Luigi is a band based in Atlanta, GA. Members are Michelle DuBois, Scott Rowe, Johnny McConnell and Brian Fletcher. Trivia: - Luigi is a band of drummers--each has played drums in one combo or another. - Luigi loves language. Between the members they can get by in Spanish, Portuguese and German, and have covered a Japanese song by the Pillows. - Soccer excites Luigi. In fact the name Luigi came to DuBois as a player in the World Cup ran down field and sported LUIGI across his back. - Left Ha...
Luigi is a band based in Atlanta, GA.
Members are Michelle DuBois, Scott Rowe, Johnny McConnell and Brian Fletcher.
Trivia: - Luigi is a band of drummers--each has played drums in one combo or another. - Luigi loves language. Between the members they can get by in Spanish, Portuguese and German, and have covered a Japanese song by the Pillows. - Soccer excites Luigi. In fact the name Luigi came to DuBois as a player in the World Cup ran down field and sported LUIGI across his back. - Left Handed Web Guru: Fletcher, Luigi's left handed drummer, is also the master of their website. - Springtime in Holland. Rowe tours Holland with Magnapop, another Atlanta band that he lends his bass-playing skillz to, about once a year. - DuBois in Your Livingroom. If you're a David Cross fan you may have seen DuBois as part of Ultrababyfat, featured band on his Let America Laugh tour DVD. - Tanning on Course. The golden tan sported by McConnell is the result of many a weekend spent perfecting his golfing skills.
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Eugene Louis "Luigi" Faccuito is an American jazz dancer, choreographer, teacher and innovator who is best known for creating a jazz exercise technique. The Luigi Warm Up Technique is an influential training program that promotes body alignment, balance, core strength, and "feeling from the inside." It is also used for rehabilitation. This method became the world’s first standard technique for teaching jazz and musical theater dance. Luigi developed the technique, which consists of a series of ballet-based exercises, for his own rehabilitation after suffering paralyzing injuries in a car accident at the age of twenty one. Determined to dance again, he first learned to regain control of his body by what he uses as a cornerstone of his technique – namely, to “lengthen and stretch the body without strain," and “put the good side into the bad side.’’ He then focused on a way “to stabilize himself – as if he were pressing down on an invisible (dance) barre. His efforts paid off because he went on to have a successful dance career, and became a world renowned jazz teacher.
Talent and perseverance enabled Luigi to work in every facet of show business, before and after the accident. His jobs have included working in big bands with Ted Lewis; Hollywood films with Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, Doris Day and Cyd Charisse; burlesque with Lili St. Cyr; television with Red Skelton and bandleader Les Brown; on Broadway with Ethel Merman and George Goebel—and for over five decades, he and his students have spread his technique globally.
Since the second half of the twentieth century, Luigi’s method has influenced generations of Who’s-Who in show business, along with a myriad of ‘dancers’ from all walks of life. This pioneer coined the phrase “5, 6, 7, 8,” which is now used universally at the start of dance routines. His motto, “never stop moving,” has moved past dance parlance into the mainstream.
- Born: Eugene Louis Faccuito, at home, March 20–21, 1925, Steubenville, Ohio - Occupation: Dancer, Choreographer, Teacher, Innovator, Singer Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.