FAZIL'S IN NY CITY CLOSES IT'S DOORS

Ah alas...I am saddened to see Fazils finally go. I studied my craft of Belly Dance there from late 1970's to 2007. Some of my first skirts were made by Chiquita for $10. She worked in a room the size of closet and was about 4' tall. She used to make the Flamenco dancers and stripper costumes also, she was a dear lady until her passing. I not only studied with Ibrahim Farrah, Yousery Shariff, Ramzi El Edlibi, Eleni Lentini but took many a workshop there with International Teachers like Nadia Gamal and more. I am sure many of you also know Fazils well.  Feel free to comment on this blog. Lets hear from all of you, it should be so interesting.

When I walked up those high flights of stairs, I felt like I was climbing to Stardom. I used to reflect on my life as to where I was as I every day I came up those stairs over thirty years. I also taught classes at Fazils for many years and trained my dance company for hours and hours each week for our stage concert performances. In the 80's I had the pleasure of working regularly at the Turkish Night club on the 2nd floor owned by Fazil. All the musicians in town used to come there and hang out as well as the dancers after their last shows. I was honored to have my picture up on the wall with the other notable dancers. I really feel so nostalgic and wish I was in NYC for the closing. Here is a story about Fazils of which much I did not know.
Amara Al Amir


Last Dance: A Studio Tears Up Its Floors
James Estrin/The New York Times

Fazil Cengiz has been forced to close the dance studio that bears his name. More Photos >

Published: February 9, 2008

The places where cultural history was made in New York City have largely disappeared, and on Friday another institution was lost. Fazil’s Times Square Studio closed after 73 years as a ramshackle, homey rehearsal center that served as a mecca for everyone from movie stars to struggling tap, flamenco and Middle Eastern dancers.

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James Estrin/The New York Times

Anne Tyus, a dancer who has been coming to the studio since the 1960s, shared goodbyes with Fazil Cengiz on Thursday. More Photos »

The rates were cheap. Even penniless artists could afford to rent there. In Studio A-4 — one of 14 rehearsal rooms in the three-floor center on Eighth Avenue, between 46th and 47th Streets in Clinton — dancers for many years paid 25 cents to spend an entire day working in the studio that was affectionately known as “the snake pit.”

“As many as could fit in,” said Fazil Cengiz (pronounced FAY-zil cen-GEEZ), a languid former owner and driver of taxis who bought the center in 1978. “The only rule was that you couldn’t bring a blanket and sleep there.”

Bill Irwin, the performance artist, was at Fazil’s on Thursday, its last day, rehearsing a new show for the Philadelphia Theater Company. “It’s very sad around here,” he said. “We’re all saying goodbye to each other.”

Mr. Irwin recalled that he fell in love with the unusual atmosphere of the place from the start. “I first walked up the stairs in 1978 or ’79, to take tap class with Brenda Bufalino,” he said. “The place was clouded with cigarette smoke. Some of the old tap dancers wouldn’t talk to each other.” They’d shut the studio door, Mr. Irwin said, so that other tappers would not steal their steps.

That studio, the spacious A-1, became known as the Copasetics Room, named after the ensemble of august tap stars, including Honi Coles and Charles Cook, who gathered there. It was the only studio with a working piano, though the old hoofers tended to sing out accompaniment.

Fazil’s was first known as Michael’s, owned by a former wrestler who taught acrobatics, tap and ballroom dance. No one seemed to know his last name, though he was immortalized in the 1948 film musical “Easter Parade” when Fred Astaire invites Judy Garland to run over to Michael’s and go through some steps. The center’s next owner was Jerry LeRoy, a vaudevillian whose specialty was tap dancing in ice skates, who renamed it after himself.

From the start, tap, flamenco and Middle Eastern dancers thronged there, as well as Broadway hoofers. By the late 1950s, Alvin Ailey was teaching there. Countless workshops and rehearsals for Broadway musicals were held at the studios. And a gangly youth named Savion Glover honed his tap style by jamming with members of the Copasetics and continued to rehearse there as his career flourished.

“The floors really had history,” said Jane Goldberg, a tap solo performer. “Those were the best-sounding floors in the city.”

Fazil’s was full of unexpected nooks and legends. “Upstairs there was a bar where there were belly dancing performances,” Ms. Goldberg said. “I don’t think it even had a name. You just knew about it.” An ancient seamstress named Chiquita who made affordable costumes for regulars in B-4, the center’s smallest room, was said to be the model for the Chiquita Banana girl.

Soledad Barrio, of Noche Flamenca, taught there, along with flamenco artists like Mariano Parra and Maria Alba, a fiery performer who taught the ballerina Gelsey Kirkland at Fazil’s.

“Everyone who comes from Spain goes to Fazil’s,” said Isabel Soler, a director of the Danzas Españolas company. “I got Maria Alba’s locker. Such ghosts there. I cried like a baby my last time there.”

Rap and hip-hop stars also found their way to Fazil’s, among them Missy Elliott. “She was such a sweetheart,” said Serpil Civan, the studios’ office manager, an ethnic dancer who is Mr. Cengiz’s sister.

Something of Fazil’s will live on in scenes in the movies filmed there, among them Woody Allen’s “Broadway Danny Rose” and Nick Castle’s “Tap.” Gregory Hines, a fixture at Fazil’s, modeled Sonny’s, the hoofers’ hangout in “Tap,” after Studio A-1. When Fazil’s received a move-out date from its landlord in July, work began on “And 5, 6, 7, 8 ...,” a documentary about the studio by the filmmaker Timur Civan, Ms. Civan’s son.

The building is one of several on the block slated for demolition to make way for new construction. Ms. Civan said the fine old maple floor in Studio A-1 would be lifted and cut into pieces, to be distributed to Fazil’s habitués as souvenirs. During a Christmas party last year that ran well into the next morning, Mr. Cengiz insisted that everyone sign the walls of Studio A-1 before leaving.

He discovered the place in 1971, when he began picking up Elena Lentini, a Middle Eastern dancer and his longtime companion, after rehearsals. Mr. Cengiz had grown up in a dancing family of Turkish descent and soon found himself taking tap and ballroom classes there.

That was the effect the studio had. “The kinds of people I met there opened my eyes to other worlds of dance,” Ms. Soler said.

Fazil’s still has a branch in Istanbul, in an old building where posters for Turkish movies were once printed. After exhaustive searching, Mr. Cengiz has found one possible new space in Manhattan, but he said it was not ideal. One problem has been the largely unearned reputation of flamenco and tap dancers for tearing up floors with their thundering feet.

“Where are the flamencos going to go?” he fretted. “Nobody wants them.”

  • 2/11/2008 7:59 AM Noora wrote:
    Ah, the memories are many! I remember walking across town during summertime and taking the train in the winter to take classes at Fazils with Bobby and later Yousry. You had to fight for your spot! Mine was right up front, right hand side. You had to prepare to be there the whole day and to work hard and sweat when you did workshops or rehearsed. And Chiquita the local seamstress would call us her kids while cutting a skirt for you on the floor and talking about the love of her life...Howard Hughes. A photographer once came to take pictures of middle eastern dancer; everyone is always captivated by that photo in "Bobby's" room with a dreamy quality to it. When I asked Serpil during the filming of the documentary what had happened to my picture on the wall she said some were taken down because people would take them. I met many great teachers and many wonderful friends there and I'm am glad I was a part of Fazils history. We will miss you!!!
     
  • 2/25/2008 6:08 PM Carmen Cameron-Wolfe wrote:
    Fazil's is a part of New York Art History, where one could study with legendary artists, at an affordable price. The energy of those artists who were there or who had been there before us, will be remembered fondly by everyone who had the opportunity to be a part of the performing arts community.