Kevin's Web Site:      Various
   
DRW page 26

Taj Mahal

http://www.southflorida.com/specialsection/teenlink/sfl-fltl1105yungmantlbenov05,0,7996997.story

From the South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Singing from new heights

 
By Mina Radman
Stoneman Douglas High

November 5 2009

Running off to join the circus seems like a far-fetched fantasy. But for Cypress Bay junior Kevin Yungman, the dream has become reality.

Yungman has joined the cast of the new Cirque Dreams Holidaze show, which is showing at Hard Rock Live in Hollywood through Nov. 8 before embarking on a national tour.

"Every time I walk into a rehearsal, it's like having another birthday party," Yungman said. "It's unbelievable and it's happening."

A native of Argentina, Yungman began performing at an early age. He learned to sing before he could even speak.

"There are recordings of me from when I was 2, and I would be singing, but then they would ask me questions and I couldn't talk," Yungman said.

He strengthened his talents by participating in various summer camps and training classes.

In April, Yungman received an e-mail about the "Run Away With Your Dreams" audition at Bloomingdale's in Aventura Mall, which would award one contestant a feature role in the Miami performance of Cirque Dreams Jungle Fantasy at the Adrienne Arsht Center.

"There were hundreds of people, so I thought I'd never get picked, but it would be a good experience," Yungman said.

Yungman won, singing both a duet and solo in front of a crowd of more than 3,000 people.

He kept in touch with Cirque Dreams producer Neil Goldberg, who later approached him about appearing in Cirque Dreams Holidaze.

Cirque Dreams Holidaze consists of 33 singers, dancers, acrobats and contortionists ranging in age from 9 to 50.

The show centers on a large Christmas tree, and each performer climbs or dances around the tree to tell a story about different holiday events.

"The most amazing thing is that you see one thing and another and think, 'what can they do next?' They flip each other with their legs, get up on each other with one arm; it's incredible what they do," Yungman said.

"It's kind of inhumane. It's like waking up from a dream and going into another one."

To participate in the 12-hour rehearsals needed to prepare for the show and tour, Yungman enrolled in two online classes for the fall semester rather than attending regular classes.

He said his life has changed drastically.

"I miss my friends and everything, but it's the kind of sacrifice you make for this kind of profession," Yungman said.

The junior plans to return to Cypress Bay in January and has considered graduating early to focus on his career.

However, for now, Yungman has no set plans.

"I've learned to look at my life as if the elevator of my life is out of order. I have to take the emergency stairs, one at a time," Yungman said.

"I don't know if I'm going to continue performing or go to college; there's a lot of different ways I can take it. The opportunity that arises will take me there."

Copyright © 2009, South Florida Sun-Sentinel




   
Herald page 1
 
Herald page 3
 
2009 11 01 Miami Herald
 
Extracted from Miami Herald:

Broward teen lands dream role on stage

A Weston teen takes his talents on the road in a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.


SPECIAL TO THE MIAMI HERALD

In a studio tucked away in a Pompano Beach business district, Kevin Yungman is working on a dream. For the past few months, the aspiring performer has been singing and dancing nearly 10 hours a day, almost every day, trying to get ready for his biggest part yet.

At just 17, Kevin has a featured role in a major holiday production headed for the national spotlight.

``Being part of the show is just something I never would have dreamed of in my life,'' said the Weston teen, who is a junior at Cypress Bay High School.

For now, Kevin has traded campus life to be a part of Cirque Dreams Holidaze, a new holiday musical by Cirque Productions coming to Hard Rock Live Wednesday through Nov. 8. Kevin, who will play the role of the drummer soldier boy, is one of four main singers in the show, which features an international cast of acrobats, aerialists, dancers, singers and musicians. After its Florida debut in Hollywood, cast and crew will set out on an eight-week East Coast tour.

``I can't wait to get out on the tour and see what it is really like,'' Kevin said.

The show shares a European-style circus sensibility with Montreal-based Cirque du Soleil, but the two are not affiliated.

The Cirque Productions role is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that Kevin came across earlier this year at an audition in Aventura. He won a chance to be in the production Cirque Dreams Jungle Fantasy for a one-time performance at Miami's Adrienne Arsht Center. The company's creative team saw enough of Kevin's talent during that May show that they asked him to stay on for all eight performances. A short time later, Neil Goldberg, Cirque Production's creative and artistic director, called Kevin and asked if he would be interested in a role in Cirque Dreams Holidaze.

``I was speechless. I thought he was joking,'' Kevin said.

Now Kevin's days are filled with costume fittings and rehearsals at Dream Studios in Pompano Beach, where there is a full-scale set that replicates the stage at Hard Rock Live. Though singing is his prime passion, being on stage in any capacity is something he said he's wanted all his life. His parents said Kevin sang before he even spoke, and he has been taking singing and dancing lessons since he was 11. He has appeared with local theater troupes in Weston and Miami, and considers both tremendous learning experiences for what lies ahead.

``You have just got to take one thing at a time, because you never know what is coming next,'' Kevin said.

The show is a musical extravaganza that will offer acrobatic feats, characters balancing on thin wires above the stage, flipping in midair and more.

A 30-foot tree sits in the middle of the action. The characters, dressed as ornaments and dangling from the tree, each come down and tell their story in a high-energy blend of circus artistry and pageantry.

Kevin is on stage for most of the show and has his own solo number. He says the hardest part is learning how to meld his singing with the elaborate choreography.

``Every step, every movement has to be on time,'' he said.

Directing him every step of the way is Goldberg, who sometimes sees up to 100 different performers in each city when he holds auditions. He said instinct told him Kevin had something special.

``There was just something in his demeanor and his projection and his performance that was different than the typical musical theater vocalist,'' Goldberg said.

The auditions are part of Goldberg's ``Run Away with Cirque Dreams Contest,'' which can give aspiring performers a chance to parlay a winning audition into a full-time job. Goldberg said the experience of going out on a national tour will give Kevin a unique edge that will put him on a caliber with Broadway performers.

``It's not just about singing a song,'' Goldberg said. ``It is about acting, it is about touring, it's about integrating your skills in with 35 other performers that collectively speak 12 different languages and whose cultural differences have to all assimilate within a touring family.''

The show will wrap on Dec. 29 and Kevin, who is taking online courses now, plans to become a full-time student again. He says he misses his friends and finds life in a production a bit lonely at times, but he is committed to living out his dream of performing on stage, whether on Broadway or in a music studio.

``I want to do anything on stage,'' he said, ``that will get to people's hearts with my music.''

Cirque Dreams Holidaze

Cirque Dreams Holidaze


Kevin featured in Weston magazine
 
   
West Side Story
   
   
American Idol Experience
American Idol Experience - Disney - 1st Place (Dream Ticket)
   

 
American Idol Experience

American Idol Experience - Disney - 1st Place (Dream Ticket)
 
The Examiner Review


El Nuevo Herald
El Nuevo Herald

image01
image02
image03
image04
image05
image06
image07
image08
 
Herald01
Herald02
 
Cirque Broadway 02
Cirque Broadway 01
 
CBS article
 
Miami Herald
 
Share photos on twitter with Twitpic Share photos on twitter with Twitpic Share photos on twitter with Twitpic
 
 
Courant article
 
Cirque Dreams 01
 

 
 
Broadway_news
 

West Side Story crew
West Side Story flyer
West Side Story Uvu

Starz of the Future 2008



Miami_Herald_2008_08

Miami Herald



Miami Herald - June 8, 2008

Link to article

Miami Herald


Weston Flair Magazine

Weston Flair Magazine - April 2008


Think_Weston_article
   
     

Take Stock in Children

Take Stock in Children First Annual Mentors are Magic Luncheon

 (from www.takestockinchildren.org

...
Entertainment was literally "over the top" with a performance by the Plantation High School Step team. The Dillard High School Jazz band provided beautiful background music. And, vocalists Alison Lockhart and Kevin Yungman (students at Cypress Bay High) brought tears to many eyes with their moving duets. These two are surely headed for Broadway.
...



 

My Amazon Associate Store

     
Copyright © 2007 (admin@kevin-star.com) - Template designed by www.zymic.com