Dancing at the Forefront of a Movement
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Building Character
Songwriters
How one-legged performer Evan Ruggiero is making history
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Welcome to Building Character, TDF Stages’ ongoing series on actors and how they create their roles
A dance prodigy who was accepted into the prestigious New Jersey Tap Ensemble at age 10, Ruggiero lost his right leg due to a rare bone cancer while a sophomore at Montclair State University. Yet that didn’t derail his performing ambitions. “Sure, doctors sometimes would say I’d never be able to dance again, or that I should try to find a new life goal,” Ruggiero remembers. “But I remained persistent in my choices to strive for being on stage.”
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“I really think the industry has improved,” says Ruggiero, though he’s quick to add that it has a ways to go. “Why does it need to be an able-bodied actor playing an actor with a disability when there are plenty of willing and working disabled actors that can do that job? On the flip side, I know most disabled actors’ goals are to look past disability and to play parts that don’t necessarily call for an actor with a disability. Was Tom Jones written to have one leg? No. But the story can still be told regardless of my disability.”
Despite Ruggiero’s dancing prowess — which he displayed on The Ellen DeGeneres Show a few years back — starring in Bastard Jones presents many physical challenges. “We have a two-level set, with a full set of stairs that I run up and down throughout the show,” he says. “I’m dancing on a table, I’m involved in every fight in the show, and, as crazy as it all sounds, I love it!”
While Ruggiero is keen to play all kinds of characters, disabled and not, he realizes that often, he needs to do some convincing. “I’ve gotten a feel from auditioning enough to read people’s body language,” he says. “Sometimes I can see them go through the thought process: Oh, you have one leg? No way can this guy dance. Next! I always walk into the room with as much confidence as possible to show that, just because I have one leg, it’s not going to affect this audition at all. It may be a little modified for me, but I’m still going to give it my all. And I’m sure every disabled actor feels that way.”
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Doug Strassler is a writer and critic based in New York City. He contributes regularly to TDF Stages.
Top image: Evan Ruggiero, center. Photos by Carol Rosegg.
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DOUG STRASSLER