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Donation Yoga with Tony Eason.Mar 23 2010 - 6:00pm Mar 23 2010 - 7:30pm **Donation Yoga Classes - Making Yoga affordable for every individual. Come to class regardless of your finances. Pay what you can afford. Beginners and seasoned yoga students of all levels are encouraged to attend.
. TUESDAY EVENING DONATION YOGA
THURSDAY EVENING IYENGAR YOGA CLASSESSATURDAY MORNING DONATION YOGA
"A Graduate of the Iyengar Yoga Institute of San Francisco, Tony Eason has been a student of Yoga for twelve years. As an AIDS LifeCycle cyclist, Tony came to yoga for the benefits of stretching.
His teachings includes the use of yoga props to encourage the ultimate benefit from each posture. Through Iyengar yoga classes, he teaches students to pay attention to the alignment of their bodies, to become aware of the breath, and to control the mind.
Presently, Tony teaches Iyengar yoga classes and seminars at James Howell Studio, Club One, Gold's Gym, and the San Francisco Tennis Club. Donation Based Yoga Classes - making Yoga affordable for every individual. Come to a yoga class regardless of your finances. Beginners cyclist, seasoned yoga students, and individuals of all levels are encouraged to attend Tony's Yoga Classes. Related Links: Iyengar Yoga Teacher cycles 575 miles for Charity San Francisco Bay Area - Donation Based Yoga Teachers
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About the StudioJames Howell Studio in the Castro -- a block from Church and market MUNI -- offers a variety of movement and dance classes, in a traditional studio format as well as by donation. Teachers include Steve Savage, Kristie Dahlia Home, Sabine Kuehner, Tony Eason, and Jamie Lindsay, and there is space available for rent to new teachers. The studio itself is bright and airy, with skylights and beautiful brick walls fitted with ballet bars, and is fully equipped with Iyengar yoga props. For information on space rental and becoming a teacher in this community, contact Carlos at cventuro@hotmail.comAbout James Howell
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James Howell was an early member of the Joffrey Ballet and choreographic assistant to Gerald Arpino. Howell entered the Joffrey Ballet studios in 1960 with little ballet training, but his intelligence and ability to interpret music quickly caught the attention of Joffrey choreographer Gerald Arpino, who asked Howell to assist him in the studio. Howell continued to work closely with Arpino on choreographic projects until leaving the company to move west in 1973. In San Francisco, Howell studied physical therapy and taught class in his own studio on Sanchez Street in the Castro District. Shortly before he died from AIDS complications in 1982, Howell created the 45-minute ballet Ritual: The Journey of the Soul, which has been described by performance theorist David Román as possibly the first performance piece about AIDS. Howell left instructions in his will that video documentation of the piece be shown at his memorial service. This prompted the Bay Area Reporter to note: "Howell's gesture opens a new chapter on gays developing a style on how to die." |