Entertainment
25 years after 13-year-old dancer's death, her legacy lives on at L.A. charter schools
The Angelus Temple megachurch in Echo Park was the unlikely venue (and largest to date) for the Gabriella Charter Schools’ year-end dance recitals. Friends and family packed the 5,300-seat, three-story theater for two performances on a Saturday in June, which transported them from California’s redwood forests and Central Valley farms to the schools’ home of Los Angeles.
Sixth grader Annabelle Soriano took the stage as a voice-over in English and Spanish told the story — inspired by José Cruz González’s play “Two Donuts” — of a Guatemalan American girl who doesn’t see the beauty in her L.A. neighborhood. So, in her dreams, she embarks on an adventure through the Golden State in search of meaning. Students explore California through classic dance styles including tap, hip-hop and ballet mixed with moves popularized on TikTok and by the video game “Fortnite.”
Audiences lined Glendale Boulevard hours before the two performances. Gabriella Charter Schools Executive Director Rhonda Baldenegro said this is the norm for the schools’ annual recital — even though it’s only their second in-person performance since the COVID-19 pandemic.
Parents made costumes for each campus’ annual recital, including cactus sweatsuits for the third-grade “Joshua Tree” performance.
(Heather Seybolt)
The event’s popularity is a testament to Liza Bercovici’s decades-long commitment to dance education. Bercovici, a former attorney, founded an after-school dance program for low-income communities in 1999 in honor of her 13-year-old daughter, Gabriella Axelrad, who was killed that year by a distracted driver while bicycling during a family vacation. Gabriella was a dancer and dreamed of becoming a teacher. In 2005, the program grew into a charter school for students from kindergarten through eighth grade. The Echo Park campus that is now its home opened in 2009 and spawned a second location in South L.A. in 2017. About 400 students are enrolled at each school.
Twenty-five years after Gabriella’s death, her legacy lives on.
“We serve a pretty impacted population and any experience that can be offered them that enhances their lives, to me, is just really, really important,” Bercovici said. “We as an organization have made this commitment to provide arts and dance at a very high level and a very frequent level, and that’s very atypical.”
Baldenegro said GCS is one of the few public schools in the country to teach dance as a part of the curriculum multiple days a week. For many of GCS’ low-income students, it’s their sole opportunity for formal dance training.
Even after their big year-end recital, as summer vacation loomed, the kids at GCS kept dancing. For five students, the dancing will continue through the summer at the Theatrical Education Group’s Summer Arts Conservatory at Los Angeles County High School for the Arts. While enrollment costs more than $1,200, GCS students received full-ride scholarships.
GCS dance instructor Antavius Ellison was the catalyst in connecting the school and the program.
The Gabriella Charter Schools’ “Cali Dreams” recital, which included the third grade’s “Beach” routine, depicted different areas of the state.
(Emann Mallorca)
“The more I’m able to introduce [students] into those spaces now lets me feel like, ‘Hey, you’re doing your job. You didn’t have this growing up and now you’re able to pay it forward [in] a very hopeful way,’” said Ellison, a professional dancer who’s appeared in music videos for SZA and Hozier. “I feel like that’s one of my purposes for being at GCS right now. … I take it as a sign from God that you are doing just what you need to do.”
One of the conservatory scholarship recipients is rising eighth grader Madison Pinon, whom Ellison personally chose for the scholarship. He calls her his “little assistant/mentee.”
“As soon as she found out, I’ve never seen that smile,” Madison’s mother, Berlin Pinon, said. “[It was] ear to ear that whole weekend.”
The young dancer joined GCS in fifth grade. She hadn’t taken classes since she was 8 years old. As her dance skills progressed, Madison began assisting Ellison in leading classes for younger students at the Echo Park campus.
The 2024 dance recital marked the schools’ second in-person performance since the COVID-19 pandemic.
(Heather Seybolt)
The 13-year-old hopes to learn new styles of dance during the three-week program in July.
“In sixth grade, I discovered dance is something I can pursue in the future, something I can do for a living,” Madison said. “I feel like if I believe in the fact that I can — and in myself — I probably would be able to get there.”
Fifth-grader Nathan Sandoval is one of the scholarship recipients from the South L.A. campus. His mother, Nora Martinez, was “in shock” when she found out about the opportunity.
“I feel so blessed because they see my son has talent,” she said. “These are achievements that he’s doing himself because he loves [dance].”
Martinez said the 11-year-old was a born performer who finally shed his shyness at GCS.
“He always tells me before he goes onstage, ‘Mom, I’m doing this for you because you cheer for me and I know you’re going to like my dance,’” Martinez said.
Even as the COVID-19 pandemic forced schools into virtual learning, the dancing never stopped. During the spring 2020 semester, dance instructors recorded videos for students to watch, said Echo Park principal Stephanie Piazza. The school still put on its recital — although that year’s took the form of videos stitched together of the students dancing at home.
“In a lot of places, the pandemic stopped stuff that schools had been doing. And we just were like, ‘No, this matters. This is important. We’re going to figure out a way to do it,’” Piazza said. “Anytime I see a clip of the [2020] performance we did, it’s really emotional because we were all so lonely and sad, and we still found ways to connect like that.”
Gabriella Charter Schools teach dance to students three days a week, every week.
(Heather Seybolt)
The schools’ commitment to dance earned them a California Pivotal Practice Award for innovation during the shutdown.
“Something I’m really proud of is that we never stopped doing any arts, even as budgets go everywhere all the time in California, that’s just because it’s our mission and vision that will never get touched,” Piazza said. “[Dance is] such a powerful way for kids to express themselves. … It’s really amazing for kids, as young as 4 at our school, to have this other space where they can shine.”
Dance classes have been shown to help students’ physical and emotional well-being. In 2016, the Copenhagen Consensus Conference found that physical activity improves scholastic performance and brain function. Meanwhile, children’s arts education has been linked to improved grades and attendance.
“We really, truly believe in sort of the transformative power of dance, and how it can help kids learn better and just be more competent, poised individuals who have this great mind-body connection when it comes to learning,” Baldenegro said.
Walking through the Echo Park campus, everyone knows everyone else’s name. The common theme among students, family and faculty: a love for the community the schools have created.
“A lot of kids at my old school, they all kind of stick to their own group and they aren’t so happy,” Madison said. “But here, a lot of people are happy; they get really happy through dance.”
The schools’ dance classes mix classic cardio exercises such as jumping jacks and high knees with choreography. The students move to popular tunes from artists such as Kali Uchis and Harry Styles. One dance to Drake’s “Controlla” was choreographed — and, for the first-grade class, led — by Madison.
Previously, Madison “stuck to choreography” that was familiar to her. She has since felt empowered to choreograph original dances in order to “express more” through her own movements, she said.
“I’ve seen a lot of growth within her, not only in her dancing skills — obviously with more practice that’s bound to happen — but just leadership skills and discipline. She really is committed and sets plans for everything,” Berlin said. “I can see she’s shaping up to be a great young woman.”
After the class concluded, two second-graders wanted to show off a dance they made up, complete with acrobatics.
“I couldn’t have paid them to have done that last semester,” Ellison said.
While the dance instructors at the schools are in charge of choreographing the recital, Ellison said he makes sure to incorporate his students’ moves.
“I want to give my students more agency to be able to create because I feel like that allows them to be more confident within themselves,” Ellison said. “They are taking up space in a very healthy way. … A space is given for them to trust in their natural abilities, and to understand that movements and creativity will always look different, based off of the person, and there is no — to me — right or wrong way to move your body, to dance.”
Movie Reviews
1985 Movie Reviews – A Chorus Line, The Color Purple, Enemy Mine, and Out of Africa | The Nerdy
Welcome to an exciting year-long project here at The Nerdy. 1985 was an exciting year for films giving us a lot of films that would go on to be beloved favorites and cult classics. It was also the start to a major shift in cultural and societal norms, and some of those still reverberate to this day.
We’re going to pick and choose which movies we hit, but right now the list stands at nearly four dozen.
Yes, we’re insane, but 1985 was that great of a year for film.
The articles will come out – in most cases – on the same day the films hit theaters in 1985 so that it is their true 40th anniversary. All films are also watched again for the purposes of these reviews and are not being done from memory. In some cases, it truly will be the first time we’ve seen them.
This time around, it’s Dec. 20, 1985, and we’re off to see A Chorus Line, The Color Purple, Enemy Mine, and Out of Africa.
A Chrous Line
For a film about dancers, it’s amazing how lifeless it feels.
Set during the auditions for the chorus line of a new musical, the story follows the lives and dreams of the assembled men and women that cover multiple age brackets and backgrounds.
At the time, A Chorus Line was the most successful Broadway show ever. The film was meant to do for movie musicals what it had done for the stage, and while it did turn a minor profit, the film just completely falls flat.
No one in this film is believable in their roles. There is no hunger, no fire in their eyes. It’s just cold and dead. This film feels exactly what it is, a bunch of actors reciting lines, and not once did I feel pulled into their stories.
A massive let down on just about every level.
The Color Purple
Going from the rote performances of A Chorus Line to the transcendent turns of The Color Purple was downright near whiplash.
The film follows Celie (Desreta Jackson as young Celie, Whoopi Goldberg as adult Celie) across multiple decades of her life that see her go from a sexually abused child to a woman who eventually finds her own way in the South of the early 20th Century.
Let me just get this out of the way from the jump: Every single actor in this film delivers an unbelievable performance. Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey in particular shine here, but no one was slacking to be sure.
That being said, I do not feel Steven Spielberg was the right choice to direct here. His instincts are always to lean toward the sentimental moments, and this is a harsh story to its core. It is constantly interrupted by swelling music, hopeful shots, and more of his worst instincts.
Spielberg is a master director without question, but that doesn’t mean his style can be plugged into every style of story, and it doesn’t feel like it worked here.
It’s still a worthwhile film, but you have to wonder how much greater it could have been with someone else directing it.

Enemy Mine
Some times a film just proves how valuable a good editor is.
Set in 2092, Humans are at war with the reptilian Dracs. Willis E. Davidge (Dennis Quad) crash lands on a planet with a Drac named Jeriba “Jerry” Shigan (Louis Gossett Jr.) after a dogfight, and the two have to rely on one another for survival.
I’ve enjoyed this movie since I first watched as a video rental back in the 80s. Gossett is so hidden in the makeup it’s unfathomable to think you know the actor in the costume. And Quaid turns in a really strong performance as well leaving you with a truly enjoyable sci-fi romp.
But… the editing. Late in the film when Davidge is rescued, he is accused by higher ranking officers of being in league with the Drac, and this is capped off by everyone hearing him speak the Drac language. The implication is clear they think he is a traitor.
In the very next scene he is clean shaven, healed, and walking in his uniform on his way to steal a starfighter to fulfill a promise he made to Jerry.
So, either a scene was cut of him clearing his name, or maybe we should have never had the scene implying he was a traitor? It was a jarring jump in logic, and shows just how important editing can be to a film.
Out of Africa
I have never been more bored while watching something so pretty.
Danish aristocrat Karen Dinesen (Meryl Streep) moves to Africa to marry her friend, Baron Bror Blixen (Klaus Maria Brandauer) and set up a farm. While there, she meets Denys Finch Hatton (Robert Redford) and becomes enamored with him, eventually leaving her husband for him.
The film is semi-autobiographical, just proving that not every biography, no matter how exotic, needs to be turned into a film. Between Streeps horrific attempt an accent, and far too many details about everyone’s life, the only thing I enjoyed was the scenery, and even that was a stretch at times.
Quite glad to never have to revisit this film.
1985 Movie Reviews will return on Dec. 27, 2025, with Murphy’s Romance, Revolution, and The Trip to Bountiful.
Entertainment
Phil Wickham and ‘David’ face the Goliath of ‘Avatar’
Phil Wickham has released 14 Christian worship albums, has been Platinum certified and nominated for American Music Awards, Dove Awards, Billboard Music Awards and Grammys — but all of his vocal training and performances couldn’t prepare him to step into the shoes of one of his Biblical heroes with the upcoming animated musical film “David.”
Directed by Phil Cunningham and Brent Dawes, “David” marks the second animated film this year for Angel Studios. April’s “The King of Kings” made $60 million and is the second-highest-grossing film from the studio following “Sound of Freedom,” which made $184 million. The film hits theaters on Friday. If the release date sounds familiar, it could be because the third installment in the multibillion-dollar “Avatar” franchise, “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” is released on the same day. Presale numbers for “David” are at $15 million on 3,100 screens, but with “Avatar” tracking to open between $135 million and $165 million, and “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants” also tracking between $13 million and $20 million, it would seem to be a true David vs. Goliaths for ticket sales.
That in itself could be daunting, but for Wickham, the biggest obstacles came long before release dates were decided. Despite playing in arenas with thousands of fans, he had a “secret dream” of voicing a character in an animated film. A character “that carried courage and faith and had some grand adventure.” But because he’d never chased that dream, he realistically put a limit on that particular goal. Even when the opportunity arose, he was hesitant when going into a casting meeting.
“I’m unoffendable. [I said to producers], if I suck, then just tell me because I don’t want to waste anybody’s time. And also, I don’t want to be bad in a movie as much as you don’t want to make a bad movie,” says Wickham.
The contemporary Christian artist, who recently finished sold-out concerts at Downey Calvary Chapel and the Wiltern, had never tried his hand at voice acting. Not only did he get the role, but he also had to help bring to (animated) life one of the most well-known stories in the Bible. The tale of David — the boy who was anointed to become the king and along the way felled the giant Philistine warrior Goliath with a rock and a slingshot — has become synonymous as the most famous of underdog representations and tests of faith in the Bible. The character and story is also one of Wickham’s favorites.
Phil Wickham always wanted to voice an animated character, especially after seeing “The Lion King.”
(Colton Dall)
“When this came across my desk, so to speak, I was just like, man, I could tell you that story, but I didn’t know if I had it in me. I didn’t know if I was a good actor. I didn’t know if I could voice a character, but I knew I wanted a shot,” said Wickham.
A curious revelation for Wickham was discovering that the singing that he’d been doing most of his life would not work on-screen, at least not for this project. He was asked to tone down things, to sometimes “talk through” lyrics and to generally make the music more dramatic for the screen.
“I thought, OK, I got this. This is why they hired me, because I’m a singer. But that ended up being the hardest part because they didn’t want me to sound like me,” Wickham said.
“Singing became a background to just being the character, which honestly, in some ways, was the hardest thing. Maybe even for my ego as as an artist.”
It was definitely a process that required lots of fine-tuning and looking at David as not just the king and hero that Wickham had grown up reading about at home and in Southern California churches. Sitting in the pews in Downey, the singer reflected on why he got into music and why Christian entertainment is on the rise.
“I found out really quick that I loved being a part of moments where people were encountering the same hope and faith that I encountered in my room alone,” Wickham said of songwriting and performing. He grew up with Christianity all around him, but has seen a spike in popularity for music and movies dealing with faith-based fandom.
“For this movie ‘David’ to come out at this time … I think that the world is looking for stuff to hope in. I think people are just searching and finding out more and more the truth that if we look around us at the world of man, we’re not going to find real solutions. So that maybe if we look up, we will.”
Entertainment
TikTok creators welcome deal to keep app in the U.S.
Only a few years ago, Keith Lee was a professional MMA fighter, doing food delivery and making social media videos to ease his social anxiety.
On Thursday night, however, Lee found himself under the glare of bright lights and walking the red carpet outside the historic Hollywood Palladium on Sunset Boulevard about to be recognized as TikTok’s “Creator of the Year.”
He and hundreds of other creators had gathered for TikTok’s first American awards show. And they had good reason to celebrate.
Only a few minutes before the start of the inaugural show, they got word about a deal that would allow TikTok to keep operating in the U.S. through a joint venture controlled by a group of U.S. investors that includes tech giant Oracle Corp. TikTok confirmed the deal in an email to employees and said it is expected to close next month.
“[TikTok] is the best way to reach people and I know so many people who rely on it to support their families,” said Lee, who has 17.3 million followers of his casual restaurant reviews. “For me, it’s my career now so I can’t imagine it not being around.”
Creators — many of whom are based in Southern California — rely on the app as a key source of income, while businesses and brands turn to the platform and its influencers to promote their products.
Many had worried that the app might disappear after the Supreme Court upheld a ban on the platform because of national security concerns raised by President Trump in 2020.
Trump subsequently allowed TikTok, which has offices in Culver City, to keep operating in the U.S. and in September signed an executive order outlining the new joint venture.
Comedy creator Adam W., who attended the awards show, called the news “game changing.”
With 22.6 million followers on TikTok, Adam W. has amassed a massive audience for his videos that parody pop culture trends.
In one, he’s a contestant on “The Bachelor,” surrounded by a line of lookalike blond models; in another, he’s drinking matcha lattes with Will Smith.
“That’s so good to hear,” said Adam W. of the new ownership. “So many people are able to make careers off of TikTok. There’s so many people out there who go to TikTok to get away from their reality and it means a lot to them, so I think it’s really valuable for us to have.”
TikTok said the awards show is intended to celebrate the influencers who’ve helped transform the app into a global force that has shaped the way younger Americans shop and consume entertainment.
“You represent a truly global community of over 1 billion people on TikTok,” Kim Farrell, the app’s global head of creators, said at the event. “This year, you showed the world just how much impact creators have.”
Despite the historic moment, the awards show was not without technical glitches. Screens that were intended to display clips of contestants and visuals during speeches were dark the entire night.
The two-hour show, in which creators received awards in several categories, featured a range of skits parodying TikTok cultural moments, from Jools Lebron telling the crowd to “be demure,” to Rei Ami of K-Pop Demon Hunters shooting a Labubu cannon into the crowd.
“TikTok definitely changed my life,” Lee said in an interview. “I always planned my life around food, so I’m blessed to just turn the camera on and do the same thing.”
The new ownership of TikTok should allow the app to rebound after it lost market share amid uncertainty over its future, said Max Willens, an analyst at EMarketer.
“This past year, because a lot of advertisers weren’t really sure whether TikTok was going to stay or go, it did kind of slow the momentum that we had seen on that platform,” Willens said. “We think that moving forward that is going to wind up just being a blip.”
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