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Interview with
Valorie Kondos
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Meet Valorie Kondos, head coach of the
NCAA Champion UCLA Women's Gymnastic Team and a trained dancer.
Finis: First of all, tell us how you got started in dance.
Val: I was taking horseback riding and piano when I was little, and I had a
tremendous sway back. My doctors told my parents when I was seven that they needed to get
me into ballet so that it could help straighten out my back and develop the right muscles
to be able to stand up straight. So I started taking it, and I hated it because I wasn't
your typical ballet dancer. I wasn't naturally flexible, I didn't have natural turn out.
I'll never forget my first few classes. I was in this class with this girl who was
5'8", and she could develop her leg up to her ear and just hold it there for days. I
HATED it. I hated going to ballet.
Finis: If you disliked it so much, why did you continue?
Val: My parents made me (laughs). And then when I was 12, I started performing, and
that was all I needed. I absolutely LOVED being on stage.
Finis: So you continued dancing?
Val: Yes, and I never studied jazz or tap or anything like that, and I think I
would've made a better jazz dancer or tap dancer because I wasn't a natural ballet dancer.
I constantly had to fight my weight. I wasn't this nice little waif-looking, petite young
woman. I was much more athletically-built. But I loved to perform, and I was one of those
dancers who did much better on stage than in the classroom or in rehearsals. I couldn't
understand how some of the girls in the company with me would throw up before a
performance. They'd get so nervous that they were a wreck. And then they'd go out there,
and it would be like a deer-in-the-headlights stare. I never understood that.
Finis: Tell us more about your dance career. You went on to study ballet through high
school, right?
Val: Yes. I danced growing up with the Sacramento Ballet and another ballet company
called Capital City Ballet. And we were very fortunate to have a gentleman named Nolan
T'sani, who was a soloist with the New York City Ballet for many, many years. He was a
tremendous choreographer. So my last few years of high school, I joined that company. He
was very much influenced by George Balachine, who was, in my opinion, the greatest
choreographer of all time. He was the co-founder of the New York City Ballet. His style
was known for being kind of neo-classical classical lines, classical training, but he put
a modern or new twist to it with flexed feet, turned-in legs. So that was it. I loved
that. The summers of my junior and senior years of high school, I went to New York to
study, and I spent my last few years studying at Washington, D.C. Ballet. The artistic
director asked me to audition, and it was just at that point that I said, You know what? I
always wanted to go back to school, and I always wanted to go to UCLA. And I don't want to
go back to school when I'm 30, and I don't want to spend the rest of my life teaching
ballet. And I just knew it at that instance.
Finis: What was it about UCLA that made you want to come here so badly?
Val: It's because I was always very athletic. My whole life I had always heard
about all these great athletes that came from UCLA. And my dream in high school was to
come to UCLA and become a part of a team. So when out of the blue I heard that UCLA needed
a dance coach for its gymnastics team, I called them up, and they offered me a full
scholarship to be their assistant coach and choreograph for them. It was the closest I
could have ever come to my dream.
Finis: What were your first experiences at UCLA as the dance coach like?
Val: My first year as a dance coach, I was not appreciated or respected at all. A
great deal of it was my fault because I just didn't take control or show any authority. I
was told by the head coach that all these gymnasts had had plenty of dance and that I just
needed to oversee them. And it was obvious from my first day working here that they had
little to no dance and didn't know what they were doing. I'm a firm believer in teaching
through metaphors, so I started coaching them like this, and they thought I was nuts! One
time, one girl's arms were above her head in high fifth, and I was telling her to open her
arms, and she was just dropping them. So I told her to peel her arms as if she were a
banana, like her head was the banana and her arms were the peels. To this day, I am made
fun of about that. I was trying to get them to understand movement in a different way. And
because I was new, and because I didn't have any background or credentials, they thought I
was just a real kook.
Finis: When did things start to change for you?
Val: It was shortly after that. It just took one athlete who enjoyed working that
way and enjoyed working with me. There were huge results with her performance. Once the
other athletes could see the importance of movement quality and that I did had something
to offer them, then they turned around.
Finis: Did you have any aspirations to become a head coach?
Val: No. I never wanted to be a head coach. I thought that I would get into public
relations or do something in the entertainment field.
Finis: How did you get into your current position as head gymnastics coach?
Val: It was handed to me on a silver platter. I've always believed in very hard
work, and I've always believed in being brutally honest. When you're dealing with athletes
of any caliber, or just people in general, I think that they appreciate that. The athletic
director here saw that, and recognized that was needed to take the team to the next level,
that the athletes were tired of not being pushed through honest criticism. They were being
trained really hard, but when they would get to a meet, it was okay if they didn't do well
because "we're just out here to enjoy it." Well, no athlete trains that hard to
not do well. And I would open my mouth and say, "Well, it's not okay. You're letting
yourselves down first." I think that's what the athletic director saw and liked, and
she offered me the head coaching job. I remember not knowing how long I would stay at this
job -- but I knew I couldn't turn it down.
Finis: You obviously enjoy this job. You've been at it for eight years now. What made
you want to stay?
Val: The athletes. I'm working with very bright, talented young women who need a
lot of help with the bridge between high school and club gymnastics, where they are being
told what to do, when to do it and how to do it every moment of their life, to the real
world. I saw that there was a real need for someone to empathize with them and respect how
they got to the great place that they are academically and athletically, but that they
needed guidance in how to succeed in the real world with all these great attributes that
they have. I think I've been successful at that. I've been able to get in touch with them
at a personal level, and then I see that helps them achieve gymnastically as well as
personally.
Finis: You had no gymnastics training, correct?
Val: Right. I got interested in gymnastics when I was 12 years old and saw Olga
Korbut at the 1972 Olympics. At that point, I was the tallest one in my class. I was big
and strong and very athletic. When I saw her come out, I was not into this pretty ballet
stuff at all, and I thought, I'm going to be a gymnast. So I went into my backyard and
taught myself some moves. But my parents said, No, you're not stopping dancing to be a
gymnast. I also wanted to take ice skating, but they said no. So instead of doing that,
when I was 16 or 17, for my first job, I called the local gym (Agilites in Carmichael, CA)
and asked if they needed a dance coach and they said no, they couldn't afford one. But
when they found out I could play the piano, I started playing the piano for their floor
music. So that's how I got started in gymnastics.
Finis: Having had no technical gymnastics background, was there a lot of hesitation in
hiring you as the head coach?
Val: First of all, I think I chose this sport, and I was drawn to it because being
a ballet dancer, you develop a tremendous awareness of body movement and body mechanics.
If something's off, and you're flipping sideways or if you're crooked, I can figure it
out. But no one in the gymnastics world knew that or understood that or knew what I was
contributing to this team as an assistant coach. When I got this job, there was this
tremendous uproar that this quote-unquote 'dancer/choreographer' was taking over one of
the most prestigious collegiate jobs in the country. I was asked how I thought I could do
that, and I was ego-less enough to be able to say that I didn't know everything and that I
would have to hire really good people who knew these things that I didn't know.
Coincidentally, the past two years in a row, some of these same people who said all those
rotten things about me when I first got the job voted me their national Coach of the Year.
That meant a lot coming from those same people. It was interesting, when I got the head
coaching job and was saying how hurtful it was to have all these people saying these
things about me, Scott Bull (co-head coach with Kondos from 1990-94) said to me that if
anyone would take the time to look at the stats, balance beam, which I coached, had been
the highest scoring event at nationals for UCLA the last four years. I hadn't even
realized that. So it was like, okay, I do know what I'm doing.
Finis: Do you think your dance background gives you and your team an advantage?
Val: I think a lot of people comment on the choreography and how great it is and
how great the athletes look and how they move so well. That is my gift to them, but I
really don't think it adds a lot of points to your score. I don't think that wins national
championships for us. I think it's mainly a gift that I am able to offer to them- how to
really listen to your music and get the most out of it, the musicality of their movement,
how to move from point A to point B. How one moves is very important in one's life in
general.
Finis: Your choreography has been well lauded by many. Do you have plans to branch out
at all?
Val: I would love to. I was asked a few years ago why I haven't gotten an agent.
But jobs just seem to come to me, and I'm not really hungry to go out there and be known
and make a gazillion dollars doing it. But I would like to do other things. I've worked
for Sea World, San Diego now for seven or eight years choreographing an ice skating and
gymnastics show. I've done a few other Sea Worlds because of that and did some work for
Disneyland. I've choreographed an acrobatic show over in Germany. But when I watch the
Academy Awards or Broadway musicals, it's SO exciting and stimulating. I would love to do
something like that.
Finis: What's stopped you?
Val: An agent (laughs).
Finis: What have been your greatest thrills in your dance and gymnastics careers?
Val: In dancing, there was a pas-de-trois that I was involved with, which is a
dance with two girls and a guy. I mentioned before that I was great in the moment. The
other girl I that was supposed to dance this with me sprained her ankle during the piece
just before we were supposed to go out. So I had to go out with the guy and ad lib her
part while still doing my part, which was impossible to do as it was choreographed. I just
had to ad lib it. I was in heaven (laughs), and I could do anything. I remember holding a
balance on point for so long that it went into the next phrase where I was supposed to be
doing something else. And I just kept holding it, and the audience went crazy. In class, I
remember that I could do just two pirouettes on point consistently, three every once in a
while. And that night, I was doing four. It was just, give me the spotlight, give me the
moment, and I could do anything.
Finis: And your greatest thrill gymnastically?
Val: Gymnastically, my greatest thrill wasn't winning the national championship
last year; it was the year before that in Alabama at nationals, seeing every single one of
your athletes be the best and perform the best they could on that night, especially on
beam, which is the make or break event in gymnastics. We put up six athletes and see every
single one of them go out there with confidence and hit a routine that was the best of
their ability. The head beam judge came up to me and said that in her 25 years of judging,
judging our beam team was the highlight of her career. That night was exceptional. We
didn't win, but it didn't matter. We had fully succeeded, and we accomplished all of our
goals that night.
Finis: What are your future goals?
Val: To choreograph a Broadway show once I get an agent (tongue-in-cheek). I'd like
to win another national championship before I retire.
Finis: Maybe this year, since UCLA is hosting the NCAA Championships in
April [1998]?
Val: I would like to win another, and I would love to do it at home. I know we have
the talent, and I know they're prepared. If they can get through the stumbling blocks,
which every meet has, they'll be successful.
Finis: Any other personal goals?
Val: Personally, choreographically, I'd love to branch out and choreograph
something on Broadway or off-Broadway or for television. I'd like to do something purely
dance, not involved with gymnastics at all.
Finis: So you really need an agent for this don't you?
Val: Yeah! Because everyone hires me to do gymnastics stuff. Would you put that in
really big, bold letters? I need an agent ...
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