About the author
Taira was brought up in Derby, England where the dance scene was somewhat limited. At the age of 17 she decided that she wanted to be a dancer and so began training. To say this was a late start for this industry is an understatement as her 1st training class was shared with seven year olds just starting out on their journeys too! Taira's teacher was Eve Leveaux and it is to her Taira believes she owes her career as well as to her parents who supported her all of the way and spent many hours driving her to and from auditions and eventually shows.
Taira's story is one of belief, passion and determination leading her eventually to grace the floors of the west end in London, UK TV, perform with the days superstars and on two occasions for Her Majesty the Queen.
With time past she can now look back with pride at many achievements. In a dance career spanning over ten years she performed in the original cast of we will rock you at The Dominion Theater, Chicago, The Balbeck festival – Beirut, Cha Cha in Grease, Ensemble Fame, The snowman playing the part of the Cat ( The Peacock theater, The Royal Variety show ( Dominion Theater ) , Queens jubilee ( Buckingham Palace), Party in the Park (Hyde Park ) & Michael Parkinson ITV. Today she can add, teaching, chorography and authorship to her impressive list of achievements.
Having started so late, her path was a little different to most dancers. She spent a small amount of time at a conservatoire and then decided to stay in Derby to complete her training and travel up and down to London, (a 3 hour journey), exposing herself to other styles of dance. Her willing and eagerness to learn was apparent.
Although she lacked experience she started to audition learning how to do so on the hop. This alone created some funny, cringe worthy, scary and exhilarating experiences. Taira soon discovered that there was little information or guidance on how to succeed. Most simply said it was a hard industry to get into with no assistance on how to overcome this with information on how to get 'in the mix'. Simple and obvious, now, advice such as such as jobs to help me survive while auditioning, where to look for auditions, agents and how to stay motivated was non-existent.
Her constant desire and strong belief drove her to soak up everything about the industry and it was clear early on that this was the only path for her to follow. She quickly (and quietly) learnt the ins and outs of this business. However, what she really lacked was time and guidance, she needed a book like "Pocket Guide for Dancers" to save time money and accelerate the journey.
Having reflected on her struggle she decided to pen a few ideas to help those facing similar challenges today. This was the birth of "Pocket Guide for Dancers" that would ensure young dancers would have access to a mass of information to help them at every stage of their career and for this information to be in one place – one handy little survival guide.
In teaching she witnessed many students not knowing where to go and what to do after their training; many dancers give up on their dream far too soon because of knock backs from the industry and the fear of the unknown. The guide addresses these issues and offers hope and motivation to help dancers through those dark days - days of feeling alone, isolated and almost ready to give up.
Taira's choreography work has extended her involvement in the dance industry and amongst other work she created two critically praised half-hour showcase works recently - both playing as part of The Place Resolution! Festival. The first entitled "Soloist" The second was an adaptation of the Academy Award winning "Rainman".
The chosen narratives, both of which had successful film versions, demonstrated Taira's ambition and ability to create contemporary narrative dance works that captivate modern audiences.
As well as numerous shorter pieces, Taira has also choreographed a short dance film which premiered in the San Fransisco Dance Film Festival and then the Dance on Camera festival in New York.
Industry reviews have described her work as "explosive", "gripping" & "intensely moving".
Taira has also choreographed numerous pantomimes and today still enjoys this work.
Taira's Hinged Dance Co, with support from Arts Council England, brought together professional dancers, musicians and theatre practitioners together with new talent from the OC London community in Kings Cross, to create Prisoner 466, a new contemporary dance work about Mandela's 27 year imprisonment and the international anti-apartheid campaign his imprisonment inspired.
The future is set to help others achieve their aims and to author more books to help in this regard. That's not to say the dance shoes have been put in the bottom draw, not so fast! Taira is still physically able to dance her students beyond their known limits, both physically and creatively and this she finds highly rewarding.