Arnie Zimbelman was dressed to the nines on July 28 when he watched the return of the Strauss Competition of Elk Grove at Elk Grove Regional Park.
It didn’t matter that he was in a wheelchair or that the late afternoon warmth was within the triple digits – he nonetheless wore a tuxedo. He additionally wore an Austrian flag pin that was a present from the Austrian Consul-Common and a pin that resembled a purple Iris.
A couple of dozen competition dancers, wearing nineteenth century Austrian vogue, made positive to greet Arnie earlier than the performances started. His late spouse, Iris, created the competition in 1987 when she needed to see the standard Austrian waltzes and polkas they watched throughout a trip journey to Vienna.
“What pleases me probably the most is the truth that it’s nonetheless going,” Arnie instructed the Citizen. “Iris was instructed means again when it began that 90% of these items die after one yr, and right here is the thirty third present and it’s nonetheless going.”
The thirty third annual Strauss Competition of Elk Grove was revived on July 28-31 after two years of cancellations, because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Greater than 70 dancers, ages 5 to 81, carried out waltzes, polkas, and quadrilles to Austrian composer Johann Strauss II’s music that was performed by the Camelia Symphony Orchestra on the Strauss Island stage on the park. Paolo Reyes returned because the orchestra’s conductor this yr.
Mark Hedlund, a retired Information 10 reporter and longtime Elk Grove resident, returned because the present’s grasp of ceremonies. Through the competition’s opening night time, Cosumnes Group Companies District Board President Jaclyn Moreno offered a $36,000 verify from her district to the competition.
Becky Bennett sat on a blanket close to the island to benefit from the manufacturing’s opening night time. She began attending the competition throughout its early years within the Eighties.
“I like that it’s neighborhood–oriented (and) to see the children,” she mentioned. “And you recognize there are households within the efficiency. It’s undoubtedly a competition.”
Dancers included Strauss veterans like John Matthews who’ve been with the competition for 30 years. He joined the competition’s polka troupe at age 17, and he mentioned that he by no means knew it might be such an extended a part of his life.
“It’s a household, it’s not simply my precise household, however the dancers – they’re household,” Matthews mentioned. “There’s additionally a rush if you exit on stage and it’s simply enjoyable.”
His daughter, KatieJohn, starred as “Iris” on this yr’s competition storyline that was a retelling of Lewis Caroll’s basic story, “Alice in Wonderland.” This storyline, which named its heroine in honor of Iris Zimbelman, was initially supposed to be carried out on the 2020 competition that was canceled in the course of the pandemic’s early months. Standard characters just like the White Rabbit, the Cheshire Cat, and the Queen of Hearts appeared on the competition. Within the scene the place Iris shrinks after consuming a cake, KatieJohn rapidly disappeared behind a playground slide that was adorned like a big inexperienced rock. A little bit lady then slid down the slide and appeared as Iris’ tiny self.
Outdated competition traditions remained, such because the grand finale that had dancers waltz to Strauss’ 1866 basic, “The Blue Danube.”
New households such because the Pattanis joined the dancer forged and spent a number of months rehearsing. Tushar mentioned that he and his spouse, Tanima together with their teenage sons Medhansh and Kavish rehearsed a number of instances per week since March. He talked about how the expertise is academic for his kids.
“It’s not simply enjoyable, it’s additionally educating them rather a lot about communication, getting together with individuals, and listening to all people’s perspective,” Tushar mentioned.
Raelynn Springer, a competition board member, spent a lot of her time pausing to be greeted and hugged by attendees earlier than the present began. She instructed the Citizen that volunteers spent as much as seven months making ready for the competition.
“It’s an extended haul, and so they do it as a result of they take pleasure in it and to see individuals come out and assist it,” Springer mentioned. “It’s heartwarming – it brings again that previous Elk Grove really feel, that nostalgia.”