I
was very desperate and determined to get back to my old self.
- 3-24-04
Chapter 2: "I'd Rather
Stay Home with my Kids" by Amina Goodyear
I
asked her how to take it off, and she told me to figure it out when
I
was on stage. Then I heard - "Our "guest" dancer, Amina,
all the way from upstairs!"
- 4-17-07
Chapter 3: A Marriage Made in North
Beach by Amina Goodyear
The
stage was alight with the flames of the candelabrum’s candles and
the eerie glow of her costume. Fatma’s costumes were always comprised
of material that glowed in the dark as her show began with no light—except
for “black light”.
- 6-6-07
Chapter 4: Smokin' by Amina Goodyear
Now that I was
legitimately part of the Bagdad family and on the payroll, Yousef told
me that all
the dancers had to split their tips 50/50 with the band. This meant that
I was making less money than when I wasn’t getting paid at all.
- 6-30-07
Chapter 5: Listen to the Music
by Amina Goodyear
Yousef
wanted us to look exotic, like we were from the Middle East, so he made
us stay downstairs, look available and wear sexy, skimpy pantaloon outfits
or diaphanous caftans when we were not dancing.
- 8-15-07 Chapter
6: Bert, by
Amina Goodyear
On my first Monday at
the Casa Madrid, Bert came to support the place and me. Well, what he saw
was equivalent to a San Francisco earthquake.
- 2-8-08 Chapter
7: Yousef – Black Lights
and Veils by Amina Goodyear
It
was kind of hard to compete with this kind of action when we kept our clothes
on.
more coming soon!
Reviews
of Products and Events
- 3-15-08 The
Magic Sounds Studio of Cairo, 3 Albums reviewed and Compared by Amina
Goodyear
CDs- Oriental Fantasy #12- Talisman, Nesma:Del Nilo al Guadalquivir
(From the Nile to the Guadalquivir),Nesma, Memories of Cairo.
In a world where Egyptian dancers dance in the "less
is more" tradition, the world of musicians seemed to be - more
is better and lots more is best.
- 12-6-07 IBDC-
Part 1 A Brand New Idea for Belly Dance: The Festival Idea in its Formative
Years by Amina Goodyear
I’m
speaking of a festival and its promoters that promised more than
they were able to deliver.
- 1-7-08 IBDC
Part 2:- A Gilded Serpent tale, Alex in Wonderland, by
Amina Goodyear
Unfortunately,
the event did not draw the amount of vendors he had expected and, I believe,
because he himself had not yet made a reputation for himself as a credible
festival producer, he did not get the numbers of the dancers he wished
for. Belly dancers are special people and Alex personally did not understand
their basic nature.
- 11-23-07 Danza
Del Vientre by Devorah Korek Book Review by Gregory Burke Translation
by Amina Goodyear
Book is in Spanish. Once in a while an object of desire comes
along, which is deemed important by its obscurity. Such could be the
case with this hardcover, difficult to acquire tabletop adornment from
Devorah
Korek, an American-born Belly Dance teacher living and thriving in Spain.
additional Synopsis
of the book
- 7-24-07 The
Zar, Trance Music for Women, CD Review by Amina Goodyear
produced by Yasmin of Serpentine.org. “Once a spirit is called,
it must be appeased. Then it will always be there.” And it will
have to be periodically dealt with.
- 4-2-07 “In
a Beirut Mood”: Jalilah's
Raks Sharki 6, A Review by Amina Goodyear
I
found the selections included make exciting listening. Each selection
is a beautiful arrangement and a good mix. Best of all: each musical
selection is useful and conducive for dance.
- 2-21-07
Veiled Visions: A Trip Down Memory
Lane CD review by Amina Goodyear
The CD titled “Veiled Visions” is a re-release
of music that was formerly produced on vinyl.
- 7-11-07 "Veiled
Visions" How Belly Dance Music was First Brought to the
United States by Ray Rashid, intro by Amina
One
time he told me about a blind accordion player who sat and made lots of
jokes while they rehearsed, that musician turned out to be Ammar el Sharie.
Interviews
and Other Articles
- 9-17-07 Changes:
Egyptian Dance - Has it crossed the line? by Amina Goodyear
Both
festivals, held in Giza were isolated and insulated from the people and
the Cairo
that I know and love.
- 2-13-07
Sunday Morning Panel Discussion at Carnival
of Stars, November 11, 2007 Transcribed from video by Allyson.
Panel members
discussed Fusion in Belly Dance. Members included: Jihan Jamal, Shareen
El Safy, Dahlena, Debbie Lammam, Amina Goodyear, and
Edwina Nearing
- 12-10-05
Articulating the Collective Dream:
The Giza Awards, and why the legacy-making process is important to you.
by Amina Goodyear and Gregory Burke.
"We
embrace change however roughly it appears. With video we feel secure
in
the knowledge that the legacy of the past will never abandon us."
- 11-16-01
Giza Club Lecture, Wacky
Woman Traveler- Leyla Lanty
Hard work and familiarity
pays off.
- 8-31-01 Make
a Giza Club!
...She was to become
our first Wacky Woman Traveler...
- 5-3-01
Fouad
Marzouk, Interview by Amina Goodyear
I remember at first feeling intimidated dancing to one of Soheir Zaki's
musicians.
- 8-12-00 Dancing
on the Edge by Amina
I learned from the first
evening chasing Fatma around the stage that in order to have a serious
dance company in the Egyptian style, I had to seriously play with the
appearance of disorder.
- 3-22-00 HOW
TO START A MIDDLE EASTERN BAND or How The Arabian Knights Came About
We dreamed of a
band that would play music to make us look good always.
- 12-99 Second
Annual Giza Academy Awards by Amina Goodyear
The judges seldom
agree the first time around. So begins a process of arguing the various
merits of each video performance as it pertains to the category for which
it is being considered, until finally a consensus is reached.
- Salamat
Valentine by Amina Goodyear of San Francisco, CA
Would my "Valentine" want
to celebrate the day a day early or would he be mad that I would rather
be at Salamat Sundays?
- 12-12-99
AT LONG LAST-HERE IT IS!
North Beach Memories!
Please join us as we travel
back in time to the North Beach district of San Francisco between the
years
1957 through 1985. We'll read about a vibrant period of Middle
Eastern Dance and Music Performance as presented in our interviews with
musicians, dancers, and club owners who created this exciting history.
Amina,
Saida Asmar, Aziza,
Dahlena, Fadil,
Najia, Shamira,
Taka, Vince
For
more info, including Amina's exciting Video ,"Hizz Ya Wiz",
contact Amina at aminajune@aol.com
Our
band plays every Sunday Night!
Call for more info: Amina (415) 282-7910
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