Co-directors of the Dance Education Centre and mother and daughter Prue and Debbie Gooch. Photo / Supplied
A “sanctuary” for dance students in Tauranga has closed its doors after decades of teaching.
The Dance Education Centre in Matua closed at the end of September. It was established in 1991 from the Prue Gooch School of Dance, established in 1975.
Co-directors, mother and daughter Prue and Debbie Gooch, have taught dance to students from age 3 to adults.
Classical ballet, contemporary, jazz dance, musical theatre, tap dancing, competition work, and stage productions were taught at the school.
Former students have spoken of the “immense” contribution the school has made to ballet and the “lifelong lessons” from the school.
Students reach ‘extraordinary heights’
Debbie told the Bay of Plenty Times it was time the family “went on with other parts of their lives”.
“We’d dedicated so many years to the Tauranga community and young children who also travelled from outside of Tauranga to us — some as far as Gisborne, Auckland, Taupō — over the years.”
Debbie thanked “from the bottom of my heart” all the families who chose to learn at the centre.
“Because as much as we taught them, I have learned so much from being with them.”
‘The bulk of my dancing life’
Prue said this year marked her 50th year teaching dancing in Tauranga and the centre had been “the bulk of my dancing life”.
Now, “age is working against me as far as running a large business”.
Prue — who was made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for her services to dance in 2020 — said the centre would be remembered for producing a “high standard” of dancers.
She recalled a grandmother recently say to her, “You cannot give up … you’re the one person in Tauranga I know that has high expectations of the children”.
Prue thought this was a “very relevant comment for the times we’re living in” and parents needed to “elevate that expectation again, as we probably had 10 years ago and before that”.
She was still “extremely busy” with sewing, making tutus, and writing a book. She looked forward to having time for herself.
‘Immense’ contribution to ballet
Royal New Zealand Ballet artistic director and former Dance Education Centre student Ty King-Wall said it was a “sad moment” for the dance and arts community, particularly the “thousands of alumni who have treaded the boards of their Matua studios over the past 50 years”.
“Dance Education Centre has been such a constant for generations, and the contribution they’ve made to ballet in this country, nurturing and developing talented young dancers, has been immense.”
King-Wall said the centre was “instrumental” during the formative years of his training, paving the way for his professional career.
“I will always feel enormously grateful for the time I spent there.”