44 THE QUEENS COURIER • DANCE • AUGUST 30, 2018  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
  dance 
 Ditch the workout, join the party 
 BY THE QUEENS COURIER STAFF 
 editorial@queenscourier.com 
 Zumba (ZOOM-ba), derived from a  
 Colombian word meaning “to move fast  
 and have fun,” fuses Latin and other  
 international dances with interval training  
 set to global dance music. Zumba is  
 being taught at over 60,000 locations in  
 105 countries, has sold millions of DVDs,  
 and more than seven million participants  
 take Zumba classes each week 
 According to Zumba instructor Lisa  
 Eskenazi, Zumba specifi cally tones your  
 core and entire body, all while burning  
 between 400-1000 calories per hour,  
 depending on your energy level. With a  
 formal dance class, the focus is on memorizing  
 choreography and improving your  
 skills as a trained dancer. With Zumba  
 Fitness, it is not the dance steps that are  
 important, but that you keep your heart  
 rate elevated. 
 “Working out has never been so much  
 fun,” said Lalita K., owner of Creative  
 Yoga Studios in Astoria, which off ers  
 Zumba three times a week. “It’s a dynamic, 
  eff ective cardio workout with dancing  
 that’s also easy to do. Th  ere are no ‘levels’  
 in Zumba. It burns fat, increases fl exibility  
 and makes it easy to lose weight.” 
 Celebrity fi tness trainer Alberto “Beto”  
 Perez created Zumba in Colombia in the  
 mid-’90s. One day, he walked into his  
 aerobics class and realized he had forgotten  
 his aerobics music. He grabbed  
 whatever tapes he had in his backpack,  
 which were traditional salsa and merengue  
 music and improvised what went on  
 to become Zumba. 
 “It doesn’t feel like a workout. You’re  
 dancing to great music and having a good  
 time. It’s basically a party. You don’t have  
 to be the best dancer or have any prior  
 dance  experience  to  do  Zumba,”  said  
 Marisa Breglio, a Zumba instructor at  
 the Flushing YMCA and Matrix Fitness  
 Center in Astoria. 
 In addition to Zumba Basic, there’s  
 also Zumba Toning, which blends body  
 sculpting techniques with Zumba moves  
 using  weighted,  maraca-like  Zumba  
 Toning  Sticks;  Aqua  Zumba,  a  “pool  
 party” of water-based workouts Zumba  
 Gold,  which  is  modifi ed  slightly  for  
 seniors  and  adults  with  physical  limitations  
 and Zumbatomic for kids aged  
 4-12. 
 Debbie Ann Schneider teaches Zumba  
 at the Ozone Park Jewish Center and says  
 even her 76-year-old mother comes to  
 her classes 
 “Th  e hour fl ies by. You go at your own  
 pace and move to the rhythm of the  
 music, so there’s no wrong way to do  
 Zumba. It’s simple and it works. I’ve had  
 people take my classes and lose 40 lbs, or  
 be able to go off  their thyroid or diabetic  
 medication. Just go with the fl ow and  
 have a good time,” Schneider said. 
 To fi nd a Zumba class near you, log on  
 to www.zumba.com. 
 
				
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		/www.zumba.com