Celebrating Cinco de Mayo
- Share via
Stefanie Frith
Second-grader Maria Cuahutle said Saturday she had been waiting all
week to perform in Whittier Elementary’s Cinco de Mayo event. Earlier in
the week, she wasn’t nervous. But the actual day, however, was a
different story.
“She came in this morning and said, ‘Mom, Dad, I’m nervous,’ and she
had this little look,” said Maria’s mother, Esther Perez. “In fact, I was
nervous for her.”
If the children who performed during the fourth annual event at the
Costa Mesa school were nervous during the dozen or so dances they
performed in honor of Cinco de Mayo, it certainly didn’t show.
Kindergartners took to the decorated stage in the center of the school
first, performing a cowboy dance in pairs, smiling and giggling.
Third-graders performed “Los Machetes” and even the adult school
performed to “Rock Around the Clock.” A few hundred people were there to
watch, mostly family members of the stars on stage.
There was also cotton candy, food from Super Chicken and Zubie’s
Chicken Coop, crafts and hundreds of parents with cameras. The event
commemorates the defeat of the French army by the Mexicans at the Battle
of Puebla in 1862 on the fifth of May.
“This is really great, all the people here celebrating Cinco de Mayo,”
said Amaea Gonzalez of Costa Mesa, whose niece, Giselle, performed in the
cowboy dance. “It’s so cute. And the teachers are wonderful for learning
all the dances for the kids and teaching it to them. They do great events
here at the school.”
Martha Blair, a kindergarten teacher who organized the dances, said
the children have been working hard for weeks and now that it was finally
happening, she couldn’t believe how adorable they all looked.
“Aren’t they all so cute? Just look at them,” she said, as another
group of girls dressed in bright, red, flowing dresses got ready to go on
stage.
Jennifer Margolin, a third-grade teacher, said her students practiced
their dance Friday morning during the flag salute, and bugged her for the
rest of the day to perform again.
“They kept asking, ‘Can we do it again? Can we do it again?’ It’s
really cute,” Margolin said. “They are just all so good. All week, they
have been so excited and nervous, asking to practice all the time.”
Another third-grade teacher, Margaret Anderson, who was the emcee of
the event, said her students couldn’t wait for Saturday.
“They’ve really been looking forward to this,” she said while the
students took a break from performing. “The younger brothers and sisters
have watched their brothers and sisters doing this and now it’s their
turn. They just love performing and they have so much talent.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.