full
His Name was Joseph
Twenty-four thousand men were crowded into Knockaloe Interment Camp in 1914 because they had been found guilty of being in the wrong place, at the wrong time, with the wrong last name.
Tightly confined behind barbed wire, those men grew increasingly weak, feeble, stiff and awkward until a man named Joseph was shoved through their gate on September 12, 1915.
He gave his fellow prisoners strength, stamina, flexibility and grace.
They never forgot him.
When the war was over and those men were released, Joseph boarded a ship for America. While onboard that ship, he fell in love with a woman named Clara who was also headed to America. When they arrived in New York, Joseph and Clara opened a studio on 8th street that would send ripples across the world.
The rest of this story is about how those ripples became a wave.
George Balanchine sent his ballet dancers to Joseph on 8th street to gain strength, stamina, flexibility and grace.
Martha Graham sent her modern dancers to Joseph on 8th street to gain strength, stamina, flexibility and grace.
The best dancers on Broadway went to Joseph on 8th Street to gain strength, stamina, flexibility and grace.
George Balanchine became known as “The Father of Modern Ballet.”
Martha Graham is shown in Apple’s famous “Think Different” video as one of the 17 people that Steve Jobs felt had changed the world.
Broadway, Ballet, and Modern Dance were lifted to new heights.
When those ripples from 8th Street reached California, the “Golden Age of Hollywood” began.
Gene Kelley danced with a light post and sang in the rain to the thundering applause of America.
Slim, elegant, and incredibly strong, Fred Astaire did impossible things effortlessly.
Ginger Rodgers did exactly what Fred did, but backwards and in high heels.
A young man was known for his slogan, “Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.” He brought strength, stamina, flexibility and grace to the world of boxing.
Like Martha Graham, this young boxer was chosen to appear in Apple’s famous “Think Different” video as one of the 17 “crazy ones” who changed the world.
He had been the heavyweight champion of the world for 5 years when a 10-year-old boy named Michael elevated dancing to an even higher place with the help of his 4 older brothers. Those 8th Street ripples of strength, stamina, flexibility and grace had splashed back from the California coast and were now rippling through Motown.
Charles Atlas and Joseph Pilates were born one year apart and lived an almost identical lifespan.
Charles Atlas gave men bulging biceps that other people could admire.
Joseph Pilates told us how to gain the strength, stamina, flexibility, and grace to do whatever we want to do.
What do you want to do?
– Roy H. Williams
PS – Joseph loved Clara until the day he died.
Are your employees happy to follow you, or do they avoid you like a skunk at a garden party? Phillip Wilson says the more accessible you are as a leader, the more your business will thrive. But when leaders create a gap between themselves and their employees, they lose top talent and nudge workers toward unionization. Listen in as the famous Phillip Wilson explains to roving reporter Rotbart why “Approachable Leadership” is the only elevator that can lift employee morale, productivity, and retention. The button has been pressed and this elevator is about to up-up-up! But we’re holding the door open for you, hoping that you’ll join us at MondayMorningRadio.com