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The Perfect Cheer

By Daily Bruin Staff

Aug. 27, 2000 9:00 p.m.

By Emilia Hwang

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

Torrance Shipman may not be old enough to vote, but she knows
that it takes more than just good looks and a short skirt to be the
captain of the Rancho Carne High cheerleading squad.

“This is not a democracy,” she declares with a power
akin to that of the leader of the free world. “It’s a
cheerocracy.”

Goodbye DNC. Welcome to the competitive world of
cheerleading

“This is her life, cheerleading,” said actor Kirsten
Dunst, who plays the spirited Shipman. “This is what she
loves.”

In “Bring it On,” rival cheerleading squads go
head-to-head to compete for the national championship trophy.
Director Peyton Reed and writer Jessica Bendinger create characters
that venture to break the stereotypes associated with
cheerleading.

“There’s never been a movie where it really shows
cheerleading as a sport,” Dunst said at a recent press
event.

In the film, Missy Pantonte (Eliza Dushku) mirrors the attitude
of an audience that may enter the theater despising cheerleaders.
Initially, the cynical Missy joins the squad with ambivalence and
even scorns her cheery teammates as airheads with unabashed
enthusiasm for pompoms.

When in school, Dushku said that she and her friends made oaths
that they would never become cheerleaders.

“I grew up with three older brothers and so I thought I
was a boy until I was 10,” she said.

Though Dushku played her fair share of football as a kid, she
came to the film with no gymnastics, dancing or cheerleading
experience.

In order to play cheerleaders who take their athletics
seriously, the cast went through several weeks of intensive
cheerleading camp in order to be able to perform the difficult and
demanding routines required by the script.

“It’s such hard work,” Dunst said. “You
learn to appreciate what (cheerleaders) go through.”

At the boot camp and throughout filming, the actors worked with
cheer and dance choreographers as well as professional
cheerleaders.

Gabrielle Union, who plays the captain of the Clovers, said that
she learned how cheerleaders are more than just peppy and cheery
cliches.

“The girls are very diversified in personalities and life
experiences,” she said of the cheerleaders she worked
with.

Cheerleaders from cheer squads around the country were cast in
the movie. The eight actors and 12 actual cheerleaders who compose
the cheerleading squad in the film worked together to make sure all
their moves were synchronized and to ultimately deliver seamless
routines.

“We were sweaty beasts for most of the shooting,”
said Union, who was a cheerleader in the eighth grade. She admits
that the squads in the movie are a whole different caliber from her
squad, who did more hair flips than back flips.

During filming, cheerleading was the focus and there was no
touching up of makeup. The cast learned to appreciate cheerleading
as an artful combination of dance and gymnastics, instead of merely
an exercise in looking good.

“All of the ego, pride and vanity is out the window
because you get so involved with hitting your routine and not being
the weak link,” Union said.

At the camp, the actors learned more than just cheer rules,
regulations and moves.

“Not only were we learning the dancing and
choreography,” Dushku said. “We’d also play trust
games.”

In addition to all the physically demanding work, the cast had
to learn to be emotionally supportive of each other in order to
order to make the final outcome believable.

“When we saw the final footage of that final routine, we
were all practically in tears,” Dushku said.

Though cheerleading camp proved to be demanding for the actors,
they worked through filming the routines with the spirit and
enthusiasm of true cheerleaders.

“You feed off of everybody’s energy,” Dunst
said.

The level of physical and mental discipline exercised to make
the movie taught Brandi Williams of Blaque to take the sport more
seriously.

“I’ve never really seen how competitive it really
is,” said Williams, who plays a cheerleader. “Now when
I see those competitions on TV, I know that those girls really
worked for that.”

While the movie attempts to alter cheerleading stereotypes among
its audiences, many of the first converts were the actors
themselves, who learned that there’s more to the perfect
cheer than meets the eye.

“This movie taught me so much, not just about
cheerleading, but about girls bonding together, caring more about
the girl next to you, rooting for another woman, (and) being
supportive of each other,” Dushku said. “That’s
more than I thought I could get out of a movie.”

FILM: “Bring It On” is now playing in theaters
nationwide.

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