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LATINA SINGERS WANTED   - Project ID # 31703
Project Type   Live Event Submission Type   Open Call
Location   NEW YORK Union   Non-union
Rate/Pay   n/a
   Contract
Release Date   04-27-06
Audition Date   04-30-06 Submission Deadline   04-30-06
Shoot Date   12-31-69    
Casting Category   Trade Shows/Live Events/Promo Model
Market(s)   New York City, NY

LATINA SINGERS, Dancers and Models WANTED!!!

We are currently seeking young Hispanic women between 17 and 25
years of age. Must be able to sing and speak in English and Spanish.
If you have what it takes, join the people that helped discover superstars Mary J. Blidge, Jodicee, Cypress Hill, P Diddy, Big L, and Alicia Keys.

Auditions will be held in N.Y.C. on Sunday April 30, 2006, 3:30 pm to 6:30pm.

Note: This is an Open Call! If you fit the role criterias and are interested by this project, you can attend directly the Audition this Sunday April 30, 2006, from 3:30 pm to 6:30pm (see Audition infos below the role description).

Role # 1 - Latina Singers, Danc Submit yourself for this role
Seeking 4 talent(s) for this role
LATINA SINGERS, Dancers & Models WANTED!!! We are currently seeking young Hispanic women between 17 and 25 years of age. Must be able to sing and speak in English and Spanish. If you have what it takes, join the people that helped discover superstars Mary J. Blidge, Jodicee, Cypress Hill, P Diddy, Big L, and Alicia Keys.

Searchable talent specs:
Gender: Female
Age: from 17 to 25
Ethnicity: Hispanic - Mediterranean -
Built: Medium - Athlitic - Petite - Thin -


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art-and-space To deepen his insights, he's also doing research on particle physics at Stanford University But this is something for the new age, the new generation, something we've never had before Yamagata said that because his light creations are so expensive, he continues to spend much of his time wooing sponsors His work, much of which is sold at shopping malls, generates an estimated $4 billion in sales a year "It will be dumped Then he's going to work on a laser opera in New York com/English And it's far harder to hang on the wall I am thankful for that "I really appreciate the people who got my work They said I forgot about art, I was commercial I'm touched "When the exhibition period is over, we'll destroy it," he said But Yamagata, it would seem, has seen the light The "Solar Cube" project and its nearby light-show rooms in this city just south of Tokyo, for example, cost $2 million In 1988, he painted the commemorative poster for the 100th anniversary of the Eiffel Tower " Yamagata was born in 1948 near the city of Kyoto "Of course, I paint and sculpt, too "For 12 years, I shut my mouth and did just 100 percent commercial artwork "For me, laser beams are like a paintbrush and mylar like the canvas," he said "When I was a kid, I spent most of my time stargazing, or studying physics," he said index At 55, he is one of the most commercially successful artists alive today, with his brightly colored and infectiously upbeat work â€â€? mass-produced on posters, jigsaw puzzles and prints But unlike the countless jigsaw puzzles that bear his name, this work will never be tucked away somewhere to collect dust But I had a really hard time with the critics and the museums when I tried to come back I was like the mechanical boy Just paint it and sell it," he said com http://www He moved to Paris in 1972 to study at L'Ecole des Beaux Arts, and then to Los Angeles six years later That's the way it is Artist Hiro Yamagata Follows New Light Jun 18, 11:46 AM EST Commercialism has been good to Hiro Yamagata "That's nice, isn't it," the Japan-born, Los Angeles-based artist said as he looked out at a shimmering spectrum of greens and reds reflected across Yokohama's waterfront from his latest work â€â€? two building-sized cubes covered with holographic Mylar panels This spring, he took over the skies of St " In an effort to share his passion for light, Yamagata has lighted the Los Angeles River in lasers and dazzled viewers with rooms so full of dancing photons they require disclaimers warning the weak of heart to stay away " â€â€?â€â€?â€â€? On the Net: http://hiroyamagata Nearby, he has fitted out a pair of large rooms with lasers, strobes, 1,800 reflective cubes hanging on wires and all sorts of other devices to create an effect that is something like a kaleidoscope on steroids, or what a disco might look like several hundred years from now Petersburg as the Russian city marked its 300th anniversary with a gala celebration " Yamagata said he deliberately focused on making money â€â€? though he says most of the profits went to middlemen and he has little personal wealth â€â€? so that he could fund his experiments with the expensive materials needed to create the art of light "I got a lot of gain financially from that "We'll make something somewhere else html He said he doesn't expend much energy worrying about critics who say he sold out, but acknowledged it was a hard label to shake off That's my background Innovative, avant-garde work is not how Yamagata made his name " Now, however, his project list is anything but conventional â€â€? and not very likely to make him much money "Facts are facts," he shrugged "I made lots of things with neon, and thousands of spaceships What he's doing now isn't about money, he says In a bit of a departure from his focus on light, he is planning a show using sound frequencies that can be felt by the body but are too high or low for the human ear to discern, and another in which gallery visitors actually climb into his work â€â€? sleep capsules â€â€? and nap for a few hours "It's almost like medical research," he said