 I think there's a saying where, you know, language is a barrier but when you do art, it's universally understandable. I can watch Ukrainian so that you can dance and I still get the same feeling that I'll get from Moscow because dancing is dance, we're all in the one field, we all speak the same language so to speak, even though we may come from completely different backgrounds. Dance, everyone can dance. There's six of us in our crew. Myself, I'm from Vietnam, South Vietnam. Eli is from Laos. Gary and Isaac are both from New Zealand but Isaac's Maori descent and we've got another bloke, Adam, who's from Australia and lastly a young fellow called Lonnie, who's from Samoa and we're all come together so all parts of the world came together and dancing together so it's quite a lot of fun. Having all these flavours from different backgrounds of the crew is so powerful because we all have different stories to tell through our upbringing and when we get together it's just crazy. So which direction are you going? You draw something from your background, from your religion, from your culture, not even that, even from your social background or from your home, you know. Right now we're just working out bearings on stage, our special awareness. Sometimes we're cracking jokes which are where we shouldn't really be. Just getting ready for the performance, getting our heads settled in, knowing the floor, giving each other positive reinforcement that tonight and tomorrow night and the night after is going to be really great. It's good to get on stage and learn the floor and do all the special arrangements for the crew and whatnot and get feedback as a crew would feel about it but positive, very positive and puffed. Knowing that everyone enjoyed the show and had a wonderful time watching the dance, this is why I danced, to tell the story and to move people and hopefully by doing this they'll dance too. They'll get to know themselves a bit better.