Hannah Devlin (left) with Kerry Davis. Devlin is the new owner of Hamilton's Drury Lane Dance Studio. Photo / Malisha Kumar
Hannah Devlin (left) with Kerry Davis. Devlin is the new owner of Hamilton's Drury Lane Dance Studio. Photo / Malisha Kumar
Hamilton dancer Hannah Devlin, 28, has come full circle, from taking lessons as a toddler to becoming a dance teacher and owning her own school.
And not just any school: Devlin took over Drury Lane Dance Studio, the place where she first put on her tap shoes at the ageof 3.
Devlin is taking over from Kerry Davis, the daughter of the studio’s founder, the late Aileen Downey, marking a new era for a school that has shaped Waikato dancers for nearly 60 years.
Downey started Drury Lane Dance Studio in 1968 under the name the Downey Dance Studio.
Like Devlin, Downey also found her passion for dance at the age of 3, as her mother ran a backyard dance studio in Te Aroha.
Downey initially opened the Hamilton studio for tap dance classes only and soon introduced tap examinations under the British Ballet Organisation syllabus.
What started with 20 students quickly grew, and Downey expanded the dance school to Te Awamutu and Morrinsville.
“I can have a bad day at work and come in here, and just see the smiles on the kids’ faces, walking out of the studio happy, and it just completely changes your mood,” she said.
“I’ve made lifelong friends from dancing.”
Drury Lane Dance Studio currently has about 200 students.
The Morrinsville and Te Awamutu studios closed a few years ago, but Devlin hopes to expand to other Waikato areas again in the future.
Drury Lane Dance Studio is on 55 Victoria St, Hamilton Central.
Malisha Kumar is a multimedia journalist based in Hamilton. She joined the Waikato Herald in 2023 after working for Radio 1XX in Whakatāne.