Under ordinary circumstances, the 40 students from North and Southwest high schools would never have met. Ten miles of Minneapolis and a world of differences divide them.
But there they were, twisting and leaping over one another at the Guthrie Theater last week in a performance that celebrated teen spirit, dance legacy and the bridge-building power of the arts.
"There's something incredibly unique about sharing a stage with people," said Sophia Meza, a Southwest senior.
For the past month, they'd been carpooling and busing across the city to rehearsals, learning how to move together, work together, to give and take time in the spotlight.
In practice, shy underclassmen leapt out of their shells. Veterans took front-row spots, imagining their futures on stage. They started out as strangers, but in the end hooted for one another and hugged, bound by the power of performance.
The March matchup started as a question from the Minneapolis School District, backed by a grant from the Martha Gould Fund at the Minneapolis Foundation: What if kids across the city danced together?
Southwest has been lauded as the district's best high school with top academics and a flourishing arts program. North, once an arts magnet school, is in comeback mode. Its dance program folded and its school nearly closed a few years ago. Now, enrollment and graduation rates are rising, and dance is alive again.
Cultural divisions are clear. North dance teacher Tamiko French doesn't think many kids from North go to the south part of the city, except for trips to the Mall of America. More people from south Minneapolis have traveled to Europe than have driven into the North Side, Southwest dance teacher Colleen Callahan-Russell remembered hearing.