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THE
NEW YORK POST
A Post Plus Section
New York Woman
"Life In The City"
Tuesday, January 7, 1997
By Heidi
Mae Bratt
HITTING
THE RIGHT HIGH-ON-ME NOTE
Clad
in a metallic mini, body-hugging silver shirt and go-go boots, "serious
architect" Leslie McBride could barely recognize herself.
Grabbing the mike, she
vamped her way through Bonnie Raits suggestive "Something
to Talk About" to an audience that lapped up every flirtatious roll
of her shoulder. Waiting for the applause to quell, McBride signed,
"Ive done a flip."
Linda Amiel Burns, New
Yorks unofficial singing Svengali, wasnt at all surprised.
After attending her
"chutzpah" workshop, nearly all the performers are transformed:
They come in like a mouse, and out like Madonna.
"The first night theyre
all hiding under their chairs," says Amiel Burns, director of The
Singing Experience, a six-session workshop that teaches confidence
through singing.
Amiel Burns started
the workshop some 20 years ago to boost her own self-esteem after
a divorce left her feeling lousy and with two kids to support.
But why singing? "Everybodys
voice, like their fingerprint, is unique," explains Burns, who was
a child performer. "They learn their voice is important in the world
and people can love and applaud you."
And each workshop, which
cost $350 ($325 repeaters rate) and draws about 60 percent women,
caps with a cabaret performance on a real New York stage. (The affirming
audience is packed with family, friends and workshop graduates).
For McBride, the workshop
has translated into a greater sense of self-esteem and confidence
in her dealings as an architect with clients and contractors.
"Getting on stage and
doing it definitely helps you get more confidence," McBride says.
"Im less afraid to assert my opinions and less afraid of being
rejected."
Carmen Dunn, a patternmaker
who has taken 18 workshop says, "Every time I gain
a little more confidence. Not just in singing, but in life."
Everybodys got
their reason for coming.
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