Deaf performer draws crowds with inspiring dance routines

Miss-Delectable

New Member
Joined
Apr 18, 2004
Messages
17,158
Reaction score
7
The Daily Texan - Deaf performer draws crowds with inspiring dance routines

Cruz Lane turns up his iPod to near-maximum volume and shoves the buds into his ears. Blaring Eamon’s “I Don’t Want You Back,” one of several hip-hop songs he performs, the fit 19-year-old begins dancing with Usher-like smoothness.

Lane’s moves, however, come with a twist: He’s pairing his dancing with American Sign Language.

“The first thing you must do when you choose a song is read the lyrics so you understand what it means,” Lane says of performing songs as a deaf entertainer. “You feel the music by speaking the words.”

Lane’s hearing began to fade at age 3. Now, when he doesn’t wear his hearing aid, he hears what he describes as echoing sounds. He moved to Austin from Greenville to attend the Texas School for the Deaf at age 14, where his interest in dance and music began to blossom.

Now, he performs around the city in groups or by himself, singing, signing and dancing to popular music.

“A lot of deaf people come to me because they feel frustrated that hearing people don’t think they can interact in listening activities like signing and dancing,” Lane said. “I tell them the bottom line: Just do it. They know that they know about music and love to sing and dance, and if they show it — people will talk about it and they will know too.”

UT deaf education and deafness studies junior Eve Robinson saw Lane perform with a friend during class this semester and found the experience inspiring and encouraging.

“A lot of hearing people just assume that deaf people live in a silent world and they can’t experience music or sound, but that’s not the case,” Robinson said. “It is an easy conclusion to make that if you’re living in a silent world you’re missing out on a lot of information and have a limited world view. But take Cruz for example — just because he experiences music in a different way than us doesn’t mean he has a lesser understanding of it. He breaks it down on the floor.”

Last summer Lane was invited to New Orleans to compete at the National Association of the Deaf Conference. Though his favorite genre is R&B because it “inspires people to feel,” he performed a routine to Taylor Swift’s “Do I Make You Proud,” which earned him a place in the top five contenders.

Now he is working on a video with Pat Green, who watched him perform and, after wiping the tears from his eyes, asked him to be a part of his upcoming show and single.

“Sometimes people need some love,” Lane said of his routines. “So I give it to them.”

In August, Lane will move to New York to attend the Rochester Institute of Technology, one of two prominent deaf colleges, where he will continue to pursue his goals and work toward a degree in music performance.

“I love music and I love performing. I feel so relaxed,” Lane said. “Not a lot of deaf people go down this path, so it means a lot to me to make the Deaf community proud.”
 
Back
Top