As of the time of this post, Bella Thorne's song TTYLXOX has topped Radio Disney's requests for five straight days.
Not bad for someone whose first experience in a recording studio was...less than a year ago.
It's very pop-oriented indeed. Yet this track still stands out alongside the usual mix of frenetic tracks from established folks like One Direction and Selena Gomez, and the mainstream hits of Adele et al. It's not quite like anything else Shake It Up has featured...and maybe that's why it's risen to prominence as quickly as it has.
---
The TTYLXOX dance sequence from "Judge It Up" at first seems like any other - using the full Shake It Up Chicago dancefloor set, having Tinka in as part of the routine, and so forth.
Yet the dancing itself isn't what makes the scene so notable. It's more the acknowledgement of Gary Wilde's first-episode comment, that Rocky and CeCe have the "it" factor: the short skit before the choreography begins, in which the two gals pantomime a text conversation between each other.
To this point they've been the background girls...the paradox that has made the show easily related to by its audience, that Bella and Zendaya have become stars in real life while acting out as a couple of regular kids who are on their very first entertainment gig. One could argue "Throw It Up" represents a paradigm shift away from this, where the leads finally get chosen for a spotlight dance (a promise that gets obstructed by Tinka's machinations), but that was more of a teaser than anything else.
I wouldn't consider the dance as a breaking-the-fourth-wall moment...Shake It Up so far isn't the type of show to go that route. But it very much captures the real-life chemistry of Ms. Thorne and Ms. Coleman as both actresses and friends, in a similar vein to the real-life parallels in my two favorite episodes ("Add It Up" and "Break It Up").
---
In my most recent blog I noted how Zendaya's Something To Dance For captures the Shake It Up zeitgeist better than the actual Selena Gomez title track that precedes every episode.
Same probably could be said for TTYLXOX in a bit of a different light.
So far the show's produced basically four singles:
- the aforementioned theme song, which tends to accentuate the "go out and dance" vibe of the show
- Zendaya and Bella's "Watch Me," about empowerment
- Zendaya's "Something To Dance For," a song focusing on pining for dreams, for making it to where you're meant to be
- TTYLXOX.
The latter tune looks at the other primary theme of the series - friendship - and expands on it in its lyrics:
I'm a better me - when you're here next to me.
Throughout the two seasons of Shake It Up, we've witnessed brief moments of impetuousness - Rocky's rebellious turn in "Wild It Up," CeCe's irritation at Rocky's dismissal of her academic ability in "Egg It Up," the conflicts of "Shrink It Up" - with the understanding that no matter what, the best friends would realize how much more they can accomplish and have accomplished together.
In the real world, it comes as absolutely no surprise that TTYLXOX and Something To Dance For ended up sharing a mashup music video: not just because Disney and the fans all clamored for it, but also because Zendaya and Bella really wanted this music adventure to be just as much about the two of them as much as it was about their individual personalities.
There's that old cliche of "life imitating art" but I'd pose the opposite here: Shake It Up has become a vehicle for the two gals to demonstrate their importance to each other both on-set and in their lives way outside the studio.
shaking...not stirred: shake it up in a different light
essays on the best new show gracing television these days.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Name that tune
So Zendaya's upcoming song Something To Dance For - from the Shake It Up episode "Apply It Up" - has managed to trend worldwide on Twitter.
I've mentioned the song a bit on my most recent post but I'll offer up a few more musings here:
- Most of the folks on that hashtag probably have no clue the title is a reference to Shake It Up, Zendaya, et al. Their responses though tend to come in answer form - as in, "what would YOU dance for?"
- I don't think either Z or B have quite gotten used to this concept of recognition. Sure, it's what every kid in the business probably dreams of - to some degree - yet even then, the show's success has surpassed expectations, and this song's emergence as the most anticipated tune of the second CD dwarfs its subtle inclusion in a midseason episode!
- In line with my first point...in some ways Something To Dance For serves as a much better encapsulation of the series than the Selena Gomez theme song.
The show's namesake track is energetic, fun, and has a recognizable voice behind it.
Something to Dance For captures the aspirations, hopes, and dreams of ingenues, and Zendaya surprised everyone with the sneak peek of the song weeks ago.
You can listen to that bit of music and immediately know what happens in "Add It Up."
Or for that matter, what's been happening for the last 42 episodes - and counting!
I've mentioned the song a bit on my most recent post but I'll offer up a few more musings here:
- Most of the folks on that hashtag probably have no clue the title is a reference to Shake It Up, Zendaya, et al. Their responses though tend to come in answer form - as in, "what would YOU dance for?"
- I don't think either Z or B have quite gotten used to this concept of recognition. Sure, it's what every kid in the business probably dreams of - to some degree - yet even then, the show's success has surpassed expectations, and this song's emergence as the most anticipated tune of the second CD dwarfs its subtle inclusion in a midseason episode!
- In line with my first point...in some ways Something To Dance For serves as a much better encapsulation of the series than the Selena Gomez theme song.
The show's namesake track is energetic, fun, and has a recognizable voice behind it.
Something to Dance For captures the aspirations, hopes, and dreams of ingenues, and Zendaya surprised everyone with the sneak peek of the song weeks ago.
You can listen to that bit of music and immediately know what happens in "Add It Up."
Or for that matter, what's been happening for the last 42 episodes - and counting!
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
The letter
Apply It Up - the first new Shake It Up episode to air in 2012 - mixes my personal favorite angle of the show (serious introspection) with a little bit of irreverence...
And some people will always mistake the irreverence as what the series is all about. I'm not one of those folks, a good thing as it gives me a chance to look at the week-to-week progression the characters experience as they basically grow up with the show.
So many different themes return here: the surface-level of the CeCe/Rocky dynamic being thrown for a loop (as it has been on previous occasions)...the overcoming of personal adversity...adults not necessarily being the mature ones...and a new revelation about Rocky.
---
I mentioned above that the parental characters are not always portrayed as great role models for the gals (and for that matter, for anyone), even if they are gainfully employed and are often shown trying hard to make ends meet.
We've seen this play out with CeCe's mom over and over: she wasn't altruistic throughout much of Jingle It Up (as she tried, with little subtlety, to make sure she received EXACTLY the gift she demanded from CeCe) and her behavior in Up Up And Away wasn't as motherly as it would appear at first, as she seemed way more interested in letting Gunther and Tinka act as selfish as possible to further her own vindictiveness. To some extent other than in Add It Up, it's hard to tell what Mrs. Jones really wants, except to keep Flynn and CeCe in line.
Apply It Up has a similar dynamic going on for Rocky's parents - the last time they played a central role was in Doctor It Up, the first appearance of her father and his proclivity towards practicality, in wanting his daughter to follow in his footsteps (until proven otherwise by the performance CeCe, Rocky, and Ty choreographed at the hospital).
Okay, that's established, right?
It's fair that they let Rocky know she can't afford Chicago Fine Arts...throughout the series both the Blue and Jones families (and their friends) are given a very urban, middle-class-but-not-by-much atmosphere.
So why did he and his wife basically tell her they bragged about it to their coworkers? I don't know why that bugs me so much, maybe it is just the idea that they knew they would never be able to pay for it...yet wanted to use their daughter's success to show off to the (unseen) colleagues they have, even though they knew all along at that dinner at Crusty's that they were going to disappoint her.
Sure, they relented after Doctor It Up and realized their daughter was an artiste and not a worker bee...but to what degree did they truly let that sink in? For them to tell her she couldn't attempt to work part-time to pay for school...they know how determined Rocky is to work to be the best at anything she accomplishes, once she's in the mode of trying to accomplish it. Wouldn't they have figured she would have tried to actually make part-time employment work, as opposed to CeCe's futile moments at the mall in Jingle It Up?
Seems the message they sent is, "Hey, go chase your dreams...if we think we can pay for it. otherwise, well...um...I dunno."
Not encouraging.
---
After Rocky and CeCe's scheme to get her a scholarship (by claiming at the admissions office Rocky only had one parent) backfired badly, their final scene in Apply It Up is at the windowsill, where Rocky is relegated to the outside (due to her parents disallowing her from "ever" entering CeCe's apartment again, a regulation that probably will fade away at some point later in the season)...
To me it's the culmination of the repeated disappointments that Rocky experiences here. Not disappointments in the same vein as Show It Up, where her competitive desire and ego are tested, or even Wild It Up, where she intentionally goes rogue at school to try to prove a point to her peers.
Here...it's about opportunities missed, and thus it's important to describe those very avenues...
---
After Rocky finds out on set that CeCe has applied for both of them to try out at Chicago Fine Arts, she immediately demonstrates resistance, complaining that CeCe's "trying to commit online fraud on my behalf," but the concept of a fine arts academy eventually wins her over - even if she tries not to admit she was inspired by her less-intellectual compatriot.
As the audition process evolves, and Rocky starts to see what opportunities attending would bring...her enthusiasm and determination increase, reaching its absolute peak in the "Something to Dance For" segment. I don't think it's coincidental that a Zendaya solo tune would be chosen here, given how much this episode brings a new shade to who Rocky really is.
The lyrics convey so much of what Rocky (and CeCe) both understand about themselves, while the adults around them - not just their parents, but the arrogant Gary Wilde on Shake It Up Chicago and the school's director - are too busy distracted to care about or notice:
A dream like this, is not something you wish for
A dream like this, is not something you ask for
When it's a gift worth taking a chance for
Then this is something you dance for
Just like the end of Glitz It Up, CeCe's rather perceptive about where her friend really is, book-smartness and achievement hunger aside. In the aforementioned episode (as expounded by me here) she catches Rocky imitating the catwalk reenactment that CeCe herself had been lightly rebuked over seconds previously...
Here, after Rocky lights up over the possibility Chicago Fine Arts could fast-track her to an Ivy League school, CeCe comments, "So what you're telling me is...you want this just as much as I do."
Rocky stops being dismissive and plays it off for laughs, asking CeCe to try to get her to pull her leg over her head (as they had seen another candidate pull off). Compared to the beginning of the episode...this is a major leap for her, to finally let her guard down and go after her goal.
I think of the moment in Reunion It Up in the flashforward daydreams of both Rocky and CeCe...that recurring theme of them needing each other to be motivated to achieve what they want. CeCe's observation isn't so much Rocky being dependent on her friend to gain inspiration, but rather CeCe realizing that Rocky herself was at that same juncture, as they both awaited the grind of the audition environment.
---
After the "Something to Dance For" sequence, both Rocky and CeCe get sent off into one-on-one interviews with the dance director...
from the previews before the episode aired, to when I finally saw it, I kept thinking "A Chorus Line."
For those who weren't around in the 70s or 80s...that musical is probably my favorite of all time, all centered around vignettes in an interview/monologue/singing format. Audition prospects revealed their motivations, their characters, their insecurities during their portions of the show, and its unconventional, ensemble-driven approach made it at the time the longest-running musical on Broadway.
It's a much edgier production than anything Disney could ever produce, due to theater's older audience, but the introspection inherent to the concept can be seen in smaller scale in Apply It Up.
With CeCe, two portions of her interview stand out:
- Her self-description before she's even been asked a question. In some ways that's the most like A Chorus Line that the scenes ever get...the introduction, the awkwardness, the fumbling for words. Even her cheesy gimmick of pretending she's being called on her cell phone...there's a sense that she's so used to trying to scheme through things (and eventually would do so to try to save Rocky's shot at attending, later in the episode) that being herself at its fullest is much more difficult.
- When she finally opens up and states, "The dance floor is the one place I get to be a genius," that moment is both rewarding and yet so incredibly vulnerable. It's not teary-eyed like Start It Up's "I go around thinking I'm cool" or Add It Up's "Because people can be mean" lines are...but Bella's tight-lipped delivery sells how humbling that admission is for CeCe.
It's not so much that CeCe was pretending to be anything else...but just as much as it was difficult for her to admit her dyslexia to Rocky...getting to the core of her real strengths (dance) in comparison to the rest of her life (not exactly an academic wunderkind) still required a degree of self-awareness and clarity that her start-of-interview goofiness lacked.
---
Where CeCe's interview bolsters elements we've already known about her persona, Rocky's is illuminating, and in some ways contrasts with the expectations placed on her character.
Yeah, she's a hard-studying overachiever who can't stand it when she's not in first place...at least that's what we've been led to think for some time.
I'd say the first time that that front was broken down was Break It Up, where her injury and subsequent surgery forced her to realize how much her pursuit of achievement and success on its own wasn't enough to sustain her dream. For all the (continued) talk about grades and milestones...and for her sass having to deal with the uncomfortable stretcher...certainly the potential cost of her injury cut out plenty of pretenses.
Rocky's initial interview phase, where she could not help but define herself almost entirely based on her connection to CeCe...it's somewhat surprising. When she's at CeCe's house later on, trying to figure out ways to deal with the high tuition, she suggested she couldn't aim for better grades (to try to impress her parents), for "as we all know, [higher grades than what she already has -] that's impossible."
Yet when grilled, Rocky never calls herself a "great student" (which she is) or talks up her Shake It Up Chicago experience (For that matter, CeCe doesn't mention her time on the show either.) Instead, she's...CeCe's best friend and dance partner, earning the retort "I want to hear...who is Rocky."
For someone who earlier this season (Shrink It Up) couldn't stand having CeCe "dragging her into things" and "making all the decisions for her," she suddenly seems a little bit at a loss for words.
Once Rocky finally spills a yarn about her own life, we discover, finally, maybe why she usually pushes so hard to chase accolades and grades...as she describes how dance freed her from the awkwardness of being taller than everyone else at her age, and how often folks would comment on that.
Really, is that all that different from CeCe's response? It's simple to categorize the Shake It Up leads based on their contrasting traits, but both have a combination of intense brashness and desperation...and in their energy and drive, seem a little bit on the fringe.
Rocky definitely wants to reach her goals...but sometimes those goals need to be spelled out first, whether via the concrete scoring of a report card, the arrogance and hubris of the school's director, or the frivolous dreaming of her best friend. Maybe it doesn't even matter what those incentives are...but that for her, they're an escape from a reality of not fitting in, and from a home life where creativity isn't appreciated.
If Wild It Up after all is the only time that we do see Rocky demonstrate an ability to gather "friends" outside her small circle...then it's not surprising that dance is her outlet, and regardless of grades and others' approval, it's that pioneering spirit that's her something to dance for.
---
Rocky's initial reaction to receiving a smaller mailing than CeCe speaks volumes: for someone as smart as she is, to tear the letter apart before opening it hints at an impulsiveness she actually shares with her comrade, something she tries to suppress with her academic skills, only for it to reappear when faced with real stress and the starkness of uncertainty.
In that direction, it's interesting that even knowing how unsuccessful most of CeCe's schemes are...once the scholarship issue came up, she was more than willing to go along with the low-percentage strategy her friend offered.
- Looking once more at the final scene Rocky and CeCe share in Apply It Up...CeCe gets sheepish about losing her acceptance and scholarship, initially deflecting it by expressing her lack of desire to attend without Rocky...but surely she knew going into their plan (given how often she gets in trouble at school) that this was a last-ditch effort at best.
Is she a little too embarrassed to let Rocky have the opportunity to be grateful for that sacrifice? (Kinda like Rocky's own inability to directly acknowledge early on that CeCe's idea to have them apply to Chicago Fine Arts WAS a great idea.) Sure, it wasn't the smartest choice, but given their bond and their ability to relate that others haven't figured out...maybe it really was the only decision she allowed herself to have.
CeCe never once entertained the idea of going to Chicago Fine Arts on her own. The episode doesn't highlight that enough but her actions, her thought process...I never got the impression even once that that could have been a possibility for her.
Bella certainly understands that about her character, and appropriately retweeted this exact observation from a fan.
- As Rocky closes out her conversation by noting that she's "banned" permanently from CeCe's residence and grounded for two months for her stunt, I can't help but ask...for all of Rocky's aversions to getting in trouble, flashing back to "Shrink It Up," she obviously has learned over the years that her friend's willing to take risks to make things happen...and she ultimately is responsible for bringing herself along with those crazy directions CeCe goes in. Given that (and her actions in "Wild It Up,") does Rocky REALLY fear trouble and disapproval, or has she been conditioned into doing so, by her strict parents?
- If Rocky's parents had no intention of trying to pay for the school, then what was her getting grounded for all about? Yeah, it's not like "trying to falsify forms" is a good thing, but is that worth two months of restrictions, or is that them going overboard? It's almost more about "proving a point" rather than getting to the reason WHY Rocky ended up playing along with CeCe's flawed ploy.
The parental characters aren't well-developed enough to really figure out too much about them, but I find it interesting that prior to Doctor It Up, Rocky's mom never mentioned to Rocky's dad that their kid was on local TV in the Windy City. The show's chronological speed isn't apparent, but working on the assumption that each episode represents about a week's or two time...that's plenty of weeks of appearances on Shake It Up Chicago that the family somehow hid from her dad.
Was her interest in dance something that was well-cloaked behind the report card talk? Except it seems Rocky's mom was aware enough throughout that time period.
It's definitely another instance where that mom and dad simply did not see the forest for the trees. Knowing Rocky's history, did her parents really think their flat "no" would get her to give up, or to avoid attempting something left-field CeCe would suggest? As soon as they didn't even give her the avenue of trying to get a job to pay for tuition, the seeds were set for the kids' desperation move.
- Doctor It Up basically established Rocky's father as so busy with traveling around and working that it's rare for him to be at home. So it makes sense Rocky could get away with even visiting CeCe at all after the grounding...
Yet it also shows how much the gals really rely on each other for moral support, and by extension...Rocky's parents' brief understanding of such. I'm reminded of Gunther and Tinka's parents in Valahootsit It Up complimenting CeCe and Rocky for showing up for dinner considering how peculiar the exchange students are, though the dynamic is different here.
If Rocky's parents really never wanted her to interact with CeCe again, they probably could've made that happen, and Rocky's tendency towards seeking approval might be piqued...but that didn't happen.
To me the friendship atmosphere in the series serves as a reaction to the kids' home environments: they have each other because only they realize a dream isn't something you ask for.
Bella once commented - I can't find the link at the moment - that part of her strong connection with Zendaya occurs from the mere fact they're the only two who can understand the experience of being chosen as THE leads in Shake It Up, from obscurity to stardom in such a short period of time, through all the tapings, appearances, and interviews.
(Both Bella and Zendaya visited that exact concept early on in this Good Morning America interview from December.)
On a smaller scale, CeCe and Rocky demonstrated that in Apply It Up.
And some people will always mistake the irreverence as what the series is all about. I'm not one of those folks, a good thing as it gives me a chance to look at the week-to-week progression the characters experience as they basically grow up with the show.
So many different themes return here: the surface-level of the CeCe/Rocky dynamic being thrown for a loop (as it has been on previous occasions)...the overcoming of personal adversity...adults not necessarily being the mature ones...and a new revelation about Rocky.
---
I mentioned above that the parental characters are not always portrayed as great role models for the gals (and for that matter, for anyone), even if they are gainfully employed and are often shown trying hard to make ends meet.
We've seen this play out with CeCe's mom over and over: she wasn't altruistic throughout much of Jingle It Up (as she tried, with little subtlety, to make sure she received EXACTLY the gift she demanded from CeCe) and her behavior in Up Up And Away wasn't as motherly as it would appear at first, as she seemed way more interested in letting Gunther and Tinka act as selfish as possible to further her own vindictiveness. To some extent other than in Add It Up, it's hard to tell what Mrs. Jones really wants, except to keep Flynn and CeCe in line.
Apply It Up has a similar dynamic going on for Rocky's parents - the last time they played a central role was in Doctor It Up, the first appearance of her father and his proclivity towards practicality, in wanting his daughter to follow in his footsteps (until proven otherwise by the performance CeCe, Rocky, and Ty choreographed at the hospital).
Okay, that's established, right?
It's fair that they let Rocky know she can't afford Chicago Fine Arts...throughout the series both the Blue and Jones families (and their friends) are given a very urban, middle-class-but-not-by-much atmosphere.
So why did he and his wife basically tell her they bragged about it to their coworkers? I don't know why that bugs me so much, maybe it is just the idea that they knew they would never be able to pay for it...yet wanted to use their daughter's success to show off to the (unseen) colleagues they have, even though they knew all along at that dinner at Crusty's that they were going to disappoint her.
Sure, they relented after Doctor It Up and realized their daughter was an artiste and not a worker bee...but to what degree did they truly let that sink in? For them to tell her she couldn't attempt to work part-time to pay for school...they know how determined Rocky is to work to be the best at anything she accomplishes, once she's in the mode of trying to accomplish it. Wouldn't they have figured she would have tried to actually make part-time employment work, as opposed to CeCe's futile moments at the mall in Jingle It Up?
Seems the message they sent is, "Hey, go chase your dreams...if we think we can pay for it. otherwise, well...um...I dunno."
Not encouraging.
---
After Rocky and CeCe's scheme to get her a scholarship (by claiming at the admissions office Rocky only had one parent) backfired badly, their final scene in Apply It Up is at the windowsill, where Rocky is relegated to the outside (due to her parents disallowing her from "ever" entering CeCe's apartment again, a regulation that probably will fade away at some point later in the season)...
To me it's the culmination of the repeated disappointments that Rocky experiences here. Not disappointments in the same vein as Show It Up, where her competitive desire and ego are tested, or even Wild It Up, where she intentionally goes rogue at school to try to prove a point to her peers.
Here...it's about opportunities missed, and thus it's important to describe those very avenues...
---
After Rocky finds out on set that CeCe has applied for both of them to try out at Chicago Fine Arts, she immediately demonstrates resistance, complaining that CeCe's "trying to commit online fraud on my behalf," but the concept of a fine arts academy eventually wins her over - even if she tries not to admit she was inspired by her less-intellectual compatriot.
As the audition process evolves, and Rocky starts to see what opportunities attending would bring...her enthusiasm and determination increase, reaching its absolute peak in the "Something to Dance For" segment. I don't think it's coincidental that a Zendaya solo tune would be chosen here, given how much this episode brings a new shade to who Rocky really is.
The lyrics convey so much of what Rocky (and CeCe) both understand about themselves, while the adults around them - not just their parents, but the arrogant Gary Wilde on Shake It Up Chicago and the school's director - are too busy distracted to care about or notice:
A dream like this, is not something you wish for
A dream like this, is not something you ask for
When it's a gift worth taking a chance for
Then this is something you dance for
Just like the end of Glitz It Up, CeCe's rather perceptive about where her friend really is, book-smartness and achievement hunger aside. In the aforementioned episode (as expounded by me here) she catches Rocky imitating the catwalk reenactment that CeCe herself had been lightly rebuked over seconds previously...
Here, after Rocky lights up over the possibility Chicago Fine Arts could fast-track her to an Ivy League school, CeCe comments, "So what you're telling me is...you want this just as much as I do."
Rocky stops being dismissive and plays it off for laughs, asking CeCe to try to get her to pull her leg over her head (as they had seen another candidate pull off). Compared to the beginning of the episode...this is a major leap for her, to finally let her guard down and go after her goal.
I think of the moment in Reunion It Up in the flashforward daydreams of both Rocky and CeCe...that recurring theme of them needing each other to be motivated to achieve what they want. CeCe's observation isn't so much Rocky being dependent on her friend to gain inspiration, but rather CeCe realizing that Rocky herself was at that same juncture, as they both awaited the grind of the audition environment.
---
After the "Something to Dance For" sequence, both Rocky and CeCe get sent off into one-on-one interviews with the dance director...
from the previews before the episode aired, to when I finally saw it, I kept thinking "A Chorus Line."
For those who weren't around in the 70s or 80s...that musical is probably my favorite of all time, all centered around vignettes in an interview/monologue/singing format. Audition prospects revealed their motivations, their characters, their insecurities during their portions of the show, and its unconventional, ensemble-driven approach made it at the time the longest-running musical on Broadway.
It's a much edgier production than anything Disney could ever produce, due to theater's older audience, but the introspection inherent to the concept can be seen in smaller scale in Apply It Up.
With CeCe, two portions of her interview stand out:
- Her self-description before she's even been asked a question. In some ways that's the most like A Chorus Line that the scenes ever get...the introduction, the awkwardness, the fumbling for words. Even her cheesy gimmick of pretending she's being called on her cell phone...there's a sense that she's so used to trying to scheme through things (and eventually would do so to try to save Rocky's shot at attending, later in the episode) that being herself at its fullest is much more difficult.
- When she finally opens up and states, "The dance floor is the one place I get to be a genius," that moment is both rewarding and yet so incredibly vulnerable. It's not teary-eyed like Start It Up's "I go around thinking I'm cool" or Add It Up's "Because people can be mean" lines are...but Bella's tight-lipped delivery sells how humbling that admission is for CeCe.
It's not so much that CeCe was pretending to be anything else...but just as much as it was difficult for her to admit her dyslexia to Rocky...getting to the core of her real strengths (dance) in comparison to the rest of her life (not exactly an academic wunderkind) still required a degree of self-awareness and clarity that her start-of-interview goofiness lacked.
---
Where CeCe's interview bolsters elements we've already known about her persona, Rocky's is illuminating, and in some ways contrasts with the expectations placed on her character.
Yeah, she's a hard-studying overachiever who can't stand it when she's not in first place...at least that's what we've been led to think for some time.
I'd say the first time that that front was broken down was Break It Up, where her injury and subsequent surgery forced her to realize how much her pursuit of achievement and success on its own wasn't enough to sustain her dream. For all the (continued) talk about grades and milestones...and for her sass having to deal with the uncomfortable stretcher...certainly the potential cost of her injury cut out plenty of pretenses.
Rocky's initial interview phase, where she could not help but define herself almost entirely based on her connection to CeCe...it's somewhat surprising. When she's at CeCe's house later on, trying to figure out ways to deal with the high tuition, she suggested she couldn't aim for better grades (to try to impress her parents), for "as we all know, [higher grades than what she already has -] that's impossible."
Yet when grilled, Rocky never calls herself a "great student" (which she is) or talks up her Shake It Up Chicago experience (For that matter, CeCe doesn't mention her time on the show either.) Instead, she's...CeCe's best friend and dance partner, earning the retort "I want to hear...who is Rocky."
For someone who earlier this season (Shrink It Up) couldn't stand having CeCe "dragging her into things" and "making all the decisions for her," she suddenly seems a little bit at a loss for words.
Once Rocky finally spills a yarn about her own life, we discover, finally, maybe why she usually pushes so hard to chase accolades and grades...as she describes how dance freed her from the awkwardness of being taller than everyone else at her age, and how often folks would comment on that.
Really, is that all that different from CeCe's response? It's simple to categorize the Shake It Up leads based on their contrasting traits, but both have a combination of intense brashness and desperation...and in their energy and drive, seem a little bit on the fringe.
Rocky definitely wants to reach her goals...but sometimes those goals need to be spelled out first, whether via the concrete scoring of a report card, the arrogance and hubris of the school's director, or the frivolous dreaming of her best friend. Maybe it doesn't even matter what those incentives are...but that for her, they're an escape from a reality of not fitting in, and from a home life where creativity isn't appreciated.
If Wild It Up after all is the only time that we do see Rocky demonstrate an ability to gather "friends" outside her small circle...then it's not surprising that dance is her outlet, and regardless of grades and others' approval, it's that pioneering spirit that's her something to dance for.
---
Rocky's initial reaction to receiving a smaller mailing than CeCe speaks volumes: for someone as smart as she is, to tear the letter apart before opening it hints at an impulsiveness she actually shares with her comrade, something she tries to suppress with her academic skills, only for it to reappear when faced with real stress and the starkness of uncertainty.
In that direction, it's interesting that even knowing how unsuccessful most of CeCe's schemes are...once the scholarship issue came up, she was more than willing to go along with the low-percentage strategy her friend offered.
- Looking once more at the final scene Rocky and CeCe share in Apply It Up...CeCe gets sheepish about losing her acceptance and scholarship, initially deflecting it by expressing her lack of desire to attend without Rocky...but surely she knew going into their plan (given how often she gets in trouble at school) that this was a last-ditch effort at best.
Is she a little too embarrassed to let Rocky have the opportunity to be grateful for that sacrifice? (Kinda like Rocky's own inability to directly acknowledge early on that CeCe's idea to have them apply to Chicago Fine Arts WAS a great idea.) Sure, it wasn't the smartest choice, but given their bond and their ability to relate that others haven't figured out...maybe it really was the only decision she allowed herself to have.
CeCe never once entertained the idea of going to Chicago Fine Arts on her own. The episode doesn't highlight that enough but her actions, her thought process...I never got the impression even once that that could have been a possibility for her.
Bella certainly understands that about her character, and appropriately retweeted this exact observation from a fan.
- As Rocky closes out her conversation by noting that she's "banned" permanently from CeCe's residence and grounded for two months for her stunt, I can't help but ask...for all of Rocky's aversions to getting in trouble, flashing back to "Shrink It Up," she obviously has learned over the years that her friend's willing to take risks to make things happen...and she ultimately is responsible for bringing herself along with those crazy directions CeCe goes in. Given that (and her actions in "Wild It Up,") does Rocky REALLY fear trouble and disapproval, or has she been conditioned into doing so, by her strict parents?
- If Rocky's parents had no intention of trying to pay for the school, then what was her getting grounded for all about? Yeah, it's not like "trying to falsify forms" is a good thing, but is that worth two months of restrictions, or is that them going overboard? It's almost more about "proving a point" rather than getting to the reason WHY Rocky ended up playing along with CeCe's flawed ploy.
The parental characters aren't well-developed enough to really figure out too much about them, but I find it interesting that prior to Doctor It Up, Rocky's mom never mentioned to Rocky's dad that their kid was on local TV in the Windy City. The show's chronological speed isn't apparent, but working on the assumption that each episode represents about a week's or two time...that's plenty of weeks of appearances on Shake It Up Chicago that the family somehow hid from her dad.
Was her interest in dance something that was well-cloaked behind the report card talk? Except it seems Rocky's mom was aware enough throughout that time period.
It's definitely another instance where that mom and dad simply did not see the forest for the trees. Knowing Rocky's history, did her parents really think their flat "no" would get her to give up, or to avoid attempting something left-field CeCe would suggest? As soon as they didn't even give her the avenue of trying to get a job to pay for tuition, the seeds were set for the kids' desperation move.
- Doctor It Up basically established Rocky's father as so busy with traveling around and working that it's rare for him to be at home. So it makes sense Rocky could get away with even visiting CeCe at all after the grounding...
Yet it also shows how much the gals really rely on each other for moral support, and by extension...Rocky's parents' brief understanding of such. I'm reminded of Gunther and Tinka's parents in Valahootsit It Up complimenting CeCe and Rocky for showing up for dinner considering how peculiar the exchange students are, though the dynamic is different here.
If Rocky's parents really never wanted her to interact with CeCe again, they probably could've made that happen, and Rocky's tendency towards seeking approval might be piqued...but that didn't happen.
To me the friendship atmosphere in the series serves as a reaction to the kids' home environments: they have each other because only they realize a dream isn't something you ask for.
Bella once commented - I can't find the link at the moment - that part of her strong connection with Zendaya occurs from the mere fact they're the only two who can understand the experience of being chosen as THE leads in Shake It Up, from obscurity to stardom in such a short period of time, through all the tapings, appearances, and interviews.
(Both Bella and Zendaya visited that exact concept early on in this Good Morning America interview from December.)
On a smaller scale, CeCe and Rocky demonstrated that in Apply It Up.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Glamour profession
I don't know if it's the luck of the draw or just my own way of watching SIU, but I don't think I've ever seen the entirety of Glitz It Up...
Yet I always seem to be in the right place to catch my favorite part of that episode, which actually is one of my very favorite moments in the series so far: the "CeCe wins the 2005 Little Cutie Queen Pageant" scene. If anything, those final 55 seconds reveal so much more about CeCe and Rocky - and the show itself - than a simple closing gag would suggest initially.
Maybe it's something that they more easily see in each other than in themselves...or at least that's the case most of the time, except in some serious contemplation (i.e. Start It Up and Add It Up, where CeCe has to be reassured by Rocky that she is both strong and extremely capable).
For all the silliness of Glitz It Up's ending...it conveys succinctly how much both gals want to be considered successful in their endeavors, in methods that are only divergent in form rather than motivation. Through the excitement of this exercise of assigning themselves first place...the yearning heart of this series once again reveals itself, a mixture of determination and self-realization, of never being quite sure where or how to get to the top, but wanting the validation of achievement.
---
An addendum:
CeCe's "BUSTED!" yell at Rocky as she catches the latter in her own reenactment walk...is reminiscent of the brashness she shows at the start of Break It Up, where she amusingly cuts off Rocky's attempts to explain the origins of summer holiday.
In that brief call-out, we find out two things:
- CeCe totally gets that Rocky is way more like herself than she would care to admit
- Even if her own logic is flawed, CeCe can see through Rocky's attempts to deflect that comparison via her intellect.
Yet I always seem to be in the right place to catch my favorite part of that episode, which actually is one of my very favorite moments in the series so far: the "CeCe wins the 2005 Little Cutie Queen Pageant" scene. If anything, those final 55 seconds reveal so much more about CeCe and Rocky - and the show itself - than a simple closing gag would suggest initially.
---
First things first...assuming the show is set in the present day...the pageant CeCe attempts to reenact would've been half-a-decade in the past by the time that scene occurs! Very easy to look at it and say, "It's just a natural reaction to being snubbed by her protege a minute or two ago," and that's one rather straightforward interpretation.
First things first...assuming the show is set in the present day...the pageant CeCe attempts to reenact would've been half-a-decade in the past by the time that scene occurs! Very easy to look at it and say, "It's just a natural reaction to being snubbed by her protege a minute or two ago," and that's one rather straightforward interpretation.
But in the wake of getting on Shake It Up Chicago with your best friend? Interesting that that memory of 2005 still lingers on...I can totally relate to that, but in this case the longing for that past experience seems a little out of place by high school.
Then again, when Flynn compares Tinka's competitiveness to that of hir sister during the Break It Up, we get a little bit of an answer...that there's always a competitive fire for Ms. Jones no matter how long ago those opportunities came to mind.
---
Rocky's interjection to the platform and to wearing the same accessories CeCe donned...those moments represent so much more than simple cleverness.
To me they capture the essence of the character: Rocky's the book-smart girl yes, and the one who on the surface aspires to life beyond dance (at least that's how CeCe perceives her in her Reunion It Up flashforward)...but really, in her heart, loves recognition and success in any form.
CeCe may have been way more blatant about it all day long. Her best friend though wants those same things...success, recognition, achievement. All the talk about grades and "helping others out" sometimes seems targeted towards the same ends...particularly Rocky's desperation to be liked by the grumpy retiree in Give It Up.
That leads to a concluding thought...
---
In Reunion It Up, CeCe and Rocky each comment during their flashforward scenes how their respective compatriot needs to be there to "push [themselves] to be the best they could be." They also seem to think in their horrified future perceptions though...that their respective counterpart has accomplished so much on her own in comparison, leaving only CeCe or Rocky alone to realize what could've been.
Then again, when Flynn compares Tinka's competitiveness to that of hir sister during the Break It Up, we get a little bit of an answer...that there's always a competitive fire for Ms. Jones no matter how long ago those opportunities came to mind.
---
Rocky's interjection to the platform and to wearing the same accessories CeCe donned...those moments represent so much more than simple cleverness.
To me they capture the essence of the character: Rocky's the book-smart girl yes, and the one who on the surface aspires to life beyond dance (at least that's how CeCe perceives her in her Reunion It Up flashforward)...but really, in her heart, loves recognition and success in any form.
CeCe may have been way more blatant about it all day long. Her best friend though wants those same things...success, recognition, achievement. All the talk about grades and "helping others out" sometimes seems targeted towards the same ends...particularly Rocky's desperation to be liked by the grumpy retiree in Give It Up.
That leads to a concluding thought...
---
In Reunion It Up, CeCe and Rocky each comment during their flashforward scenes how their respective compatriot needs to be there to "push [themselves] to be the best they could be." They also seem to think in their horrified future perceptions though...that their respective counterpart has accomplished so much on her own in comparison, leaving only CeCe or Rocky alone to realize what could've been.
Maybe it's something that they more easily see in each other than in themselves...or at least that's the case most of the time, except in some serious contemplation (i.e. Start It Up and Add It Up, where CeCe has to be reassured by Rocky that she is both strong and extremely capable).
For all the silliness of Glitz It Up's ending...it conveys succinctly how much both gals want to be considered successful in their endeavors, in methods that are only divergent in form rather than motivation. Through the excitement of this exercise of assigning themselves first place...the yearning heart of this series once again reveals itself, a mixture of determination and self-realization, of never being quite sure where or how to get to the top, but wanting the validation of achievement.
---
An addendum:
CeCe's "BUSTED!" yell at Rocky as she catches the latter in her own reenactment walk...is reminiscent of the brashness she shows at the start of Break It Up, where she amusingly cuts off Rocky's attempts to explain the origins of summer holiday.
In that brief call-out, we find out two things:
- CeCe totally gets that Rocky is way more like herself than she would care to admit
- Even if her own logic is flawed, CeCe can see through Rocky's attempts to deflect that comparison via her intellect.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Shine on, you crazy diamond
Recently Caroline Sunshine was interviewed by American Cheerleader and had this to say about how she gets along with Bella and Zendaya:
My relationship with the girls compared to Tinka’s is night and day. The first day on set I literally hugged them and was like, “Hi, I’m Caroline and I think we could be great friends. Sorry I have to say some mean things to you in this scene.” It’s kind of funny because before takes we’ll be gabbing about our nails, chatting about girl stuff, but then when they call “action” we have to start playing our characters.
Obviously outside the show they're all amazing buddies! On set the chemistry of the cast drives the show's inner energy, time and time again.
But most of the time it's not so apparent:
I love playing characters that are a little offbeat and crazy. Tinka is so great because she’s not your typical mean girl-type. She’s really funny, says exactly what’s on her mind and is very driven to get what she wants. She’s not afraid to dress a little differently and express herself.
Listing every moment Tinka's ego or brashness appears on Shake It Up would be an endless exercise, really, though several key scenes come to mind (the ending of Throw It Up, the card game with Gunther in Break It Up). She's cutting but clever (the disguises in Auction It Up!) and rarely finds herself on the wrong end of any situation, looking for advantages where she and Gunther can (their lack of commitment in Show It Up as evidence).
Both Caroline and Kenton immerse themselves into their roles in order to generate their brand of accented snark, as she herself expounds on:
When I’m fully Tinka-fied I stand differently, walk differently and even smile differently.
After all, singing "I'm Getting a Goat for Christmas" probably requires shifting into character!
---
Even with her predominant edginess, Tinka does have a few moments where her persona is slightly overridden by that of Caroline's...nothing with the gravity of the serious spots CeCe and Rocky are called for, but still more insightful than the usual mixture of mirth and ambition.
Her and Gunther's involvement throughout Auction It Up serve as an easy example, where they somehow have the numerous greenbacks to toy with our leads in the first place, before finally relenting and handing over the thousands CeCe and Rocky need to save their old dance teacher's studio. Maybe they didn't get to that point through complete generosity (after all, they used the ploy as an excuse to pilfer the girls' concert tickets!)...but for a pair of exchange students in high school, in the end they still dropped serious coin to help their erstwhile rivals.
In "Three's A Crowd It Up" - really a character piece on all three gals in the cast - while self-interest reigns supreme as Tinka, CeCe, and Rocky pursue the same boy...they ultimately see the futility of their figurative sparring and decide to figure out the situation together. It's fair to argue here though that this doesn't really reflect on any one of them as individuals though.
Most notable would be the brief date Ty and Tinka had in Add It Up and their table tennis match in Camp It Up though. Sure, Tinka remains as quirky as ever during her adventure with Ty...but they end up sharing a poignant moment through dancing under a full moon, despite the differences she acknowledged at the end.
In the latter episode...Ty lets his pride get the better of him in his mistaken assumption that Tinka is not much of an opponent - a premise immediately shattered by her dominance in numerous ping-pong battles. When she finally does lose to him, she demands that Ty follow through with the end-of-game ritual of aiming the ping pong ball at the defeated party, despite his own reluctance.
It's a nice follow-up to the excessively competitive nature she demonstrated in Break It Up - sure, she has a fierce desire to succeed over anyone, even her own brother...but in a strange, easy-to-relate manner, she frames that intensity in the midst of the rules of the game.
Certainly not a traditional method of fairness...but is anything about Tinka traditional?
My relationship with the girls compared to Tinka’s is night and day. The first day on set I literally hugged them and was like, “Hi, I’m Caroline and I think we could be great friends. Sorry I have to say some mean things to you in this scene.” It’s kind of funny because before takes we’ll be gabbing about our nails, chatting about girl stuff, but then when they call “action” we have to start playing our characters.
Obviously outside the show they're all amazing buddies! On set the chemistry of the cast drives the show's inner energy, time and time again.
But most of the time it's not so apparent:
I love playing characters that are a little offbeat and crazy. Tinka is so great because she’s not your typical mean girl-type. She’s really funny, says exactly what’s on her mind and is very driven to get what she wants. She’s not afraid to dress a little differently and express herself.
Listing every moment Tinka's ego or brashness appears on Shake It Up would be an endless exercise, really, though several key scenes come to mind (the ending of Throw It Up, the card game with Gunther in Break It Up). She's cutting but clever (the disguises in Auction It Up!) and rarely finds herself on the wrong end of any situation, looking for advantages where she and Gunther can (their lack of commitment in Show It Up as evidence).
Both Caroline and Kenton immerse themselves into their roles in order to generate their brand of accented snark, as she herself expounds on:
When I’m fully Tinka-fied I stand differently, walk differently and even smile differently.
After all, singing "I'm Getting a Goat for Christmas" probably requires shifting into character!
---
Even with her predominant edginess, Tinka does have a few moments where her persona is slightly overridden by that of Caroline's...nothing with the gravity of the serious spots CeCe and Rocky are called for, but still more insightful than the usual mixture of mirth and ambition.
Her and Gunther's involvement throughout Auction It Up serve as an easy example, where they somehow have the numerous greenbacks to toy with our leads in the first place, before finally relenting and handing over the thousands CeCe and Rocky need to save their old dance teacher's studio. Maybe they didn't get to that point through complete generosity (after all, they used the ploy as an excuse to pilfer the girls' concert tickets!)...but for a pair of exchange students in high school, in the end they still dropped serious coin to help their erstwhile rivals.
In "Three's A Crowd It Up" - really a character piece on all three gals in the cast - while self-interest reigns supreme as Tinka, CeCe, and Rocky pursue the same boy...they ultimately see the futility of their figurative sparring and decide to figure out the situation together. It's fair to argue here though that this doesn't really reflect on any one of them as individuals though.
Most notable would be the brief date Ty and Tinka had in Add It Up and their table tennis match in Camp It Up though. Sure, Tinka remains as quirky as ever during her adventure with Ty...but they end up sharing a poignant moment through dancing under a full moon, despite the differences she acknowledged at the end.
In the latter episode...Ty lets his pride get the better of him in his mistaken assumption that Tinka is not much of an opponent - a premise immediately shattered by her dominance in numerous ping-pong battles. When she finally does lose to him, she demands that Ty follow through with the end-of-game ritual of aiming the ping pong ball at the defeated party, despite his own reluctance.
It's a nice follow-up to the excessively competitive nature she demonstrated in Break It Up - sure, she has a fierce desire to succeed over anyone, even her own brother...but in a strange, easy-to-relate manner, she frames that intensity in the midst of the rules of the game.
Certainly not a traditional method of fairness...but is anything about Tinka traditional?
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Imitation of life
One of Bella Thorne's many fans on Twitter asked her about her ability to tear up when called upon, to which she responded...
i have a lot of sadness that i can reflect on so that's how i cry on cue
Anyone who's read even a succinct biography of her (from this post) - or seen the video I linked to in my previous entry - can totally understand it. It's what transforms CeCe from an outward ditz into a character with real depth, emotion, and heartache - that the surface issues of behavior and grades aren't really reflective of who she is, while her real-life counterpart's insights and empathy eventually emerge.
In Add It Up, the most loosely biographical episode so far...the centerpiece scene occurs after CeCe runs out of the apartment, embarrassed by the revelation of her dyslexia. As Rocky reassures her that she has much more inner resolve than she realizes, and that "everyone has baggage," CeCe hears what Rocky feels is her own big secret getting revealed:
feet as large as her brother's.
...wait, what?
The first few times I've watched it, I always thought it was a silly response, not uncommon to the show. After all, the Break It Up prayer monologue contains some light-hearted moments plus a goofy resolution. Seems though that the sheer gravity of working through CeCe's dyslexic situation really dwarfed something as absolutely ridiculous as...yeah, shoe size.
More on that specific wrinkle in time later.
From the aforementioned biographical interview, Bella related that show creator Chris Thompson said...
When he saw me he just knew that I was CeCe, that there would be nobody else for that part because I was actually that character.
That being said...where does that leave Rocky? Is Rocky basically a fictional version of Zendaya...or something entirely else?
---
Some characters are pretty obviously not representative of their actors' real lives, most exemplified by the Hessenheffer siblings and their faux-Old World accents. (I'm always amused when I read of fans being shocked that Kenton and Caroline have voices more reminiscent of the average Californian!)
Some are a little bit more derivative of real life. Beyond the continuous parallels between CeCe and Bella...I think of the video game scenes in Add It Up and compare it to Davis Cleveland's own on-set gaming time (which he's gotten Zendaya into!).
Certainly the fashion aspect of the show provides some clues - apparently Bella's wardrobe matches that of CeCe, while Zendaya's off-seat look contrasts from her attire in character as Rocky.
Yeah, differences for once. I'm not sure if it's a conscious contrast to the taken-from-Bella's-life-story CeCe Jones, or an attempt to match that energy with wit and sarcasm, but certainly the simplistic takes on her character as "generous, helpful, and friendly" (as seen in the character list on Wikipedia) overlook so much of the moment-to-moment redirection of motives that often occur.
Sure, Rocky says she "wants to be liked" by the crotchety senior in Give It Up, but is she really trying to be kind here? (CeCe seems to see through the pretenses.)
CeCe predicts Rocky's lack of grace in responding to the unfavorable Andy Burns commentary in Review it Up, even before the meltdown actually happens.
For all of Rocky's protestations in Shrink It Up that CeCe pressures her into trouble-creating situations...doesn't she choose to participate, ultimately? She's shown her independence from CeCe after all, i.e. in Kick It Up, and she herself has made irresponsible decisions on her own (the entire plot of Wild It Up) with her friend suddenly becoming the more reasonable one.
The intellect may lead to a heavier book bag and more impressive grades, but it sure isn't always a direct correlation for maturity - while adorable, I can't help but find Rocky's behavior at the very end of Glitz It Up a tad hypocritical (if played for laughs).
Why do I mention all of these foibles of Rocky? Because it's so important to contrast that with the real Zendaya - a stepping stone to then examine how much the character does show hints of Zendaya's off-set personality.
---
Caroline recently brought up Z's boot collection in a recent video blurb. So that's where the whole shoe-size discussion comes from in Add It Up!
Beyond that trifling detail, the overall direction of that episode - and that of Start It Up, CeCe's very first watery-eye appearance - involves Rocky taking the role of the big sister with an open ear and a mixture of compassion and encouragement.
Easy to say that that simply is a reflection of how the characters are supposed to be, after all. A little bit more than a mere notion, though...when it's reflective of the bond between Zendaya and Bella, as the latter has tweeted and expounded on.
Zendaya herself is so much about being positive and making the most of her experiences - evidenced here and here. And when she and Kenton brightened Bella's day recently with a goofy video...I think that she is just as much of a cheerful, energetic, quirky persona too.
If anything, the varying approaches to the two leads highlights slightly different acting approaches at work:
- Bella Thorne basically method-acts as herself when walking around as CeCe Jones. The serious moments she has in the show tend to draw very much from personal experience. And between the Reunion It Up flash-forward and the entirety of Meatball It Up, maybe the goofy scenes do, too!
Given her lack of comedic acting experience prior to the show, I often wonder how much of it is a truly liberating position for Bella, in that her offstage silliness is just as much of her role as her ability to deadpan and to get serious in a hurry.
- Zendaya's not entirely playing against type as Rocky - her vulnerability in Break It Up and her "big sister" moments elsewhere speak to this - but in the role, even while she questions CeCe's motives at times (such as the first ten minutes of Up Up And Away, or the entirety of Shrink It Up)...she's not unwilling to sometimes think of herself first, particularly at the end of Glitz It Up, and the competitive atmosphere of Show It Up.
Even with her from-the-heart moments in the series, much of her ability mirrors that of Caroline and Kenton having to essentially play heel on the show, when they're equally just as likable off-set.
And sometimes you see elements of both: her willingness (compared to CeCe) to get vindictive towards Tinka and Gunther in the cupcake-sale scene from Auction It Up mixes a little bit of sass with her own loyalty to her best friend!
Rocky isn't characterized anywhere as antagonistic as the Hessenheffers but she's not a direct representation of Zendaya at all. I'd speculate that comes out of trying to provide contrast between the CeCe and Rocky roles, of adding a tad more grit and conflict in their friendship.
CeCe may have the big personality and loud mouth (I'm thinking of the brash, hilarious first portion of Break It Up, where she admonishes Rocky for her excessive focus on academia during summer vacation!) but Rocky can match those things when needed. The Shrink It Up episode would have been entirely impossible without this tension, and does much to highlight the paradoxes of Rocky's persona, especially when compared to real life Zendaya.
In short:
It's not so much the individual quirks and actions of CeCe and Rocky that anchor the show, so much as it is how often they are able to make up their (relatively minor) differences and remain best friends, through so many ups and downs. If they simply got along 100% of the time, those realizations of how important their bond is would be so much less.
While CeCe is a much closer representation of Bella Thorne herself than Rocky is of Zendaya...both characters are simply a shade too complex to classify that at face value, and their skill at translating their off-set personal chemistry into on-set magic ultimately is the heartbeat behind Shake It Up.
i have a lot of sadness that i can reflect on so that's how i cry on cue
Anyone who's read even a succinct biography of her (from this post) - or seen the video I linked to in my previous entry - can totally understand it. It's what transforms CeCe from an outward ditz into a character with real depth, emotion, and heartache - that the surface issues of behavior and grades aren't really reflective of who she is, while her real-life counterpart's insights and empathy eventually emerge.
In Add It Up, the most loosely biographical episode so far...the centerpiece scene occurs after CeCe runs out of the apartment, embarrassed by the revelation of her dyslexia. As Rocky reassures her that she has much more inner resolve than she realizes, and that "everyone has baggage," CeCe hears what Rocky feels is her own big secret getting revealed:
feet as large as her brother's.
...wait, what?
The first few times I've watched it, I always thought it was a silly response, not uncommon to the show. After all, the Break It Up prayer monologue contains some light-hearted moments plus a goofy resolution. Seems though that the sheer gravity of working through CeCe's dyslexic situation really dwarfed something as absolutely ridiculous as...yeah, shoe size.
More on that specific wrinkle in time later.
From the aforementioned biographical interview, Bella related that show creator Chris Thompson said...
When he saw me he just knew that I was CeCe, that there would be nobody else for that part because I was actually that character.
That being said...where does that leave Rocky? Is Rocky basically a fictional version of Zendaya...or something entirely else?
---
Some characters are pretty obviously not representative of their actors' real lives, most exemplified by the Hessenheffer siblings and their faux-Old World accents. (I'm always amused when I read of fans being shocked that Kenton and Caroline have voices more reminiscent of the average Californian!)
Some are a little bit more derivative of real life. Beyond the continuous parallels between CeCe and Bella...I think of the video game scenes in Add It Up and compare it to Davis Cleveland's own on-set gaming time (which he's gotten Zendaya into!).
Certainly the fashion aspect of the show provides some clues - apparently Bella's wardrobe matches that of CeCe, while Zendaya's off-seat look contrasts from her attire in character as Rocky.
Yeah, differences for once. I'm not sure if it's a conscious contrast to the taken-from-Bella's-life-story CeCe Jones, or an attempt to match that energy with wit and sarcasm, but certainly the simplistic takes on her character as "generous, helpful, and friendly" (as seen in the character list on Wikipedia) overlook so much of the moment-to-moment redirection of motives that often occur.
Sure, Rocky says she "wants to be liked" by the crotchety senior in Give It Up, but is she really trying to be kind here? (CeCe seems to see through the pretenses.)
CeCe predicts Rocky's lack of grace in responding to the unfavorable Andy Burns commentary in Review it Up, even before the meltdown actually happens.
For all of Rocky's protestations in Shrink It Up that CeCe pressures her into trouble-creating situations...doesn't she choose to participate, ultimately? She's shown her independence from CeCe after all, i.e. in Kick It Up, and she herself has made irresponsible decisions on her own (the entire plot of Wild It Up) with her friend suddenly becoming the more reasonable one.
The intellect may lead to a heavier book bag and more impressive grades, but it sure isn't always a direct correlation for maturity - while adorable, I can't help but find Rocky's behavior at the very end of Glitz It Up a tad hypocritical (if played for laughs).
Why do I mention all of these foibles of Rocky? Because it's so important to contrast that with the real Zendaya - a stepping stone to then examine how much the character does show hints of Zendaya's off-set personality.
---
Caroline recently brought up Z's boot collection in a recent video blurb. So that's where the whole shoe-size discussion comes from in Add It Up!
Beyond that trifling detail, the overall direction of that episode - and that of Start It Up, CeCe's very first watery-eye appearance - involves Rocky taking the role of the big sister with an open ear and a mixture of compassion and encouragement.
Easy to say that that simply is a reflection of how the characters are supposed to be, after all. A little bit more than a mere notion, though...when it's reflective of the bond between Zendaya and Bella, as the latter has tweeted and expounded on.
Zendaya herself is so much about being positive and making the most of her experiences - evidenced here and here. And when she and Kenton brightened Bella's day recently with a goofy video...I think that she is just as much of a cheerful, energetic, quirky persona too.
If anything, the varying approaches to the two leads highlights slightly different acting approaches at work:
- Bella Thorne basically method-acts as herself when walking around as CeCe Jones. The serious moments she has in the show tend to draw very much from personal experience. And between the Reunion It Up flash-forward and the entirety of Meatball It Up, maybe the goofy scenes do, too!
Given her lack of comedic acting experience prior to the show, I often wonder how much of it is a truly liberating position for Bella, in that her offstage silliness is just as much of her role as her ability to deadpan and to get serious in a hurry.
- Zendaya's not entirely playing against type as Rocky - her vulnerability in Break It Up and her "big sister" moments elsewhere speak to this - but in the role, even while she questions CeCe's motives at times (such as the first ten minutes of Up Up And Away, or the entirety of Shrink It Up)...she's not unwilling to sometimes think of herself first, particularly at the end of Glitz It Up, and the competitive atmosphere of Show It Up.
Even with her from-the-heart moments in the series, much of her ability mirrors that of Caroline and Kenton having to essentially play heel on the show, when they're equally just as likable off-set.
And sometimes you see elements of both: her willingness (compared to CeCe) to get vindictive towards Tinka and Gunther in the cupcake-sale scene from Auction It Up mixes a little bit of sass with her own loyalty to her best friend!
Rocky isn't characterized anywhere as antagonistic as the Hessenheffers but she's not a direct representation of Zendaya at all. I'd speculate that comes out of trying to provide contrast between the CeCe and Rocky roles, of adding a tad more grit and conflict in their friendship.
CeCe may have the big personality and loud mouth (I'm thinking of the brash, hilarious first portion of Break It Up, where she admonishes Rocky for her excessive focus on academia during summer vacation!) but Rocky can match those things when needed. The Shrink It Up episode would have been entirely impossible without this tension, and does much to highlight the paradoxes of Rocky's persona, especially when compared to real life Zendaya.
In short:
It's not so much the individual quirks and actions of CeCe and Rocky that anchor the show, so much as it is how often they are able to make up their (relatively minor) differences and remain best friends, through so many ups and downs. If they simply got along 100% of the time, those realizations of how important their bond is would be so much less.
While CeCe is a much closer representation of Bella Thorne herself than Rocky is of Zendaya...both characters are simply a shade too complex to classify that at face value, and their skill at translating their off-set personal chemistry into on-set magic ultimately is the heartbeat behind Shake It Up.
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Words between the lines of age
I've been meaning to write about this for quite some time - one of my recurring thoughts on Shake It Up that inspired the blog in the first place - and saw a tweeted image (from "Wild It Up") that worked beautifully as a starting point.
The "CeCe has issues with her Spanish grades" running gag appears in quite a few other places on the series as seen below:
Break It Up - As CeCe's mom tells her about the hospital staff will "do the best they can" for Rocky, she once again anxiously laments the situation, flailing about while retorting, "They'll do the best they can? I thought I was doing the best I could in Spanish and I got a C minus!"
Three's A Crowd It Up - The new kid in town that Rocky, Tinka, and CeCe all pine over for that episode's duration introduces himself en Espanol, to which CeCe continually convinces herself that "his name is 'me llamo'" somehow.
Heat It Up - CeCe's mom is convinced that her daughter and Flynn trying to act all gracious and kind is one giant act, and CeCe spills it all after a brief query, admitting she "failed Spanish, broke a vase, and lied about passing Spanish."
On its own, the in-joke is pretty amusing, and overall fits with the general perception of the CeCe character as somewhat less than bright.
There's an underlying subtext though outside the realm of the show that entirely changes the focus of this recurring topic. In a previous entry, I noted how Bella Thorne's own strong faith beautifully incorporated itself into Break It Up. I also have noticed (though haven't yet blogged on it) the biographical nature of Add It Up, where CeCe reveals she has dyslexia - which Bella has had to deal with her entire life.
During her heartfelt video from this summer talking about her experience being bullied in grade school, she mentions two factors in her outcast status growing up: her dyslexia making it hard to catch up in classes...and her Cuban heritage with her only knowing Spanish much of her early life, only to unlearn it in order to fit in with the other English-speaking kids. She's since responded by tirelessly helping out StompOutBullying and raising awareness both on the Internet and in person.
With that background, suddenly the constant "not doing well in Spanish" references for CeCe take on a whole new shade: as hints to the struggle Bella had trying to cope with unkind peers not accepting her, either personally or culturally.
I also think of it as a small sign of perseverance and courage too: that it's something she's willing to bring up over and over, through those scenes. Maybe it's a reminder of how badly she does want to relearn her mother tongue and recapture that aspect of who she is and where she's from.
Maybe it's also a measure of how much Bella's been able to overcome a real obstacle in her life and can look back at it with so much confidence and hope.
The "CeCe has issues with her Spanish grades" running gag appears in quite a few other places on the series as seen below:
Break It Up - As CeCe's mom tells her about the hospital staff will "do the best they can" for Rocky, she once again anxiously laments the situation, flailing about while retorting, "They'll do the best they can? I thought I was doing the best I could in Spanish and I got a C minus!"
Three's A Crowd It Up - The new kid in town that Rocky, Tinka, and CeCe all pine over for that episode's duration introduces himself en Espanol, to which CeCe continually convinces herself that "his name is 'me llamo'" somehow.
Heat It Up - CeCe's mom is convinced that her daughter and Flynn trying to act all gracious and kind is one giant act, and CeCe spills it all after a brief query, admitting she "failed Spanish, broke a vase, and lied about passing Spanish."
On its own, the in-joke is pretty amusing, and overall fits with the general perception of the CeCe character as somewhat less than bright.
There's an underlying subtext though outside the realm of the show that entirely changes the focus of this recurring topic. In a previous entry, I noted how Bella Thorne's own strong faith beautifully incorporated itself into Break It Up. I also have noticed (though haven't yet blogged on it) the biographical nature of Add It Up, where CeCe reveals she has dyslexia - which Bella has had to deal with her entire life.
During her heartfelt video from this summer talking about her experience being bullied in grade school, she mentions two factors in her outcast status growing up: her dyslexia making it hard to catch up in classes...and her Cuban heritage with her only knowing Spanish much of her early life, only to unlearn it in order to fit in with the other English-speaking kids. She's since responded by tirelessly helping out StompOutBullying and raising awareness both on the Internet and in person.
With that background, suddenly the constant "not doing well in Spanish" references for CeCe take on a whole new shade: as hints to the struggle Bella had trying to cope with unkind peers not accepting her, either personally or culturally.
I also think of it as a small sign of perseverance and courage too: that it's something she's willing to bring up over and over, through those scenes. Maybe it's a reminder of how badly she does want to relearn her mother tongue and recapture that aspect of who she is and where she's from.
Maybe it's also a measure of how much Bella's been able to overcome a real obstacle in her life and can look back at it with so much confidence and hope.
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