A dance studio with a mission

Two girls smiling in matching orange t-shirts in front of a Studio Be backdrop in black and white.

By Karen Carlo Ruhren 

鈥淢iss Maddie, I got a new toothbrush," a kindergartener announced while warming up in her beginning ballet/jazz combo class. With a smile, Miss Maddie responds and willingly learns more about her tiny dancer鈥檚鈥痙ay, along with the stories of a dozen other classmates at the barre. It鈥檚 a typical afternoon at Studio Be in Dover, New Hampshire, where feeling confident to express yourself is implicit in the mission: 鈥淏e as you are.鈥

Maddie Stewart 鈥19, 鈥21 (MBA) and her older sister Lexie Stewart 鈥16 work hard on and off the dance floor to reinforce this mission and authentically promote their brand in the studio they built from scratch in 2021.  

鈥淟exie and I wanted to create an environment where kids could come as they are,鈥 said Maddie. Their studio serves girls and boys of all abilities, ages 3-18, from nearby towns and as far away as York, Maine. No pressure is put on dancers to compete, perform or load up on classes. The children can take one class per week and focus on other activities such as sports, or they can dance six days a week and join the studio鈥檚 performance team. The choice is theirs. Regardless, Maddie explained that the studio鈥檚 unique grade-level (not skill-level) categorization of classes allows kids to 鈥渂e with kids in their age group and expand their friend group.鈥  

From ballet to jazz, hip-hop, contemporary, musical theater and yoga 鈥 the variety and flexibility seem to be working. Enrollment has skyrocketed from 30 students when they opened, to the studio鈥檚 current roster of 110 dancers.  

鈥淲e鈥檙e growing abundantly,鈥 said Maddie, who believes this momentum is the result of鈥痵taying true to their mission. 鈥淎ll of the dancers are comfortable and happy on stage.鈥  

Maddie credits part of their success to their focus on having a vision, establishing a clear mission, fleshing out a comprehensive business plan and maintaining a consistent brand 鈥 not an easy feat for any young entrepreneurs, and especially challenging during the peak of the pandemic.

Lindsay Guarino, professor and chair for the Department of Music, Theatre and Dance, is not surprised by the Stewart sisters鈥 success.  

鈥淢addie and Lexie were both such bright lights during their time in 黑料网 dance,鈥 said Guarino. 鈥淚n addition to being talented dancers, they both so genuinely brought out the best in everyone around them. They exuded a contagious kind of joy. I鈥檓 so proud of them for carrying forward the values of 黑料网 dance as they shape and inspire the next generation.鈥  

鈥満诹贤檚 program matured my relationship with dance and inspired me,鈥 Maddie reflected. 鈥淛azz, contemporary, personal movement style, rhythm, musicality...we try to introduce it all to [young dancers] in a digestible way while having fun, and they don鈥檛 even realize they learned it.鈥

Fun and function are synonymous at Studio Be. It鈥檚 important to the Stewart sisters to strike what Maddie calls a 鈥渃ool balance鈥 between being open to the kids鈥 needs as a friendly figure in their lives and being professional as a teacher. In line with 黑料网鈥檚 mission to cultivate compassionate leaders, the Stewarts take their positions seriously.  

鈥淲e are role models,鈥 Maddie acknowledged, 鈥渁nd I don鈥檛 take that lightly. These kids are impressionable so how we communicate with each other as teachers is how our students see us.鈥

The Stewarts continue to build relationships with families at the studio and are proud to know parents, grandparents and siblings by name.  

鈥淲e just want to bring joy to people,鈥 Maddie explained.