:59:04
- Oh, this is so stupid.
- No.
:59:06
No, not at all. No, no.
I cry too when I'm hungry.
:59:09
For French fries, usually. You?
:59:13
Cake.
:59:19
Careful. Don't spill it
on your new coat.
:59:22
- Old coat, new color. I had it dyed.
- Yeah?
:59:25
Yeah, my dad did it.
He's a dry-cleaner.
:59:28
As is my mom, my brother,
my two older sisters and me.
:59:32
I told you I know about stains.
:59:34
- You're a dry-cleaner?
- Well, I was. Until I was eight.
:59:39
Actually, that's when
I started dancing.
:59:41
I was helping out in the store
one day after school...
:59:44
when my mom asked me
to go in the back and get an order.
:59:47
It was this incredibly delicate sequined
thing, held together by a gold thread.
:59:53
Well, I carried the costume
like it was gonna break.
:59:57
And then I saw the customer.
:59:59
She was the most beautiful woman
I had ever laid eyes on.
1:00:04
She invited us to see her dance that night.
And my mother said yes.
1:00:12
It was like the whole world had suddenly
gone from black-and-white to color.
1:00:17
The beautiful woman and her partner
stopped right in front of us...
1:00:21
and did a waltz pose.
1:00:23
She tilted her head back
and she winked at me.
1:00:28
And I felt like she was trying
to tell me something.
1:00:32
I took it as a sign.
1:00:35
And from then on. I knew that
ballroom dancing would be my life.
1:00:45
It wasn't the kind of dream
my parents had in mind.
1:00:50
What made you wanna dance?
1:00:53
You.
1:00:56
Looking out that window,
right up there.