Catherine Tambini's New Film 'Perfectly Normal For Me' Redefines What Kids Can Do - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1552220

Catherine Tambini's New Film 'Perfectly Normal For Me' Redefines What Kids Can Do

icon 4 Photos

"Tada!" In photo: Kayla Burger, Alexandria Vega, Maya Vega.

New York City Ballet prima ballerina Jenifer Ringer shares her makeup secrets with Caitlin McConnell.

New York City Ballet prima ballerina Jenifer Ringer shares her makeup secrets with Caitlin McConnell. HIROKO SHONO-CHENG

"Tada!" In photo: Kayla Burger, Alexandria Vega, Maya Vega. CATHERINE TAMBINI

"Tada!" In photo: Kayla Burger, Alexandria Vega, Maya Vega. CATHERINE TAMBINI

authorMichelle Trauring on Oct 21, 2019

At 5 years old, Alexandria Vega is a firecracker. At age 8, Jake Ehrlich is a trailblazer. As teenagers, Caitlin McConnell is hilarious and outgoing, and Veronica Siaba is opinionated and self-aware, both with an undeniable charisma and charm.

Together, they are the core group of featured dancers in Catherine Tambini’s documentary “Perfectly Normal for Me.” And they all live with cerebral palsy — a diagnosis they refuse to let stop them.

“I just want to be a normal kid,” Jake says in the film, which premieres on Tuesday night on WORLD Channel. “That’s my lifetime goal.”

Founded by Sag Harbor resident Joann Ferrara, her Queens-based program, Dancing Dreams, gives students with a physical disability the opportunity to dance. With the help of volunteers, they tap, sashay and twirl their way across the floor — which is where the Hampton Bays director first met them, camera in hand.

Alexandria and her twin sister, Maya, were immediately curious, and charged over to the filmmaker.

“I have a camera!” Maya declared.

“Oh?” Tambini asked. “What kind of a camera?”

“I have a pink camera!” she answered.

“And I have a dark pink camera!” Alexandria piped up, not to be outdone by her twin.

Tambini was immediately smitten, she said. They were the first children to welcome her in, and from there, the whole film opened up for her in an incredible way, she said. For over a year, she captured the lives of these four dancers, following them to parks, playgrounds and physical therapy, and visiting them at home during their day-to-day lives.

“Because I was there so much, they got really used to me,” Tambini said. “At the first screening that I showed them, Jake turned to me and he goes, ‘How did you get all that footage of me?’ and I said, ‘Don’t you remember? I followed you around with a camera for a long time,’ and he didn’t remember. It was so funny. He just didn’t notice I was there so much.”

For Tambini, the filming process marked her first interactions with the physically disabled, she said. Seeing cerebral palsy up close — which is a group of disorders that affect a person’s ability to move and maintain balance and posture — was an eye-opening experience, she said, and has shifted her perception of “disability” entirely.

“I was always generous, but I never really considered so much the person who had the disability,” she said. “And now I’m totally aware and trying to be inclusive in my own ways. They’re so self-accepting, and they so love each other. They’re so gentle and so kind with each other. It’s a whole different perspective from kids who are bullies. You just see the love that they have toward one another, and the patience and the acceptance, and that really affected me in a big way.

“I feel that my life has been enriched by having been associated with them and knowing them as I do now.”

After one particular class with Jenifer Ringer, who was then a principal dancer with the New York City Ballet, she sits down with the kids for an informal chat when a recent review, and criticism of her body, comes up. “Their job is to criticize dance,” Veronica tells her, outraged, “not body image.”

“She got really mad at the critic who was criticizing Jenifer’s body, and they wrote a letter. They wrote a letter to the critic,” Tambini said. “She’s very politically aware, but she’s still this kid. She’s very almost militantly aware of what should be. They’re wonderful advocates for their community.”

The hour-long film, which will premiere as part of the award-winning public television series “America ReFramed,” is programmed to mark National Disability Employment Awareness Month, which felt like a natural fit, Tambini said.

“As a filmmaker, I like to show the humanity in the human,” she said. “I like to find the thing that connects us and makes us see into somebody else’s life.”

Fulfilling that mission, the film is also scheduled to screen during an assembly at Jake’s school, she said. The young boy doesn’t like when his peers stare at him, and the director said she hopes the documentary will help them “understand what he goes through, and he’s all for it.”

“I’ve had people come to me after seeing the film and say that they are the ones who are transformed,” she said. “They were expecting to see transformation on screen, but what’s happening is they’re transformed. They’ll never look at people with disabilities the same way again. They’re seeing that disability fades away and they see the person and the value.

“I’m hoping for gigantic transformations all over the country as the film screens,” she continued. “This film could do a lot of good, and I’m hoping that it will.”

“Perfectly Normal for Me,” a film by Catherine Tambini, premieres on Tuesday, October 29, at 8 p.m. on WORLD Channel and worldchannel.org. For more information, visit perfectlynormalformedoc.com.

You May Also Like:

The Suffolk Presents 4-Time Grammy Award Winner & 19-Time Nominee Larry Carlton

The Suffolk will present 4-time Grammy Award winner Larry Carlton on Friday, September 19. Like ... 3 Sep 2025 by Staff Writer

LTV Studios Hosts ‘A Night With Aqua Cherry & Friends’ and Live Reggae-Fueled Taping

LTV Studios and the East End Underground Live Concert Series will present “A Night With Aqua Cherry & Friends” on Saturday, September 20, at 7:30 p.m. The event features reggae veterans Aqua Cherry, joined by special guests, for a live taping of the popular East End Underground concert series. The performance is curated by Jody Gambino, in collaboration with J TiL Productions and LTV Studios. Aqua Cherry is a reggae band from New York known for sweet, uplifting, booty-shakin’ reggae grooves infused with a rebellious rock edge. Over the years, in the studio and on countless stages, Aqua Cherry has ... by Staff Writer

Blast Off to Adventure: Southampton Playhouse Screens Movies That Are out of This World

Southampton Playhouse will host its inaugural Hamptons Space Week from September 19 to 25, featuring ... by Staff Writer

East End Photographers Capture ‘All We See’ in Debut Show at the Depot Art Gallery

The East End Photographers Group will hold its inaugural exhibition, “All We See,” at the ... 2 Sep 2025 by Staff Writer

‘Ha Ha Hamptons Comedy Tour’ Brings Laughter Back to Bay Street

Bay Street Theater presents the return of “Ha Ha Hamptons Comedy Tour” on Saturday, September ... by Staff Writer

Sag Harbor American Music Festival Celebrates 15th Year With Free Concerts and Star-Studded Lineup

The Sag Harbor American Music Festival returns for its 15th year from September 25 to 28, offering a vibrant lineup of free, outdoor performances throughout the village. New in 2025, the festival kicks off with a special collaboration between the Sag Harbor Whaling Museum, the Masonic Temple, and Hamptons Jazz Fest, expanding the range of musical and cultural experiences for attendees. Festival Highlights Include three main stages — Steinbeck Park, Marine Park and the Alley by The American Hotel, 10 pop-up stages hosted by local restaurants and shops and one headlining ticketed concert featuring three-time Grammy winner Cécile McLorin Salvant ... by Staff Writer

Hamptons Latino Film Festival Connects Cultures Through Film

Strength and perseverance serve as the thematic backbone of the 22nd Annual Latino Film Festival ... by Staff Writer

Sophia Kickhofel Quartet To Perform at Duck Creek Arts Center September 6

The Arts Center at Duck Creek will present the Sophia Kickhofel Quartet on Saturday, September ... 1 Sep 2025 by Staff Writer

Metallica Delivers Intimate, High-Octane Show at the Talkhouse

In its 38-year history, the Stephen Talkhouse in Amagansett is no stranger to big-name artists. ... by Dan Stark

‘The Wolves’ Brings Unflinching Portrait of Adolescence to Southampton

“The Wolves,” a Pulitzer Prize finalist written by Sarah DeLappe, will open at the Southampton Cultural Center on Friday, September 5, at 7 p.m. The production will continue with performances on Saturday, September 6, at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m., and Sunday, September 7, at 7 p.m. Directed by Allen O’Reilly, who recently helmed “Much Ado About Nothing” at Sylvester Manor, the play explores the raw intensity of adolescence through the lens of an indoor soccer team. Robin Aren serves as producer for the limited run. The production features a cast of both local and New York City-based actresses. The ... by Staff Writer