About

My name is Alain Wong and I love to dance. I’m a dance teacher at Cat’s Corner in downtown Montreal, specializing in Lindy Hop, Charleston and other authentic jazz dances from the swing era. I also DJ for dancers, playing mostly jazz music, and my favorite band leaders are Count Basie, Duke Ellington and Jimmie Lunceford.

I teach private and group classes for all ages. I also choreograph wedding dances and dance routines. Inquire for rates.

You can reach me at: alainkinwong@gmail.com - 514-575-9025

In my other life, I have a background in business and law. I currently work for web 2.0 startup Standout Jobs as manager of business development.

Organizations and events where I’ve taught and/or performed

Boîte Visuelle
Bombardier
Cameron School of Dance
Cégep Marianopolis / Marianopolis Swing Dance Club
Cégep St-Laurent
Centre d’Histoire de Montréal (Festival Montréal en Lumière)
Cinco / RSM Richter
Collège Jean-de-Brébeuf
Collège de Rosemont
Collège Vanier
Concordia University
École de danse Louise Lapierre
Electronic Arts
Festival International de Jazz de Montréal
Le Jazz Hot
Lucie Sylvestre’s Breast Cancer Fundraiser
McGill University / McGill Swing Kids
Pas de Danse Pas de Vie
Place Longueuil
Queen’s Swing Dance Club (Kingston)
Reinmetal
Santropol Roulant
Solid State break dance collective
St-Georges high school
Studio-88-Swing
Studio Juste pour Rire
Swing Connexion
Swing L’Été
Yeah Baby! productions
Women of the World - Diamond Honeys and Sherry D

Places where I’ve competed:

ALHC 2007 American Lindy Hop Championships
2nd place with Mélanie Huot-Lavoie - Open Showcase
4th place with Ann Mony - Classic
4th place with Mariel Adams - Strictly Lindy

ULHS 2007 Ultimate Lindy Hop Showdown
Freedom & Revolution divisions with Jan Di Kim from Korea
Lindy Hop Performance with Mélanie Huot-Lavoie

CSC 2007 Canadian Swing Championships
1st place with Swing Connexion - Team
2nd place with Ann Mony - Classic Swing Couples
4th place with Mélanie Huot-Lavoie - Canadian Showcase
4th place with Christina Rooney - Advanced Jack & Jill
Mélanie Huot-Lavoie - Swing Couples
Ann Mony - Just Do It
Ann Mony - Blues
Catherine Meinrath - Pro/Am

BTP 2007 Boston Tea Party
5th place with Laura Keat - Jack & Jill
Finalist with Mélanie Huot-Lavoie - Strictly Lindy

QSRV 2007 Québec Swing Rendez-Vous
1st place with Ann Mony - Jack & Jill
2nd place with Mélanie Huot-Lavoie – Strictly Lindy

US OPEN 2006 US Open Swing Dance Championships
3rd place with Balboa Connexion – Formation Team
Competed with Geneviève Kérouac in the Strictly Lindy

ALHC 2006 American Lindy Hop Championships
2nd place with Ann Mony - Classic division
5th place with Jandi Kim (Korea) - Strictly Lindy

ULHS 2006 Ultimate Lindy Hop Showdown
Competed in the Jack & Jill

CSC 2006 Canadian Swing Championships
2nd place with Maryse Lebeau - Classic division
2nd place with Balboa Connexion – Team division
6th place with Tammy Wang – Just Do It
Finalist with Sonia Maurel - Advanced Jack & Jill

Ma bio de danse en français

Il était une fois l’histoire d’un garçon aux yeux bridés. Il s’appelait Alain.

Celui-ci, contrairement à son frère et ses parents (aux yeux bridés aussi) aimait beaucoup danser. Mais attention, ce n’était ni le ballet (les léotards sont trop serrés) ou le tango (la musique le rend triste) qui lui donnait envie de faire parler son corps, mais bien le “swing”.

Il avait découvert ce type de danse un jour de pluie, alors qu’il était allé à l’université. Comme beaucoup de jeunes hommes de son âge, Alain s’était intéressée au groupe de danse “Les McGill Swing Kids” parce qu’une jolie jeune fille (aux yeux en amandes) en faisait parti. Un jour d’octobre, ils décidèrent tous d’aller à la célèbre soirée de l’époque, le Swing Ring. Alain avait décidé d’y aller aussi. Ce soir-là, il tomba amoureux : non pas de la jolie jeune fille aux yeux en amandes (elle avait déjà un petit copain), mais bien de la danse “swing” !

Il avait enfin trouver un moyen de faire parler ses jambes et ses sourcils. Le “swing” était la danse qui lui convenait parfaitement. Enfin !

Dès la semaine suivante, il plongea tête première dans ce nouveau milieu social qui l’inspirait et où il s’amusait tant. L’automne s’acheva, l’hiver passa et le printemps arriva. Alain décida de s’impliquer personnellement dans le milieu et joignit officiellement les McGill Swing Kids. C’est parmi ceux-ci qu’il débuta sa carrière de professeur de swing. Il se joignit ensuite à l’école de danse Cat’s Corner qu’il affectionnait particulièrement pour ses valeurs et les gens qui en faisaient partis.

Ses études terminées, Wong Kin (c’est le nom chinois de Alain) avait tout son temps devant lui pour se consacrer entièrement à la danse. Il commença cette nouvelle vie en s’achetant un billet pour s’envoler avec les avions mécaniques du ciel. Il partit danser 5 semaines en Europe (plus particulièrement à Londre, Paris, Montpellier et Barcelone). Il rencontra beaucoup de danseurs avec toutes sortes de yeux différents (bleus, rond, carrés, globuleux, en amandes, bridés, écrasés). Il revient à Montréal inspiré et avec une énergie qui allait le nourir pour l’année à suivre !

Toujours en continuelle évolution, Alain, ses yeux bridés et son sourire, envahirent les planchers de danse swing plus déterminés que jamais ! Troupe après troupe (Balboa Connexion, Swing Connexion, SCX, Cat’s Corner) Wong Kin perfectionnait son art.

Il participa à différentes compétitions (liste secrète!) et s’illustra dans certaines d’entres elles (liste moins secrète).

Aujourd’hui, que ce soit dans le métro ou sur les planchers de danse, Alain danse toujours. Sa passion pour la danse est plus présente que jamais et son implication dans le milieu le démontre bien. Il est, depuis un an, dj spécialisé en musique jazz de l’ère swing. Vous pouvez danser sur ses choix musicaux dans différentes soirées à Montréal sous le nom de DJ Wong. Toujours prêt à danser avec les recrues ou débutants, Alain adore partager sa passion et ce, toujours avec le sourire.

La bio du DJ Wong sur la liste swingmtl

Avec DJ Wong, c’est toujours d’la bonne!

Alain Kin Wong, communément appelé DJ Wong, a fait son apparition dans le merveilleux univers des DJs en 2006. Après avoir animé plusieurs soirées, le succès du DJ Wong fut instantané. Il est vite devenu un élément incontournable à tout évènement swing. Les organisateurs se l’arrachent, les danseurs en redemandent toujours, bref, tout le monde est d’accord pour dire qu’il est l’élément essentiel à toute soirée réussie. Il est d’ailleurs responsable du fameux syndrome de piedétritus ou communément appelé le ¨fuck-man-j’ai-trop-dansé- la-musique-était-trop-bonne!¨.

La musique: jazz, blues et soul

The Strictly Jazz Gazette, dans un de ses récents articles, parle du DJ Wong ainsi: « Le style de DJ Wong se démarque par une originalité et une variété de choix musicaux dans le domaine du Jazz, du Blues et du Soul. Toujours à l’écoute de la “vibe” présente dans chacune des soirées qu’il anime, DJ Wong s’assure de créer un état symbiotique avec les danseurs, ce qui les amènent à habiter littérallement le plancher de danse ».

Duke Ellington a dit « Il existe deux sortes de musique : la bonne et la mauvaise » pis avec DJ Wong, c’est toujours d’la bonne.

Vous pouvez le voir régulièrement au “Mardi Swing” au Petit Medley, au “Swing and the City” de Swing Connexion les jeudis et au Cat’s Corner “Downtown Stomp” les vendredis.

From Swing Dancer Magazine

8 Questions with Alain Wong

The Basics
Alain Wong
Dancer / Teacher / DJ / Performer
Montreal, Qc, Canada

1) Which fast food restaurant makes the best fries?

Quebec has a national fast food called “poutine”. Fries with gravy and fromage en grain (curd cheese) on top. And the best one in Montreal is at a 24h poutine joint called La Banquise

2) Being up in the land of Maple Leafs - are you a bilingual instructor? If so, have you ever had to teach a class in both French and English? What’s it like?

Yup, I’m a bilingual instructor.

The official language in the province of Quebec is French, but Montreal has both a strong anglophone and francophone community. Most of our students speak French or both French and English, but we occasionally draw English-only speakers such as foreign students attending one of the two English universities in Montreal, McGill and Concordia University.

Having grown up here, I’m lucky to be fluently bilingual. And as most teachers at the Cat’s Corner dance school, I can seamlessly switch from one to the other without a problem.

We do try to keep the dance vocabulary in English in respect to the African-American roots of the dance, so we’ll use “Swing Out”, “Sugar Push” and “Tuck Turn” in our French sentences. There are also equivalent ways of counting “five six here we go” (cinq six on y va). Finally, since I’m teaching movement and rhythm, I will offset the disruptions in language-switching by using visual cues and by scatting out the rhythms.

When we have visiting instructors for workshops, there will sometimes be a designated translator to help the francophones. In general, Montrealers are good with understanding if not speaking English, so it’s usually not an issue.

3) If you were a tree, what kind of tree would you be?

I’d probably be an apple tree, short and gnarly.

4) What made you decide to learn to swing dance? Better yet, what’s the Where, When, How, and Why of swing dancing for you?

September 2000. I was in my first year at McGill and saw students dancing outside in front of the Arts building. I couldn’t believe that people still partner-danced. At the time, dancing to me was about going to the club and “shaking it”.

It gave me the urge to try it out; plus, one of the girls was really cute! For the record, swing dancing is not an excuse to pick up girls.

It turns out the students had just founded the McGill Swing Kids club, and were recruiting members. I signed up and went to their first swing outing with a friend. My friend dropped out after that one time, but I continued on and took dance classes. As it turns out, I ended up dating the the girl I had initially spotted. And here I am seven years later, not with same person, but still deeply passionate about the music and the dance.

Why am I still passionate? The people are genuinely warm, open, welcoming. The dance is rich in history and culture.

Through swing dancing, I discovered great music and made life-long friends. The Lindy Hop community is my second home.

5) How’s it feel to be an ambassador of swing now that you’re in the GMail/YouTube video and are the screenshot being used for the video?It’s awesome that we were chosen for the Gmail video. I feel lucky and proud to be representing Lindy Hop and swing dancing on the world-wide-web.When the video went public, I was really excited, but didn’t realize the extent of what we had accomplished. As it closes in on the 5-million views, it’s mind-boggling to think that all these people have seen Ann Mony and I swinging out. It’s kinda cool.The day the video appeared on the Gmail homepage, my other dance partner Mélanie Huot-Lavoie received a text message from France - a dancer had spotted us and was letting her know. So not only did the video create exposure for the dance, it also got people talking and helped connect Lindy Hoppers together.As for the impact of the video, Peter Strom said it best when I saw him at Showdown this year, “It must be getting SOME people to start dancing… somewhere out there”. So yeah, I’m proud of that. Swing dancing has brought so much to my life, and I’ve seen the joy that it has brought to others as well, so I’m really glad that swing is getting the exposure it deserves. These days, I totally use it as a tool to convince non-dancers to try swing.And one thing I can’t forget. Fred Ngo, the guy who brought Lindy Hop to Montreal almost ten years ago, was actually the one who suggested that we submit a video for the Gmail contest, so I owe him big time.
Thank you Fred!6) In addition to the Gmail video, you’ve got a bit of a presence online - tell us about your lindy hop dedicated blog.I started my blog as a source of information for my students. In Montreal, we don’t have a city-specific discussion forum like Yehoodi (New York) or Whiteheat (Seattle) in which dancers can come together and talk swing, so I felt the need to create a space where I could bring up dance topics, help Montrealers learn about the history of the dance, and at the same time reach out to the international community.On my blog, I cover Lindy Hop, jazz music, DJ-ing for dancers, performance, history, technique, even dance shoes.I encourage students to social dance by promoting local dances and events in Montreal. I also give them the resources to learn on their own by referring to forum threads on sites like Yehoodi and SwingDJs so that they can get different points of view. And finally, I promote the dance community at large by announcing news and encouraging readers to attend swing events outside of Montreal.In the dance context, my learning philosophy comes from Ryan “Swifty” Swift, a prominent Lindy Hop DJ in New York City. He taught me to lead people in the right direction, and let them discover on their own. That’s what swing dancing and DJ-ing swing music have been for me, a constant source of excitement and discovery. That’s how I hope to inspire dancers with my blog.

Oh, and there’s also some shameless self-promotion for my dance school, Cat’s Corner, and my handpainted t-shirts for dancers. So far, I’ve painted one of Max Pitruzzella and Sharon Davis, Skye Humphries and Naomi Uyama, Mike Faltesek… I’m currently painting one for Jojo Jackson.

7) Fill in the blanks: Today I am really ___________ because ____________.

Today I am light for the leaves have turned blue.

8) When hanging around the house, do you wear shoes, go barefoot, wear socks, or wear slippers?

I get chilly, so socks.