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Abby Lee Dance Company

July 17, 2011 by · Comments Off on Abby Lee Dance Company 

Abby Lee Dance Company

Abby Lee Dance Company, Viewers have seen TLC “Toddlers and Tiaras” to expose the hysteria behind the child beauty queen, but life is taking pre-teen divas, along with their mothers too involved, to a whole new level with “Dance mothers. ”

The docu-series follows a group of competition in the Abby Lee Dance Company in Pittsburgh, where Abby Lee Miller hope whips dancers into shape. She is well known for its reputation for tough but successful. There is small fee for the training of Miller – and 16,000 a year per child. Many students return year after year and, in exchange for the high price, Miller refuses to produce anything less than winners.

During the first episode, half dozen girls between 6 and 13 years old, Miller enter to begin study to train for competition in Phoenix, which takes place in a week’s time.

With only seven days to learn two routines, the girls exercise every mental and physical resource they have. Miller watchful eye of critics and critical tests of the girls without any filter, indicating that she would not be the reason for one of her students instead of screaming crying in front of a crowd at a hearing.

For the most part, Miller is brutal in its honesty, and as a result some of her students upset. But she does not care and retaliates with statements such as points, “I understand. I do not see your tears,” or “If bowlegged, you need to fix that.”

Miller wants to not only thicken the skin of her students, but also eliminate the competitive and without talent, leading to a lot of tears in young girls.

However, the series is called “Kids Dance”, which is called “Dance mothers,” and the camera moves quickly to high maintenance women sitting in the stadium seats set behind glass in her dancing bare midriff daughters.

With two or three feet of empty space between the mother, women are not exactly friends. They are more competitive than their daughters because they understand what it means to be at the top, and freely express their frustrations with a tendency to talk trash.

They complain of hostility Miller ruling, the paper pyramid was created to foster competition, but in reality only further highlights the best dancer is and who is not all and also complain that their daughters will not be as competitive as expected.

During the interviews with mothers, shared her ex-husband says her obsession with dance was the final blow to her marriage, while another mother admits giving priority to dance school. Then start to break, abandoning their responsibilities as parents dance and go to the nearest bar for a cocktail or two – or five.

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