Stars are born just off Hwy. 36 in Maplewood, home of Minnesota's legendary Larkin Dance Studio.
The 67-year-old school has launched four generations of movers on Broadway and in Hollywood. But the school's profile was especially high this summer, thanks to student Eva Igo, 14, who narrowly missed winning a $1 million prize on NBC's "World of Dance." Meanwhile, a Larkin alum named Taylor Sieve, 19, has been competing on Fox's "So You Think You Can Dance."
In addition to these TV stars, the school has prepared young hopefuls for "America's Got Talent." Other alumni dance competitively (and often win) in contests in Minnesota and beyond. And still others become members of the national champion University of Minnesota dance team. In fact, the Larkin style — so virtuosic, so precise — has become familiar enough that choreographers nationwide can recognize it on sight.
So what's the school's secret? "Shirley Larkin," said longtime teacher Ilia Gorev, a former principal dancer with Moscow's Bolshoi Ballet.
Shirley founded the school in 1950 at age 15. According to daughter Michele Larkin-Wagner, Shirley was such a good dancer that neighborhood parents asked her to teach their children. She started giving lessons in the basement of Francois', her parents' bowling alley and supper club in Mahtomedi. As she grew older, mothering six children of her own, Shirley kept on teaching.
"She had us working all the time," remembered daughter Molly Larkin-Symanietz, who now runs the bustling school with Larkin-Wagner. "Teaching, doing stuff around the studio, helping with costumes — I got my mother's good work ethic."
The family relocated the school to Maplewood in 1976. After three decades at the Plaza 3000 mall, Larkin moved in 2014 to its location on Hwy. 36, which boasts nine studios, a retail store, even a deli and sewing shop. More than 800 students are enrolled there in ballet, tap, jazz, contemporary and hip-hop dance classes. Sadly, Shirley, who died in 2011 at age 77, did not live to see this milestone.
The Larkin way
Each new generation has worked to sustain Shirley's vision. "More than anything I think about the impact my grandma made in Minnesota," said Mackenzie Symanietz, who teaches Larkin students alongside her mother and aunts. "I'm proud to follow in their footsteps."