Utah 'Dance' finalists enjoying recognition, fame from show
Fame.
Chelsie Hightower, Thayne Jasperson, Gev Manoukian and Matt Dorame aren't about to get stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, but their twice-weekly appearances on the hit Fox series are getting them recognized.
"Last night, I went to a restaurant and one of the waitresses came up and said, 'I'm sorry. I don't want to bother you. But aren't you Thayne from 'So You Think You Can Dance'? " said Jasperson, 27, from Springville. "It was cute."
"It's funny because it's always little girls and they get so excited," laughed Dorame, 22, an Arizona native who's danced with Odyssey Dance Theatre for the past two years. "It's so funny that you make someone so excited. It's a little weird and it takes some getting used to that people want to take a picture with you, but it's really nice."
Hightower, an 18-year-old ballroom dancer from Orem, hasn't quite adjusted to being recognized.
"I don't feel like I have a very recognizable face, and it's fine with me," she said with a laugh. Of course, the fact that people do recognize her even when she's out with no makeup and her hair pulled back a much different look than they see on TV sort of disputes her theory.
"I wasn't really expecting it, but it's definitely fun. It's something I'd love to get used to," laughed Manoukian, 21, a native of Kazakhstan who lives in Centerville and attends the University of Utah. "It means that they're watching and the like what you're doing. It's really cool.
"But the more you stay on the show, the more people recognize you."
Staying on the show is the hard part. The dancers perform on Wednesdays (7 p.m., Ch. 13), viewers cast their votes; on Thursdays (8 p.m., Ch. 13), the six members of the three couples with the fewest votes perform solos and the judges send one boy and one girl home.
In the three weeks since the top 20 were selected, Hightower and Manoukian have never been in the dreaded "bottom three." Dorame and Jasperson, on the other hand, have each been in the bottom three twice. Jasperson has been there two weeks in a row.
All four agree that waiting to be told how the voting went is the worst part of "So You Think You Can Dance."
"How can I put this into words? It is one of the most stressful situations you're ever in the lights and the music and the audience just makes everything magnified tenfold," Dorame said. "It's like you're kind of waiting to have them choose the fate of your life."
Recent comments
I had looked up the dancers at the very beginning, but the only one...
MoJules | July 1, 2008 at 8:21 p.m.


