The Art and Purpose of Dance
The Art and Purpose of Dance
Meanings 
  Involves a successive group of body motions and steps 
rhythmically performed and timed to music 
  Said to be the oldest of the arts 
  The dancing body has inspired the musician, the sculptor and the 
painter 
  The drama of most countries started in their dances 
  The beginnings of music have been traced to the dance 
  Has been called the MOTHER OF THE ARTS 
 
Dance can be categorized as 
1.  Art 
a.  May tell a story 
b.  Set a mood 
c.  Express an emotion 
2.  Recreation 
a.  Fun  
b.  Relaxation 
c.  Companionship 
 
Dances may be performed for different purposes 
1.  Religious 
2.  Magical 
3.  Commemorative 
4.  Ceremonial 
5.  Recreational 
6.  Entertainment 
 
Why people dance 
1.  Worship 
2.  Courtship 
3.  Enjoyment 
4.  Magical Powers 
5.  Victory in war 
6.  Health Restoration 
7.  Companionship 
8.  Relief from the monotony of having the same activity in their daily life  
9.  Entertainment 
10.  Beauty and Inspiration 
11.  Releasing Tension 
 
Kinds of Dancing 
1.  Ethnological (Folk Dancing) 
a.  Tinikling 
b.  Alcamfor 
c.  Banga 
d.  Bilaan 
e.  Itik-itik 
f.  Jota cavitea 
g.  Pandanggo sa Sambalilo 
h.  Sayaw Ed Tapew na Bangko 
i.  Singkil 
j.  The Ifugao Dance 
2.  Social or Ballroom Dances 
a.  Waltz 
b.  Foxtrot 
c.  Swing 
d.  Cha-cha 
e.  Boogie 
f.  Tango 
g.  Rumba 
h.  Cheek to cheek 
3.  Theatrical or Spectacular Dance (performed for the entertainment of 
spectators) 
a.  Ballet 
  Staging 
  Scenery 
  Costumes 
  Dancing 
  Music but no dialogue 
  The Ballet Dancer performs on: 
o  Paintworks 
o  Pirouettes 
o  elevation 
b.  Modern dance (contemporary/ interpretative) 
  Natural and free 
  Doesnt stick to conventions 
  Has varied styles of movements and are vitally precise, 
spontaneous, free and natural 
  Usually based on the current trends 
  Also called EXPRESSIONAL DANCE 
  Developed in the early 1900s 
  The dance comes from within the performer 
  The themes of the modern dances are taken from the ups 
and downs of real life in its tragic as well as its humorous 
aspects 
  Have dynamic tempo and are vitally precise, spontaneous, 
free and natural 
  The modern dancer 
o  Stretches 
o  Drops 
o  Exaggerates 
o  Distorts 
o  Intensifies movements for the art sake 
c.  Musical comedy dances 
  Performed by 
o  Soloist 
o  Groups 
o  Choruses 
  In theaters 
  In nightclubs 
  In motion picture 
  In television 
  Combines various forms of 
o  Ballet 
o  Modern 
o  Tap 
o  Acrobatic 
o  Soft shoe dancing 
d.  Tap dancing 
 
 
Elements of dance 
1.  Theme (message) 
2.  Design (pattern of movements in time and space) 
3.  Movement (action of dancers as they use their bodies to create 
organized patterns) 
a.  Steps 
b.  Gestures of arms and hands 
c.  Facial expression 
4.  Technique (skill in executing movements) 
5.  Music (accompaniment) 
6.  Costumes and properties 
7.  Choreography 
8.  Scenery (setting/ background) 
 
Reasons for dancing 
1.  Ifugaos  
  To celebrate the victory of the warriors after a fight with their 
enemies. 
2.  Bagobos 
  To show gratitude to the spirits for success in war or domestic 
affairs 
3.  Indians 
  To give thanks for a harvest 
4.  Mexicans 
  To celebrate a religious festival  
DANCE 
Dance is  an art  form that  generally  refers  to movement of  the  body, 
usually  rhythmic  and  to  music, used  as  a  form  of  expression,  social 
interaction or presented in a spiritual or performance setting. 
 Dance  may  also  be  regarded  as  a  form  of nonverbal  communication 
between  humans,  and  is  also  performed  by  other animals (bee 
dance, patterns  of  behavior such  as  a  mating  dance). Gymnastics, figure 
skating and synchronized  swimming are sports that  incorporate  dance, 
while martial  arts kata are  often  compared  to  dances.  Motion in  ordinarily 
inanimate  objects  may  also  be  described  as  dances  (the leaves danced  in 
the wind). 
Definitions  of  what  constitutes  dance  are  dependent  on  social, 
cultural, aesthetic, artistic and moral constraints  and  range  from  functional 
movement (such as folk dance) to virtuoso techniques such as ballet. Dance 
can  be participatory, social or performed for  an audience.  It  can  also 
be ceremonial, competitive or erotic.  Dance  movements  may  be  without 
significance in themselves, such as in ballet or European folk dance, or have 
a gestural vocabulary/symbolic system as in many Asian dances. Dance can 
embody or express ideas, emotions or tell a story. 
Dancing  has  evolved  many  styles. Break  dancing and Cramping are 
related  to  the hip  hop  culture.  African  dance  is  interpretative.  Ballet, 
Ballroom,  Waltz,  and  Tango  are  classical  styles  of  dance  while Square and 
the Electric Slide are forms of step dances. 
Every dance, no  matter what style,  has something in common. It not 
only involves flexibility and body movement, but also physics. If the proper 
physics is not taken into consideration, injuries may occur. 
Choreography is  the  art  of  creating  dances.  The  person  who  creates 
(i.e., choreographs) a dance is known as the choreographer. 
Philippine Dances 
Most Philippine dances were originally patterned after European dances 
during the Spanish regime. Pandango Sa Ilaw, Cariosa, Rigodon and Balitao 
are  examples  of  these  dances  Filipinos  are  known  for.  Aside  from  these 
western-influenced dances, ethnic-created dances such as Tinikling made its 
way  to  nationwide  recognition.  Despite  its  apparent  adaptation  to  western 
dances, still Filipinos pay tribute to their cultural roots. Every district  in the 
islands has its own folk dance,  interpreted attractively  in  festivals and local 
shows,  which  have  added  to  the  countrys  reputed  contribution  to  worlds 
illustration of traditional arts. 
The following are examples of popular Philippine folk dances : 
Binasuan -  Originated  in  Pangasinan  Province  meaning  with  the  use  of 
drinking glasses, this vibrant dance basically shows off balancing skill of 
the  performers. Glasses  filled  with  rice  wine  are  placed  on  the  head  and 
on each hand carefully maneuvered with graceful movements. This dance 
is common in weddings, fiestas and special occasions. 
Rigodon -  Originated  from  Spain,  this  dance  is  commonly  performed  at 
formal  affairs  like  inaugural  balls  where  prominent  members  of  the 
government participate and enjoy. 
Pandanggo sa Ilaw - The word pandanggo comes from the Spanish dance 
fandangocharacterized  with  lively  steps  and  clapping  while  following  a 
varying  beat. Pandanggo requires excellent balancing skill to maintain 
the stability of three tinggoy, or oil lamps, placed on head and at the back 
of  each  hand.  This  famous  dance  of  grace  and  balance  originated  from 
Lubang Island, Mindoro. 
Sublian -  The  term  subli  is  from  two  tagalog  words  subsub  meaning 
falling  on  head  and  bali,  which  means  broken.  Hence,  the  dancers 
appear  to  be  lame  and  crooked  throughout  the  dance.  This  version  is 
originally  a  ritual  dance  of  the  natives  of  Bauan,  Batangas,  which  is 
shown  during  fiestas  as  a  ceremonial  worship  dance  to  the  towns  icon, 
the holy cross. 
Kuratsa - Commonly performed during festivals in Bohol and other Visayan 
towns,  this  dance  portrays  a  young  playful  couples  attempt  to  get  each 
others attention. It is performed in a moderate waltz style. 
Itik-itik - According to history of this dance, a young woman named Kanang 
(short for Cayetana) happened to be the best performer in the province of 
Surigao  del  Norte.  At  one  baptismal  reception,  she  was  asked  to  dance 
the  Sibay,  and  began  improvising  her  steps  in  the  middle  of  her 
performance  imitating  the  movements  of  an  itik,  a  duck,  as  it  walks 
with  choppy  steps  and  splashes  water  on  its  back  while  attracting  its 
mate.  Because  of  its  unusual  steps  and  fascinating  interpretation,  the 
audience began imitating her. 
Tinikling -  Tinikling  is  considered  the  national  folkdance  with  a  pair  of 
dancers  hopping  between  two  bamboo  poles  held  just  above  the  ground 
and struck together in time to music. Originated from Leyte Province, this 
dance is  in fact a  mimic movement of tikling birds hopping over trees, 
grass  stems  or  over  bamboo  traps set  by farmers. Dancers  perform  this 
dance with remarkable grace and speed jumping between bamboo poles. 
Maglalatik -  Originally  performed  in  Binan,  Laguna  as  a  mock-war  dance 
that demonstrates a fight between the Moros and the Christians over the 
prized  latik  or  coconut  meat  during  the  Spanish  rule,  this  dance  is  also 
shown  to  pay  tribute  to  the  towns  patron  saint,  San  Isidro  Labrador.  It 
has  a  four-part  performance  such  as  the  palipasan  and  the  baligtaran 
showing  the  intense  battle,  the  paseo  and  the  escaramusa-  the 
reconciliation.  Moro  dancers  wear  read  trousers  while  the  Christian 
dancers show up in blue. All dancers are male ; with harnesses of coconut 
shells attached on their chests, backs, thighs and hips. 
Maria  Clara -  Maria  Clara  is  the  main  female  character  in  Jose  Rizals  Noli 
Me  Tangere  -a  literary  piece  that  features  the  colonial  situation  of  the 
Filipinos  during  the  Spanish  regime.  She  was  characterized  as  a  Filipina 
woman of virtue and nobility. This dance is a mix of Spanish gracefulness 
and  customized  native  props,  such  as  bamboo  castanets  and  Asian  fan. 
Female  dancers  wear  Maria  Clara  dress  that  typifies  the  European  style, 
while men are in barong tagalog, a traditional Filipino embroidered long-
sleeve shirt made of pineapple fiber. 
Cariosa -  Cariosa  is  a  word  that  describes  an  affectionate,  friendly  and 
lovable  woman.  This  dance  is  performed  in  flirtatious  manner  with  fans 
and handkerchiefs to assist the dancers hide-and-seek movements. 
La  Jota  Manilea -  It  is  a  dance  named  after  the  capital  city  of  the 
Philippines, Manila, where an adaptation of Castilian Jota afloats with the 
clacking  of  bamboo  castanets  played  by  the  dancers  themselves.  The 
costume  and  the  graceful  movements  of  the  performers  noticeably 
inspired by Spanish Culture. 
Sakuting -  Originated  in  Abra,  this  dance  interprets  a  mock  fight  between 
Ilokano Christians and non- Christians with training sticks  as props. It is 
traditionally performed during Christmas at the town plaza or from house-
to-house as a caroling show. As a return, the dancers receive presents or 
money locally known as aguinaldo. 
Pantomina -  Meaning  "Dance  of  the  Doves",  this  dance  is  the  highlight  of 
Sorsogons Kasanggayahan  Festival every third week of October. Groups 
of participants, mainly elderly in colourful costumes, dance to the tune of 
Pantomina  song.  It  is  a  courtship  dance  originated  from  immitating  the 
courtship  and  lovemaking  of  doves  that  then  showed  during  the  dance 
where men attempt to please the women. 
Other Philippine Ethnic Dances: 
Banog - Cordillera In this dance, performers portray hunters shielding their 
chickens from the famishing hawk. The hawk ends up entrapped and dies 
in the hands of hunters. 
Salisid - Kalinga,  Cordillera This  is  a  courtship  dance  that  symbolizes  a 
rooster  trying  to  attract  the  attention  of  a  hen.  This  is  performed  and 
portrayed  by  both  male  and  female  dancers  as  the  rooster  and  hen 
respectively.  The  dance  starts  when  each  of  them  are  given  a  piece  of 
cloth known as "ayob" or "allap". 
Palok - Kalinga,  Cordillera -  A  tribal  dance.  The  natives  of  Kalinga  perform 
this  dance  in  most  of  their  social  events.  Male  dancers  hold  gangsa  or 
gong- a percussion instrument made of copper, and beat it with wooden 
stick. 
Lumagen - Kalinga,  Cordillera A  tribal  dance.  This  is  a  traditional 
thanksgiving  dance  by  the  Kalinga  tribe  performed  to  celebrate  good 
harvest and events such as birth of first-born child, victory in battles and 
weddings. 
Idudu- Abra, Cordillera A  tribal  dance.  This  dance  stages  a  common  family 
life  in  the  Itneg  or  Tinguian  society.  It  illustrates  the  family as the  main 
foundation  of  the  tribes  community.  Several  traits  of  an  ordinary  family 
are  shown.  It  depicts  a  father  plowing  the  field  while  the  mother  caring 
for the children. But as soon as the father finishes work, the mother takes 
over on  planting,  sowing  and  all  the  remaining  chores  to  do  in  the  field. 
At this time the father is left to take care of the kids. During the dance a 
Local  singer  breaks  into  an  Idudu  or  lullaby  to  put  the  baby  to  sleep. 
Idudu, a dance taken from Idudu lullaby, obviously portrays the different 
roles in a Tinguian family 
Dinuyya - Cordillera Ifugao  dance  Famous  in  the  Ifugao  region,  this  dance 
is  regularly  staged  during  festivals  in  Lagawe.  Three  kinds  of  gong 
instruments  such  as,  ordinary  gongs,  tobtob-  a  brass  gong  played  by 
beating with open palms and, hibat, a kind of gong played by beating the 
inner surface with a softwood are used in this dance. 
Bendayan - Benguet This  dance,  which  is  more  known  as  Bendian,  is 
performed  to  commemorate  the  arrival  of  headhunters  in  their  district. 
Performers dance in a circle and show off their lively traditional steps. 
Binaylan - Agusan This is a ritual dance, which originated from the Bagobo 
tribe  living  in  the  central uplands  of Mindanao,  imitating  the  movements 
of a hen, her banog or baby chicks, and a hawk. The hawk is sacred and 
is  believed  that  it  has  the  power  over  the  well  being  of  the  tribe.  The 
hawk tries to capture one of the baby chicks and is killed by the hunters. 
Malakas at maganda - Leyte A Tribal dance. This dance depicts the birth of 
the  first  man  and  woman  who  came  out  of  a  bamboo  tree.  It  has  been 
said  that  the  woman  named  maganda  (beautiful)  and  the  first  man 
malakas (strong) are the parents of the whole community in the island. 
The dance demonstrates how a bird discovered the noise coming from the 
inside  of  the  bamboo  and  perched  until  it  opened.  A  man  and  a  woman 
came out of the big bamboo tree and, the birth of this legendary couple is 
amusingly interpreted in this dance. 
Burung-Talo - Sulu The  dance  is  a  unique  fighting  dance  in  a  form  of 
martial  arts  by  the  Tausug  tribe.  Performers  demonstrate  a  battle 
between  hawk  and  a  cat.  With  their  acrobatic  movements  and  tough 
facial  expressions,  this  dance  is  highlighted  with  the  accompanying 
energetic beat of drums and gongs. 
Kadal-Blelah- South Cotabato A tribal dance where in the dancers perform 
simulation of movements of birds. 
Kadal  Tahaw - Tiboli  dance-  south  cotabato A  tribal  dance  performed  by 
Tiboli  tribe,  this  dance  that  mimics  the  hopping  and  flying  behavior  of 
Tahaw bird is performed to celebrate good harvest. 
Sayaw  sa  Cuyo - Palawan Cuyo  is  a  small  island  and  capital  of  Palawan. 
There,  the  feast  day  of  St.  Augustin  is  traditionally  celebrated  with 
parades,  processions  and  small  performances  by groups  coming  from all 
over  Cuyo  Island  and  the  nearby  islets.  Island  dances,  blended  with 
strong  Old  Cuyo  ethnicity  and  Spanish-influenced  steps,  are  all  brought 
out when Cuyo celebrates its festivals.  Today, pretty young girls daintily 
swirl  hats  to  the  waltz  and  other  European  steps  designed  to  bring  out 
the freshness and glow of the performers. 
Karatong - Palawan A Muslim dance. During the festival of San Agustine in 
the island of Cuyo, the celebration also includes the blossoming of mango 
trees. The parade starts from the church patio and ends at the town plaza 
with  ladies  waving  their  colorful  props  Bunga  mangga  that  symbolize 
the  flowers  of  mango  tree,  while  men  lively  strike  their  karatong 
instruments ; creating a scene of joy among reveling towns folk. 
Dugso - Bukidnon A thanksgiving dance from the talaindig tribe. 
Gayong-gayong - Capiz -A  Muslim  dance.  In  rural  gatherings,  this  dance 
offers  much  fun.  Gayong  is  a  pet  name  for  Leodegario.  According  to  the 
legend and to the words of the song, Gayong and Masiong (pet name for 
Dalmacio)  once  attended  a  feast  commemorating  the  death  of  a 
townsman.  While  eating,  Masiong  choked  on  a  piece  of  Adobo  so  he 
called,  "Gayong !  Gayong !"  to  ask  for  help  to  dislodge  a  bone  from  the 
Adobo meal from his throat. In this dance, Masiongs liking for feasts and 
the consequence of his gluttony are held up to playful ridicule. 
Kapa  Malong-Malong - Cotabato A  Muslim  dance.  This  Maranao  dance  is 
performed with women wearing malong and shawl, mantle or head piece, 
whereas men wear sash or waist band, shorts or bahag and head gear or 
turban traditionally worn in the fields. 
Pagapir - Lanao  del  Sur This  dance  is  usually  performed  to  commence  an 
important affair. Dancers of this dance are usually from the royal court or 
high society group of Lanao Province. They use apir or fan to coordinate 
with  their  small  steps  called  kini-kini,  which  symbolizes  their  good 
manners and prominent family background. 
Pangalay- Zamboanga  Del  Sur A  muslim  dance.  Originally  performed  by 
wealthy  families  during  a  wedding  celebration,  this  fingernail  dance  is 
now a popular festival dance in Sulu. 
Types of Dances and Different Dancing Styles: 
 
Ballroom Dance 
 
  The Ballroom dance is one of the most entertaining and elite styles of 
dancing. In the earlier days, Ballroom dance was only for the privileged class 
of people.  This  style  of partner  dance  originated  in  Germany but  is  popular 
all  over  the  world.  Today,  the  popularity  of  Ballroom  dance  has  spread  to 
many corners! This dance includes many other dance styles. There are many 
dance  techniques  that  have  been  developed  especially  in  America.  The 
International  Standard  recognizes  around  10  styles  that  belong  to  the 
category of Ballroom dance where as the American style has few forms that 
are  different  from  those  included  under  the  International  Standard.  
 
Different Styles that belong to International Standard 
 
Tango: It definitely does take two to tango and this dance also belongs to 
the American Style category. Like all Ballroom dancers, the male has to give 
the lead to the female. The various moves used all make the dance look 
even more beautiful to the onlooker. This International Standard varies from 
the American Style in terms of movement.  
 
Waltz: The Waltz is danced to slow beats and is an equally beautiful dance 
form. The Waltz dance is one of the slow and most attractive and rhythmic 
styles ever. When danced by the International Standard norms, this dance is 
performed more closely towards each other as compared to the American 
Style.  
 
Foxtrot: Foxtrot, as a dance style, gives a dancer flexibility to combine the 
slow and fast movements together. This social dance was named after the 
actor Harry Fox.  
 
Viennese Waltz: This style of Ballroom dance is based on the original form 
of the Waltz dance. There are many versions of this style of dance. This 
dance originated in the latter period of the 18th century.  
 
Quickstep: This style belongs to the International Style of Ballroom dancing 
which originated in the 1920s. This dance includes many steps with quick 
momentum. 
 
Cha-Cha-Cha: The Cha-cha-cha simply called the cha-cha is a type of Latin 
American dance which is very rhythmic in its appeal. This dance is energetic 
with slow movements as well.  
 
Rumba: This sensual dance is based on slow hip movement. Rumba belongs 
to the International Standard as well as the American style. This dance is 
known for the beauty of the steps that are co-ordinated on a slow rhythm.  
 
Samba: This beautiful and energetic dance also has many forms. The steps 
may differ in Samba that is danced as per the Ballroom style and the 
traditional style Samba.  
 
Jive: This is yet another lively form of Ballroom dance. This dance is also 
amongst the five dances that belong to the Latin American dance styles.  
 
Paso Doble: This lively dance is also an International Latin dance style with 
less emphasis on the hip movement. The basic structure of this Latin dance 
is based on the sounds and the movements used in Spanish bullfights.  
 
Different Types of Dances that belong to American Style 
 
Bolero: This type of dance style is basically slow and has originated in 
Spain. It can be danced solely or as even as a couple.  
 
Mambo: Mambo is a Latin dance that makes the use of many steps which 
are considered complex in origin. Mambo is also known as the base of Salsa 
dance.  
 
East Coast Swing: This type of partner dance is based on the Lindy Hop. 
East Coast Swing dance consists of many simple steps that follow the basics 
of Lindy Hop. 
 
The Waltz, Tango, Foxtrot, Cha-Cha, Rumba and Viennese Waltz also belong 
to the American Style of dances.  
 
Other Styles of Ballroom Dances 
 
Salsa: Salsa has its base in areas of Cuba and Puerto Rico and Latin 
America. This partner dance is a very sensual form that is known for the 
flirtatious and lively steps. While dancing the salsa, the couples can even 
perform on one spot without traveling all over the floor. The dance steps of 
this very beautiful dance show many influences from other dances such as 
the Mambo, Changui, Palo, Rumba etc. There are many other various forms 
of the Salsa such as the Cuban style, New York style, Colombian style and 
the Los Angeles style. 
 
Merengue: This type of dance requires the partners to be together in a 
close position. The steps are often in circular movements or away from each 
other in a sideway fashion. There are many intricate steps to this dance. The 
various handholds are an indication of the same.  
 
Bachata: This is a romantic style of dance that finds its origins in the 
Dominican Republic. The Bachata is on the similar lines of the Merengue.  
 
Lambada: Sexy and stylish, Lambada is a Brazilian dance that is performed 
in partners or even groups. This dance was particularly in the limelight 
because of the famous track Lambada by a music group, Kaoma.  
 
Polka: This is a style of dance that also refers to a type of music. The Polka 
is a fast dance, which is also present in various styles.  
 
Hustle: The Hustle is performed as a Ballroom dance and is very popular in 
the nightclubs as well. The Hustle was particularly popular due to the movie, 
Saturday Night Fever where one could notice two types of this dance form.  
 
Swing Dance: The Swing dance style originated in the 1920s  1930s. 
There are many versions of the Swing dance such as the Lindy Hop, 
Jitterbug, Boogie Woogie, West Coast Swing, Rock and Roll etc. Rock n Roll 
is a very sporty form of dance that is extremely popular as well. Boogie 
Woogie is another dance style that is seen mainly in Europe. This dance is 
also seen in competitions.  
 
Ballet Dance: The Ballet dance is a very beautiful form of dance with a 
formal look. This dance was developed in France and Russia. There are many 
ballet schools around the world that teach all about the various technical 
terminologies in relation to classical ballet. The classical Ballet is the most 
formal style of ballet. Apart from this, there is the Neoclassical ballet and 
Contemporary Ballet.  
 
Breakdance: Michael Jackson popularized Breakdance to a huge extent. 
Breakdance is actually a form of street dance that was a part of the hip-hop 
culture. The many movies based on Breakdance have also been an indication 
of its popularity. Breakdance is relatively a male dominated type of dance 
style. This type of dance is characterized with the typical battles between 
groups. The Downrock and the Freeze are some of the typical forms of 
Breakdance. The various clothing styles used while performing Breakdance is 
a distinctive part of this form of dance. 
 
Hip Hop Dance: This style is actually a street dance style and is a 
combination of dance moves combined with loads of attitude as well as 
colorful dancewear. In the early days, this style was generally seen in 
breaking and from there on, one could witness many innovations in this 
dance style. There are various other styles used with hip-hop dance, which 
includes popping and locking. The hip-hop outfits have to be selected with 
care, which helps to add to the overall appeal of the dance form.  
 
Step Dance: This category includes dances that make use of footwork. 
These types of dances generally require one to have a rigid stance with more 
movement of the feet. Step dances are basically social dances. A good 
example of this dance would be the Irish dance.  
 
Tap Dance: Tap dance is an extremely popular form of dance. Here the 
emphasis is on the movements of the feet and steps that create a tapping 
sound. This dance finds its origins in the United States. The tapping sound is 
due to the presence of metal plates on the soles of the shoes.  
 
Flamenco Dance: The Flamenco dance and music is very much a major 
part of the culture of Spain. The beautiful songs play a major role for this 
type of dance style. This beautiful style is also particularly noticeable due to 
the gorgeous costumes. The music always includes the Flamenco guitar.  
 
Fandango: This dance style is one of the main dances in Portugal. It 
involves the tapping of the feet and quick changes of the position. This is a 
folk dance, which has its origins in Southern Spain. However, there are 
many theories about the origins of the same. 
 
Jazz Dance: Jazz dance finds its origins in the African American culture. 
From the olden days till date, there are many influences that have added a 
variety to this dance form. One can see many overlapping of steps in Jazz 
dance, which are similar to various other styles. The common steps in Jazz 
dance are the ball change, the pivot step, the toe rise, the pirouettes, Jazz 
walk etc. Jazz dance is basically an energetic form that is equally graceful 
like other dances. This type of dance can also incorporate various styles.  
 
Folk Dance: Folk dances are always performed in groups at social events. 
This does not mean the dancers need to be professionally trained. A folk 
dance can be attempted by all types of common folk. Every country and 
region has its own unique style of folk dance. There are various forms of folk 
dances one can see all over the world. From the energetic Indian folk dances 
to the Scottish Country dances, folk dances have their own beauty and 
charm.  
 
Modern Dance: Modern dance involves the use of many dance steps that 
are unusual and often interpret a dancers emotions and moods. The dancer 
in this case typically performs on bare feet. In Modern dance, its not only 
the choreography that speaks about the emotions to be conveyed. The 
lighting, costumes and props are used with great creativity to create 
interesting and unusual dance sequences. 
 
Country/Western Dances: These types of dances are performed on 
country music. These social dances follow the typical pattern where the male 
leads in the dance and the partner follows. Therefore, this dance style 
includes both, the partner as well as the group dances. The country/western 
dances, which are partner based, include the Two Step, Waltz, Polka, Cotton 
Eyed Joe etc. The group dances include the Line dance, the Square dance, 
traditional Square dance, modern Western square dance etc.  
 
Contra Dance: This dance is a form of folk dancing. Here, the couples have 
to dance in two lines. These couples also have to face each other. There are 
various sequences, which couples need to perform. This social dance is a 
very fun form and also very easy to learn.  
 
Belly Dance: There are many theories about the origins of this form of 
dance. Some say this dance originated in ancient Upper Egypt were as few 
say its basics were developed in Uzbekistan and then were passed on to 
India. Belly dance is more particularly danced in nightclubs and is now also 
emerging as a new way to remain fit, especially for the ladies! The basic 
steps involve the use of circular movements by the hips with a shimmy for 
the shoulders. Belly dancing would require one to be really flexible. The 
costumes are rather bold for the ladies. This is often combined with face 
veils and hip belts.  
 
Traditional Indian Dances: India is a land of great mix of cultures, which 
witnessed in the wide variety of dances that can range from folk to the 
classical style. The Indian dances all vary as per the region it originates from 
and each have a distinct style from the steps to the kind of costumes worn. 
Besides, these dances also represent a particular culture. The steps are 
based around a strict style that is followed by all the students. 
Improvisations come in later. The dance also makes the use of Natya or 
acting to portray the story being told. Many of the dances are based on 
religious mythologies.  
 
Kathak:  Kathak is characterized with the fast footwork and the many 
numerous chakkars or spins used in the compositions. This dance 
originated from the Northern part of India. The name is actually a Sanskrit 
word which means katha-to tell a story. Kathak, like all other traditional 
dances of India follow the pattern where the Guru passes on the knowledge 
to the student, also known as the shishya. Kathak is also performed in 
various styles or Gharanas, such as the Lucknow Gharana, Jaipur Gharana, 
Rajgarh Gharana and the Banaras Gharana. Today, with the popularity of 
fusion, Kathak is used in combination with modern steps to create a fine 
blend of beautiful compositions!  
 
Kathakali:  The main feature about Kathakali is the striking costumes and 
makeup. This is a form of dance drama that originated in the Southern state 
of Kerela. The make up used is one of the most interesting features of this 
dance. This is an elaborate procedure, which is combined with a large 
headgear.  
 
Mohiniattam: This dance has its origins in Kerela. A very graceful dance, 
the performance in this case is generally solo and mainly by women. This 
type of dance includes very rhythmic movements with elaborate mudras. 
Mudras are hand gestures used to express a particular meaning. 
 
Bharatnatyam: One of the popular dances in India along with Kathak, 
Bharatnatyam dance has its origins in Tamil Nadu. This dance uses the base 
of story telling combined with pure dance movements. The dance is also 
distinctive due to the particular styles of dressing and make up. The origins 
of this dance go back to the Natya Shastra. In the ancient days, this dance 
was performed only by the Devdasis. However, in the recent times, this 
dance is not only popular in India, it has traveled across the globe as well.  
 
Odissi: This type of classical dance is also amongst the most popular types 
of dances seen in India today. This classical dance has its origins in Orissa, 
India and can be distinguished from other styles of Indian dance due to the 
specific movements of the body. Like all other forms of Indian classical 
dance, the knowledge is passed on from the teacher to the student (Guru to 
Shishya).  
 
Kuchipudi: This classical Indian dance has its roots in Andhra Pradesh. 
Danced on the accompaniment of Carnatic music, this dance is also gaining 
popularity outside India. The style may be a little similar to Bharatnatyam, 
however, there are many unique steps that belong purely to this dance.  
 
Manipuri: Manipuri is quite different from other forms of Indian dance in 
terms of the costume as well as the dance steps. The dancer uses subtle 
movements and the costumes are quite different in appearance. Basically, a 
dancer uses many rhythmic movements that gives a very soft appearance 
overall. The costume can be distinguished easily due to the stiff cylindrical 
skirt.  
 
Sattriya: This traditional style of dance originated from Assam. This style of 
dance was the creation of Sankardeva. As per the records, its observed only 
males performed this dance style. Initially, there was a delay in the inclusion 
of this style of dance as a traditional Indian dance. However, since 2000, it 
received the recognition by the Sangeet Natak Academy.  
 
Some of the Popular Folk Dances in India 
 
Bhangra: 
A very lively dance, the Bhangra has its origins in Punjab. The energetic 
movements, particularly of the men, accompanied by the beating of the 
drums are a sight to behold! The costumes are colorful and add to the 
liveliness of the atmosphere. Bhangra music and dance is now incorporated 
even in pop music and has spread to many areas around the world.  
 
Lavani: 
This folk dance is very popular and was first seen during the Peshwa rule. 
This dance is accompanied by typical music where the lead dancer is 
accompanied by a group of other dancers in the background. This dance has 
its origins in Maharashtra. 
 
Garba: 
This Indian dance is often compared to the social dances that are seen in the 
West. Garba is danced in a circular format amongst groups and has its 
origins in Gujarat. Like any other Indian classical dance, this dance is 
performed also for religious purposes. In the modern times, Garba also sees 
influences from Raas- another traditional dance. The Dandiya Raas is very 
popular and is performed with sticks.  
 
Dekhni: 
Dekhni is one of the popular folk dances of Goa. This dance has an 
interesting combination of Western as well as Indian music and is always 
centered on a girl. The theme is based on a girl who wants to cross the river 
and needs to persuade the boatman to help her cross the same. The other 
dancers carry small lit clay lamps.  
 
Bollywood Dance: 
The Indian film industry Bollywood is known for its inclusion of the song and 
dance routine in all the movies. Form the olden days till date; there has 
been a massive change in the styles that are presented. The dances in the 
olden days were subtle and often incorporated folk dances as well. However, 
in the recent times, women especially have been given a bold look and there 
is the inclusion of discotheque sequences and steps that are very typical of 
Bollywood. The craze for this song and dance routine is such that there are 
special shows designed for the fans abroad so that they can get a glimpse of 
their favorite stars grooving to all hit numbers! 
 
Famous Dancers 
1. Anna Pavlova (1881-1931) 
A famous Russian ballet dancer, Anna Pavlova is best known for 
changing the ideals for ballet dancers, as she was small and thin, not the 
preferred body of a ballerina during her time. She is also credited for 
creating the modern pointe shoe. 
2. Mikhail Baryshnikov (1948-present) 
Known as the best living male ballet dancer, Mikhail Baryshnikov is a 
famous Russian dancer. He has had roles in film, as he starred in the last 
season of Sex and the City. 
3. Rudolf Nureyev (1938-1993) 
Russian ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev is often regarded as the greatest 
ballet dancer of the 1960s and 1970s. 
4. Michael Jackson (1958-2009) 
Pop star of the 1980s, Michael Jackson wowed audiences with eye-
popping dance moves, notably one called the "moonwalk." Michael displayed 
an amazing talent for rhythm and dance at a very young age. 
5. Sammy Davis, Jr, (1925-1990) 
An American dancer, Sammy Davis, Jr. was an entertainer 
remembered mostly for his tap dancing ability. He began tap dancing at the 
age of four. 
 
 
 
6. Martha Graham (1894-1991) 
Martha Graham was an American dancer and choreographer. She is known 
as the pioneer of modern dance. She dared to introduce new, modern dance 
moves to the world. 
7. Fred Astaire (1899-1987) 
Fred Astaire was a famous American film and Broadway dancer. He is 
well-known for starring with Ginger Rogers in musical films. 
8. Gregory Hines (1946-2003) 
Gregory Hines was an American dancer mostly known for his 
outstanding tap dancing abilities. He appeared in several dance movies, 
including White Nights and Tap. 
9. Gene Kelly (1912-1996) 
An American dancer, Gene Kelly is remembered for his highly 
energetic and athletic dancing style. He is well-known for his performance 
in Singin' in the Rain. 
10. Patrick Swayze (1952-2009) 
Patrick Swayze was a well-known American dancer and actor. He 
starred as a dance instructor in the popular movie Dirty Dancing. 
Other Famous Dancers 
Aaliyah (January 16, 1979  August 25, 2001) was an American R&B 
recording artist, dancer and actress. She is famous for her heavy R&B 
themed music, such as her final single "Try Again", but also for her 
professional dancing capabilities. Aaliyah's already famous career was 
abruptly ended when she was killed in a plane crash on August 25, 
2001, shortly after filming a music video, on her return to the United 
States from the Bahamas. Along with fellow recording artists, Brandy, 
and Monica, Aaliyah was given the nickname, Princess of R&B. 
Aaron Libfeld is a Canadian award winning dancer. 
Paula Abdul (June 19, 1962) is an American Pop/R&B singer, dancer and 
choreographer. She is famous for "creating" her own style of dancing 
that involves Pop, Hip Hop and R&B influenced movements. She often 
improvises dancing, giving her an air of agility and speed. In the music 
video for her hit single "Opposites Attract", she portrays the ability to 
tap dance at incredible speeds. Paula Abdul is also internationally 
recognized as being a former judge on the hit television reality talent 
competition, American Idol. According to sources, including the 
introduction on her new CBS show Live to Dance, Abdul has sold about 
60 million records worldwide to date.[1][2][3][4] 
Christina Aguilera (December 18, 1980) is an American recording artist, 
dancer and actress. Along with being famous for her vocal technicality, 
range and power, she is also noted for her unique dancing skills. Her 
dance moves are often viewed as simple but agile, as in the music 
videos for her hit singles "What a Girl Wants" and "Genie in a Bottle", 
but can also be viewed as sexual and entertaining, as in the music 
video for her hit single "Come On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)". Her 
dance abilities are often compared to those of fellow 
entertainers, Madonna and Britney Spears, with whom she has also 
once shared the title "Princess of Pop". 
Rozeta Ahalyea was one of the earliest professional belly dancers in 
Australia with a performance career that spanned four decades. During 
her times in Australia she also taught belly dancing privately. Two 
notable students were Amera Eid who eventually set up Amera's 
Palace, the first belly dance boutique in Australia, and Terezka 
Drnzik who started Sydney's first full time belly dance school. 
Rukmini Devi Arundale (February 29, 1904 - February 24, 1986 ) was an 
Indian theosophist, dancer and choreographer in Indian classical 
dancer form of Bharatnatyam. She is considered the most important 
revivalist in the Indian classical dance form of Bharatnatyam from its 
original 'sadhir style, prevalent amongst the temple dancers, 
Devadasis, she also worked for the re-establishment of traditional 
Indian arts and crafts. 
Fred Astaire (May 10, 1899  June 22, 1987), was an Academy Award-
winning American film and Broadway stage dancer, choreographer, 
singer and actor. His stage and subsequent film career spanned a total 
of seventy-six years, during which he made thirty-one musical films. 
He is particularly associated with Ginger Rogers, with whom he made 
ten films. George Balanchine and Rudolph Nureyev rated him the 
greatest dancer of the twentieth century, and he is generally 
acknowledged to have been the most influential dancer in the history 
of film and television musicals .He was named the fifth Greatest Male 
Star of All Time by the American Film Institute. 
George Balanchine (January 22, 1904  April 30, 1983), was a 
Georgian ballet choreographer. He is one of the 20th century's 
foremost choreographers, and one of the founders of American ballet. 
His work formed a bridge between classical and modern ballet. Apollo 
is Balanchine's oldest surviving ballet and his first great public success. 
It marked the beginning of his significant and enduring collaboration 
with Stravinsky and featured the neoclassical style which Balanchine 
was to become renowned for. It premiered on June 12, 1928 by Les 
Ballets Russes de Serge Diaghilev at the Thtre Sarah Bernhart in 
Paris. Balanchine looked upon Apollo as the turning point of his life, "in 
its sustained oneness of tone and feeling". The story centers around 
Apollo, the god of music, who is visited by three muses: Terpsichore, 
muse of dance and song; Polyhymnia, muse of mime; and Calliope, 
muse of poetry. Balanchine created ballet sequences for Ravel's 
opera L'enfant et les sortilges to Colette's libretto with what Ravel 
described as "Russian dancers", presumably from the Ballets Russes 
for the 1925 Monte Carlo premiere, although this is not listed as a 
Ballets Russes production. 
Sara Baras (born in 1971) is a female Flamenco Dancer, born in the port of 
Cadiz. She is internationally famous and regularly tours the world.She 
has won a number of awards including the Madroo Flamenco of 
Montellano (Seville) in 1993,and in 1999 and 2001, she received a 
prize for the Best Female Spanish Dance Performer and was raped 
when she was 13 years old. 
Matt Barber is a dancer, teacher, author, columnist, and dance coach in 
the ballroom dance world. Matt first encountered ballroom dancing as 
choreographed routines onstage for musicals and began ballroom 
dance lessons in high school. At eighteen years of age, Matt started 
training to become a ballroom dance instructor with National Dance 
Clubs as a side job in college; he went on to teach in the independent 
world, for Arthur Murray International, and for Fred Astaire Dance 
Studios. Concurrently, Matt graduated from the American Musical and 
Dramatic Academy in Manhattan and acquired an SB from Fordham 
University, his MS, and his business management and leadership 
training from University of Notre Dames Mendoza College of Business. 
Matt Barber's books on ballroom dancing changed the way ballroom 
studios conduct business. 
Mikhail Baryshnikov (January 28, 1948) is a Soviet-born Russian 
American dancer, choreographer, and actor, often cited 
alongside Vaslav Nijinsky and Rudolf Nureyev as one of the 
greatest ballet dancers of the 20th century. After a promising start in 
the Kirov Ballet in Leningrad, he defected to Canada in 1974 and went 
on to become a principal dancer and artistic director with the American 
Ballet Theatre and the New York City Ballet in New York City. He has 
spearheaded many of his own artistic projects and has been associated 
in particular with promoting modern dance, premiering dozens of new 
works, including many of his own. His success as a dramatic actor on 
stage, cinema and television has helped him become probably the 
most widely recognized contemporary dancer. 
Joshua Berger (August 20th 1998 - August 11th 2010) was a Canadian 
break dancer. He has won multiple competitions including the yu13 
world championship which took place in Niagra falls,Ontario,and. he 
also go's in break dance shows in ,Canada's 
wonderland(Vaughan.Ontario),Vaughan mills (mall in vaughan,ontario) 
and much more .. 
Vytautas Beliajus (February 26, 1908, September 1994) is considered the 
father of international folk dancing in the United States. He specialized 
in Lithuanian dance, but performed and taught many other types of 
dance as well. He published multiple books on the subjects of dance 
and ethnicity, and also started the folklore magazine Viltis. Beliajus 
was born in Lithuania and emigrated to the U.S. when he was 14 years 
old. He had two younger brothers, Leonas and Julius, and a sister, 
Gyte Jekentes. 
Carlo Blasis (4 November 1797- 15 January 1878) was an Italian dancer, 
choreographer and dance theoretician. He is well known for his very 
rigorous dance classes, sometimes lasting four hours long.He was the 
first who published an analysis on the ballet techniques in 1820, in a 
work named Trait lmentaire, thorique, et pratique de l'art de la 
danse (Elementary Treaty on the Art of the Dance, theory and 
practice). He is most known for the pose "Attitude" derived from the 
famous statue Mercury by Giovanni da Bologna. He taught Enrico 
Cecchetti, who expanded his technique. 
James Brown or James Joseph Brown, Jr. (May 3, 1933  December 25, 
2006), commonly referred to as "The Godfather of Soul", "Mr. 
Dynamite", the "King of Funk", "Soul Brother #1" and "The Hardest 
Working Man in Show Business", was an American entertainer (singer 
and dancer). He is recognized as one of the most influential figures in 
20th century popular music and was renowned for his vocals and 
feverish dancing. As a prolific singer, songwriter and bandleader, 
Brown was a pivotal force in the music industry. He left his mark on 
numerous artists. Brown's music also left its mark on the rhythms of 
African popular music, such as afrobeat, jj and mbalax, and 
provided a template for go-go music. Brown began his professional 
music career in 1953 and rose to fame during the late 1950s and early 
1960s on the strength of his thrilling live performances and string of 
smash hits. During the early 1980s, Brown's music helped to shape 
the rhythms of early hip-hop music, with numerous groups looping or 
sampling his funk grooves and turning them into what became hip hop 
classics and the foundations of the music and dance genre. Brown 
danced vigorously as he sang, working popular dance steps such as 
the Mashed Potatointo his routine along with dramatic leaps, splits and 
slides. In addition, his horn players and backup singers (The Famous 
Flames) typically performed choreographed dance routines, and later 
incarnations of the Revue included backup dancers. Male performers in 
the Revue were required to wear tuxedoes and cummerbunds long 
after more casual concert wear became the norm among the younger 
musical acts. Brown's own extravagant outfits and his elaborate 
processed hairdo completed the visual impression. 
Jean Butler (born March 14, 1971)is an Irish step dancer. She began 
training in Irish dance at the age of four with the widely respected 
teacher Donny Golden. She also participated in tap and ballet classes, 
but step dance became her focus. Her talent was clear from a young 
age, and she competed in regional, national and international 
championships. She and her sister, Cara Butler, both went on to win 
numerous national titles and regional titles, and placing well in 
international competitions. Jean has performed with Green Fields of 
America and Cherish the Ladies. She debuted with The Chieftains at 
Carnegie Hall at the age of seventeen, and toured with them on three 
continents. 
Don Campbell is an American dancer born in 1951 who invented the 
dance locking, as Campbellocking. In 1969 Campbell began making 
the dance popular around Los Angeles. Shortly thereafter he put out a 
record called "Do the Campbellock" and started a dance group called 
the Lockers. 
Enrico Cecchetti (21 June 1850, Rome - 13 November 1928, Milan) was an 
Italian ballet dancer, founder of the Cecchetti method. The son of two 
dancers, he was born in the costuming room of the Teatro Tordinonia 
in Rome. After an illustrious career as a dancer in Europe, he went to 
dance for the Imperial Ballet in St. Petersburg, Russia where he 
further honed his skills. By 1888, he was widely accepted as the 
greatest ballet virtuoso in the world. The general populace was not 
aware that he could only turn in one direction and in fact, had to have 
all his choreography tailored especially to accommodate this 
weakness. 
Vernon and Irene Castle was a husband-and-wife team of ballroom 
dancers of the early 20th century. They are credited with invigorating 
the popularity of modern dancing. Vernon Castle (May 2, 1887 - 
February 15, 1918) was born William Vernon Blyth in England. Irene 
Castle (April 17, 1893 - January 25, 1969) was born New York. 
Jack Cole (19111974) was an American dancer, choreographer, and 
theatre director known as the father of theatrical dance. Cole is credited 
with choreographing and/or directing the stage musicals Alive and 
Kicking, Magdalena, Carnival in Flanders, Zenda, Foxy, Kismet, A 
Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the 
Forum, Kean, Donnybrook!, Jamaica and Man of La Mancha. His film 
work includes Moon Over Miami, Cover Girl, Tonight and Every 
Night, Gilda, The Merry Widow, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, There's No 
Business Like Show Business, The I Dont Care Girl, Thrill of 
Brazil, Down to Earth, Kismet, Les Girls, and many others. He was 
most famous in Hollywood for his work with Rita Hayworth and Marilyn 
Monroe. Cole's unmistakable style endures in the work of Gwen 
Verdon, Bob Fosse, Jerome Robbins, Gower Champion, Peter Gennaro, 
Michael Bennett, Tommy Tune, and countless other dancers and 
choreographers. 
Dean Collins (May 29, 1917  June 1, 1984) was an American dancer, 
instructor, choreographer, and innovator of swing. He is often credited 
with bringing swing dance, or Lindy Hop, from New York to Southern 
California. He is undoubtedly the most filmed Lindy Hopper in history 
with over 30 movie and short credits to his name. 
Jean Coralli (17791854), was a French dancer and choreographer and 
later held the esteemed post of First Ballet master of the Paris Opera 
Ballet. He is best known for the creation of the Romantic ballet 
Giselle which he choreographed in tandem with another French 
dancer, Jules Perrot. 
Eduardo Corrochio (18691912) was a Spanish-born dancer who won the 
first Tap Dancing Championship in New York City in 1890. Corrochio 
entered the Tap Dancing Championship in New York City. The only 
non-American in a field of two hundred invited participants, he 
defeated Henry Rogers to become the first tap dancing champion of 
the world .in 1894 Corrochio successfully defended his title at another 
tap dancing championship in Chicago, Illinois. Three hundred 
participants gather this time, twenty of them non-Americans, mostly 
from Britain and Germany. 
Joaqun Corts (born February 22, 1969) is a classically 
trained ballet and flamenco dancer from Spain of Roma origin. Corts 
formed the Joaqun Corts Flamenco Ballet Company and launched his 
first international tour Cibay in 1992. The formations of Corts own 
company allowed him diverge from purist ballet and create his own 
fusion of flamenco, ballet and modern dance. On May 15, 2007 he 
performed as a guest dancer in a high-profile semi-final segment on 
ABC's Dancing with the Stars. 
Merce Cunningham (born April 16, 1919) is an American dancer 
and choreographer. Cunningham was born in Centralia, Washington, 
and received his first formal dance and theater training at the Cornish 
School (now Cornish College of the Arts) in Seattle. Merce 
Cunningham Dance Company was formed at Black Mountain College in 
the summer of 1953. Since that time Cunningham has choreographed 
nearly 200 works for his company. In 1973 he choreographed Un jour 
ou deux for the Ballet of the Paris Opra, with music by Cage and set 
design by Jasper Johns. The Ballet of the Paris Opra also performed a 
revival of his Points in Space in 1990. His work has also been 
presented by New York City Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, Boston 
Ballet, White Oak Dance Project, Pacific Northwest Ballet, Pennsylvania 
Ballet, Zurich Ballet, and Rambert Dance Company (London), among 
others. Cunningham's interest in contemporary technology has led him 
to work with the computer program Dance Forms, which he has used 
in making all his dances since Trackers (1991).Another of 
Cunningham's innovations was the development of what might be 
called "non-representative" dance which simply emphasizes 
movement: in Cunningham's choreography, dancers do not necessarily 
represent any historical figure, emotional situation, or idea. 
Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo, also known as Nappytabs, 
is choreographers and creative directors who are credited with 
developing the new style of hip-hop dance known as lyrical hip-hop. 
They have been supervising choreographers on America's Best Dance 
Crew since season one and recurring guest judges and 
choreographers Fox's So You Think You Can Dance since season four. 
They currently teach dance classes at The Edge performing Arts Center 
in Hollywood and travel around the country with Monsters of Hip Hop 
and Shock the Intensive dance conventions. 
Alex Da Silva is a dancer and choreographer, specializing in Salsa dancing. 
Da Silva is also known for being a recurring guest choreographer on 
the Fox TV show So You Think You Can Dance.Da Silva was born in Rio 
de Janeiro, Brazil. He discovered Salsa dancing at the age of 20. He is 
credited with contributing to the "LA Style" of Salsa dancing. Currently, 
he resides in Southern California. 
Astad Deboo, (1947) is an Indian dancer-choreographer, who has mixed 
a modern and contemporary dance styles, with Indian classical 
dance forms of Kathak and Kathakali in which he has trained, to create 
style unique to him. 
Sergei Pavlovich Diaghilev, also referred to as Serge, (March 31, 1872  
August 19, 1929) was a Russian art critic, patron, ballet impresario 
and founder of the Ballets Russes from which many famous dancers 
and choreographers would later arise.Diaghilev 
staged Tchaikovsky's The Sleeping Beauty in London in 1921; it was a 
production of remarkable magnificence both in settings and costumes, 
but despite being well received by the public it was a financial disaster 
for Diaghilev and Oswald Stoll, the theatre-owner, who had backed it. 
The first cast included the legendary ballerina Olga Spessivtseva. 
Diaghilev insisted on calling the ballet The Sleeping Princess. When 
asked why, he quipped, "Because I have no beauties!" The later years 
of the Ballets Russes were often considered too "intellectual", too 
"stylish" and seldom had the unconditional success of the first few 
seasons, although younger choreographers like George Balanchine hit 
their stride with the Ballet Russes. 
Charles-Louis Didelot (27 March 1767 - 7 November 1837) was a French 
dancer and choreographer. The son of Charles Didelot, the dance 
maestro of the King of Sweden, he studied dance with his father, who 
were instructor in dance at the Swedish Opera, and dubuted as dancer 
in the theatre of Bollhuset in Stockholm 1786. Didelot taught dance, 
having an important influence over the development of ballet. 
Isadora Duncan (May 27, 1877  September 14, 1927) was an American 
dancer. She was born Angela Isadora Duncan in San Francisco, 
California and is considered by many to be the mother of Modern 
Dance. Although never very popular in the United States, she 
entertained throughout Europe. 
Lucinda Dickey (born August 14, 1960) is an American dancer and actress 
who is best known for her role as Kelly in the 1984 cult film Breakin 
and the 1984 sequel, Breakin 2: Electric Boogaloo. Dickey was born 
and raised in Hutchinson, Kansas, where at the age of four, she began 
dancing. While attending college at Kansas State University, she 
majored in dance and competed in the Miss Kansas pageant, where 
she won the talent division and finished third runner-up.After college, 
Dickey moved to Los Angeles and won a dance scholarship with the 
Roland DuPree Dance Academy. After 10 months, she auditioned for 
the movie Grease 2, winning a role as one of film's lead dancers. That 
same year (1982) she landed a stint as a dancer on Solid Gold. 
Doctor Ice influenced Hip-Hop dancing to a new form. His influence can be 
noted by the dance moves in videos done by artists such as Kid N Play, 
Scrap Lover and Scoop Lover (dancers for Big Daddy Kane) and G-Wiz 
and the late Trouble T-Roy (from Heavy D & The Boyz). The 
commercial world fashioned their dance moves after Michael Jackson 
but the black community embraced Doc Ice because his dancing was 
reflective of the type of dance moves done at a house/block party or in 
the nightclub. He left UTFO in the late 80s before the group's breakup 
in 1991 to go on a solo career. His first album, The Mic Stalker in 
1989, produced by R&B group Full Force, had the singles 'Word To The 
Wise', 'Love Jones', and 'Sue Me'. Ice also collaborated with Dino 
(singer), for his 1990 song 'Romeo' (charting at #6) on the album 
"Swingin'". His second album, "Rely On Self" appeared in 1994. 
Katherine Mary Dunham (June 22, 1909  May 21, 2006) was an 
American dancer, choreographer, songwriter, author, educator and 
activist who was trained as an anthropologist. Dunham had one of the 
most successful dance careers in American and European theater of 
the 20th century and has been called the Matriarch and Queen Mother 
of Black Dance. During her heyday in the 1940s, 50s and 60s, she was 
renowned throughout Europe and Latin America as La Grande 
Katherine, and the Washington Post called her "Dance's Katherine the 
Great." For more than 30 years she maintained the Katherine Dunham 
Dance Company, the only permanent, self-subsidized American black 
dance troupe at that time, and over her long career she 
choreographed more than 90 individual dances. Dunham was an 
innovator in African-American modern dance as well as a leader in the 
field of dance anthropology, or ethnochoreology (see also dance 
studies). She died in her sleep in New York City on 21 May 2006. 
Shabba Doo (May 11, 1955) is an American actor, dancer, choreographer, 
and director. He has appeared in film and television. He became one of 
the founders of hip hop dancing as a member of The Original Lockers. 
He is one of the pioneers the dance style commonly known as 
"locking".Besides his work in film and television he has served as a 
choreographer to many singers such as Lionel Richie, Madonna, 
andLuther Vandross to name a few. Presently he serves as 
choreographer for Jamie Kennedy's new MTV sitcom, Blowin Up. He is 
also well remembered for his choreography of Three Six Mafia's 
performance on the 78th Annual Academy Awards. 
Amera Eid is an Australian belly dancer and owner of an Australian belly 
dance school, Amera's Palace. Amera is of Egyptian and European 
background and was introduced to belly dancing at the age of twelve. 
She began her professional training with Rozeta Ahalyea in Sydney in 
1983 and worked the Sydney restaurant and Arabic nightclub circuit. 
Eid opened Amera's Palace belly dance boutique in 1987, which 
included one of the first belly dance schools in Sydney. She also hosts 
the annual Bellydancer's Ball which has been running since 1998. 
Fanny Elssler (23 June 1810 - 27 November 1884), was an Austrian 
dancer. Ballerinas such as Marie Taglioni and Fanny Elssler pioneered 
new techniques such as pointework that rocketed the ballerina into 
prominence as the ideal stage figure, professional librettists began 
crafting the stories in ballets, and teachers like Carlo Blasis codified 
ballet technique in the basic form that is still used today. The ballet 
slipper was invented to support pointe work. 
Norberto Esbrez (born November 22, 1966) is an 
Argentinian tango dancer, choreographer, and teacher. Innovative 
dancer and teacher of tango nuevo. He is known as El Pulpo or octopus 
for his fluid and intricate leg moves. Esbrez created and named several 
tango movements including: ocho loco, sentada girada, elevador, or el 
elstico. He explored the concept of trap sacadas (sacadas con agarre) 
and enganches into innovative variations. His style is so notorious that 
when the dancer starts combining several leg moves that look like 
Pulpo's it is being called pulpeadas. Developed the concept of 
suspension as a tool to generate the control and fluidity that is part of 
his dance. 
Michael Ryan Flatley (born July 16, 1958) is an Irish step dancer from the 
south side of the country. As a child, he moved to Chicago - the city 
which he considers his home town. He began dancing lessons at 11 
and, in 1975, became the first non-European to win the All-Ireland 
World Championship for Irish dance. As a trained boxer he won the 
Chicago Golden Gloves Championship in 1975. Flatley is also known as 
being a proficient flautist, having twice won the All-Ireland 
Competition. His first dance teachers were his mother and his 
grandmother Hannah Ryan, an Irish dancing champion. After high 
school graduation, he opened a dance school. 
Flying Steps is a German breakdance crew, founded in 1993. They have 
won many breakdancing competitions and also released some singles 
and albums. Flying Steps has also appeared in some videos of an 
electro music project Music Instructor. The members of Flying Steps 
are: "Amigo" - Kadir Memis,"Benny" - Benny Kimoto,"KC-1 - Khaled 
Chaabi,"LilCeng" - Gengis Ademoski, "LilSteph" - Stephanie 
Nguyen,"Mikel" - Michael Rosemann,"Vartan" - Vartan Bassil. 
Michel Fokine (April 23, 1880  August 22, 1942) was a groundbreaking 
Russian choreographer and dancer .Fokine staged more than 70 
ballets in Europe and the United States. His best known works were 
Chopiniana (later revised as Les Sylphides), Le Carnaval and Le 
Pavillon d'Armide. Among his works for the Ballets Russes were The 
Firebird, Petrushka, and Le Spectre de la Rose. For the Ballets Russes 
he created a ballet out of Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade 
William Forsythe (born December 30, 1949 in New York City) is an 
American dancer and choreographer resident in Dresden in Saxony. He 
is known internationally for his work with the Frankfurt Ballet and his 
reorientation of classical ballet .Forsythe trained at the Joffrey Ballet, 
and the American Ballet Theatre in New York City (taking additional 
classes with Maggie Black, Finis Jung, Jonathan Watts, Meredith Baylis, 
William Griffith, Leon Danelion, Mme. Periaslavic, Mme. Boskovitch, 
Nolan Dingman, Pat Wilde, and Christa Long). After, he studied at the 
Jacksonville University, Florida (where he studied George Balanchine's 
and Martha Graham's techniques). In 1971, he joined the Joffrey 
Ballet, but when invited by the Stuttgart Ballet three years later, he 
left the Joffrey and moved to Europe when he was twenty-three as a 
dancer, and later became Resident Choreographer of the Stuttgart 
Ballet. This position he held until 1981, when he began pursuing an 
independent career. He also created works for ballet companies in 
Munich, The Hague, London, Basel, Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, Paris, 
New York and San Francisco. He choreographed "France/Dance" 
for Rudolf Nureyev at the Paris Opera Ballet during his career as 
Resident Choreographer. 
Joe Frisco was an American vaudeville performer who first made his name 
on stage as a jazz dancer, but later incorporated his stuttering voice to 
his act and became a popular comedian. Frisco was a mainstay on the 
vaudeville circuit in the 1920s and 1930s. He made his Broadway 
debut in the Florenz Ziegfeld Follies in 1918. His popular jazz dance 
act (called by some the "Jewish Charleston") was a choreographed 
series of shuffles, camel walks and turns. It was usually performed to 
"Darktown Strutters Ball." He typically wore a derby hat, and had a 
king-sized cigar in his mouth as he danced. 
Chicho Frumboli is one of the most famous Argentine Tango dancers. His 
real name is Mariano Frumboli. He is best known for his improvisation 
skills. He is regarded as one of the founders of Tango nuevo. He 
usually dances in this open style but is equally at ease when dancing 
close. Rather his embrace is fluid in most cases. He performed among 
others with Gotan Project, Tanghetto and Narcotango. 
Loie Fuller (January 15, 1862  January 1, 1928) was a pioneer of 
both modern dance and theatrical lighting techniques. Fuller's work 
has been experiencing a resurgence of artistic and public interest. 
Sally R. Sommer has written extensively about Fuller's life and times 
Marcia and Richard Current published a biography entitled Loie Fuller, 
Goddess of Light in 1997. And Giovanni Lista compiled a 680-page 
book of Fuller-inspired art work and texts in Loe Fuller, Danseuse de 
la Belle Epoque, 1994. Fuller continues to be an influence on 
contemporary choreographers. Among these are Jody Sperling and 
TimeLapse Dance, who began creating Loie Fuller-style solos with live 
piano accompaniment for New York City audiences in 2000. 
Antonio Gades (November 14, 1936 - July 20, 2004) was a 
Spanish flamenco dancer and choreographer. He helped to popularize 
the art form on the international stage. His most notable works 
included dance adaptations of Prosper Mrime's Carmen and Federico 
Garca Lorca's Blood Wedding, as well as a feature-length adaptation 
of Manuel de Falla's 23-minute ballet El Amor Brujo. Gades has also 
co-founded and became the artistic director of the Spanish National 
Ballet. 
Samia Gamal (1924 - December 1, 1994) was an Egyptian belly dancer and 
film actress. In 1949, Egypt's King Farouk proclaimed Samia Gamal 
"The National Dancer of Egypt", which brought US attention to the 
dancer.In 1950, Samia came to the US and was photographed by G. 
John Mili. She also performed in The Latin Quarter, New York's trendy 
nightclub. She later married so-called "Texas millionaire" Shepherd 
King III (who, it was later reported, actually only had about $50,000). 
All this brought her to star proportions in the US. 
Pavel Andreyevich Gerdt, also known as Paul Gerdt (near St. Peterburg, 
Russia, 22 November 1844  Vamaloki, Finland 12 August 1917), was 
the Premier Danseur Noble of the Imperial Ballet, the Bolshoi Kamenny 
Theatre, and the Mariinsky Theatre for 56 years, making his debut in 
1860, and retiring in 1916. His daughter Elisaveta Gerdt was also a 
prominent ballerina and teacher.Gerdt studied under Alexander 
Pimenov, a pupil of the legendary Charles Didelot.Among his pupils at 
the Imperial Ballet School were Michel Fokine, Vaslav Nijinsky, Tamara 
Karsavina, George Balanchine, and Anna Pavlova, to whom he taught 
the soaring leap of Marie Taglioni and Carlotta Grisi. 
Gus Giordano (1923  March 9, 2008) was an American jazz dancer. He 
was a performer on and off Broadway, in television, film and stage, 
and he is a master teacher, a gifted choreographer, founder of his 
company, creator of the Jazz Dance World Congress and the author of 
Anthology of American Jazz Dance, the first book on jazz dance. He 
has taught world-renowned dancers in schools such as the American 
Ballet Theater, and he has choreographed award winning numbers for 
television, film, stage, commercials and industrials. Giordano is 
considered one of the founders of jazz dance, and his influence in jazz 
dance is still felt. 
Savion Glover (born November 19, 1973) is an American actor, tap 
dancer and choreographer. Glover is a graduate of the Newark Arts 
High School. His most recent credit is as the motion-capture dancer for 
Mumble, the penguin in the animated release Happy Feet. He is now in 
a production called Classical Savion, where he taps to classical pieces 
played by a chamber string group. The show jazzes and blues it up a 
bit towards the end adding drums and a pianist. Glover recently 
appeared on ABC's Dancing with the Stars, on the September 26, 2007 
results show. 
Martha Graham (May 11, 1894  April 1, 1991) was an American dancer 
and choreographer regarded as one of the foremost pioneers 
of modern dance, and is widely considered one of the greatest artists 
of the 20th century. Graham invented a new language of movement, 
and used it to reveal the passion, the rage and the ecstasy common to 
human experience. She danced and choreographed for over seventy 
years, and during that time was the first dancer ever to perform at The 
White House, the first dancer ever to travel abroad as a cultural 
ambassador, and the first dancer ever to receive the highest civilian 
award, the Medal of Freedom. In her lifetime she received honors 
ranging from the key to the City of Paris to Japan's Imperial Order of 
the Precious Crown. She said "I have spent all my life with dance and 
being a dancer. It's permitting life to use you in a very intense way. 
Sometimes it is not pleasant. Sometimes it is fearful. But nevertheless 
it is inevitable." 
Carlotta Grisi, was an Italian ballet dancer. She was born on June 28, 1819 
in Visinada, Istria and died on May 20, 1899 in Saint-Jean, 
Switzerland. She was trained at the ballet school of Teatro alla Scala in 
Milan and later with dancer/balletmaster Jules Perrot.Her greatest role 
however was that of Giselle. The world premire of this two-act ballet 
was on June 28, 1841 at the Thtre de l'Acadmie Royale de 
Musique, Paris. One of the Giselle's creators, Thophile Gautier, 
described her dancing as having a childlike artlessness, a happy and 
infectious gaiety. He is famous for coining the phrase, "Art for art's 
sake". 
Omari Ishmael Grandberry - known as Omarion (born November 12, 
1984), is an American Grammy-nominated R&B singer, dancer, actor, 
songwriter and record producer. Omarion currently holds light as one 
of the best dancers in his generation in music. He is best known for his 
tutting, popping, locking and waving, (along with intricate 
choreography). Omarion claimed to have learnt more about break 
dancing(during the making of his first movie You Got Served) and can 
tap dance, he is also friends with the originators of krumping. 
Hrithik Roshan (Hindi:   [rtk ron]; born 10 January 1974)[1] 
is an Indian actor who appears in Bollywood films. He is considered as 
one of the finest dancers in the world, he is even called the mj of 
india. He has been an inspiration to the people across the board, 
Hrithik's dance style includes from hip-hop to indian bagara. What 
attracts to his moves are that it is so clear and flexible. He is even 
judging an international dance show in star plus, which is called just 
dance. 
MC Hammer (Stanley Kirk Burrell born March 30, 1962) is an 
American MC and hip-hop dancer, most popular during the late 1980s 
to mid-1990s. His flamboyant dance style, which was a significant part 
of his performances, influenced the development of Hyphy. Hammer's 
dance style included elements popularized by James Brown and The 
Nicholas Brothers such as splits, leaps and slides. Dances such as 
"Hammer Dance" (or the "Typewriter" Dance) and the use of "The 
Running Man" dance were unlike any others at the time. He won many 
awards and award nominations for his dancing and choreography. 
Erick Hawkins (April 23, 1909 in  November 23, 1994) was an American 
dancer and choreographer. He was a graduate of Harvard. Erick was 
inspired by the dancing of Harald Kreutzber and Yvonne Georgi. In the 
1930s he was the first American student of George Balanchine. He 
became a soloist and the first male dancer in Martha Graham's dance 
company. Hawkins and Graham lived together for eight years, but 
soon after marrying the relationship fell apart. The influence of her 
work on Hawkins is legendary. Erick Hawkins is known as one of the 
revolutionary pioneers of radical modern dance through his original 
choreography and evolution of a new theory and technique of modern 
dance. "Dance is the most beautiful metaphor of existence in the 
world." is one of Erick's beautiful quotes. 
Tatsumi Hijikata (March 9, 1928 - January 21, 1986) was a Japanese 
choreographer, and the founder of a genre of dance performance art 
called Butoh. By the late 1960s, he had begun to develop this dance 
form, which is highly choreographed with stylized gestures drawn from 
his childhood memories of his northern Japan home. It is this style 
which is most often associated with Butoh by Westerners. Hijikata was 
an innovator in movement technique. He was a master of the use of 
energy qualities in constructing expressive movement. He would use 
sounds, paintings, sculptures, and words to construct movement, not 
exclusively in a formal or literal memetic application, but by 
integrating these elements via visualization into the nervous system to 
produce movement qualities that could be very subtle, light, angelic 
and ghost-like, or demonic, heavy, dark, grotesque, violent and 
extreme. 
Gregory Oliver Hines (February 14, 1946  August 9, 2003) was an 
American actor, singer, dancer and choreographer. 
Hong 10 (16 February 1985 in South Korea) is a male South Korean B-Boy. 
As of 2007, he has won more than 20 competitions as an individual or 
as a member of a crew, and has been termed "the best B-Boy in the 
world". His accomplishments include both a Red Bull BC One individual 
title (2006) and a Battle of the Year crew title (2002). He also was a 
judge at the 2007 Battle of the Year world finals. Hong 10 is 
recognized as a superb all-around B-boy able to dynamically hit beats 
with floorwork, freezes, uprock/toprock and powermoves - not to 
mention the rare ability to mix all of them in a set. 
His breakdancingfeatures bridge-like floor work, sharp execution, and 
an arsenal of signature moves. These all showcase not only the 
complex nature of his dance, but also his creativity. 
Lester Horton (January 23, 1906 - November 2, 1953) was an American 
dancer, choreographer, and teacher. Lester Horton was born in 
Indianapolis, Indiana. Choosing to work in California (three thousand 
miles away from the center of modern dance - New York City), Horton 
developed his own approach that incorporated diverse elements 
including Native American dances and modern Jazz. Horton's dance 
technique (Lester Horton Technique) emphasises a whole body 
approach including flexibility, strength, coordination, and body 
awareness to allow freedom of expression. Horton trained a number of 
the mid-twentieth century's best-known modern dancers, including 
Alvin Ailey, Carmen de Lavallade, and Bella Lewitzky, as well as dance 
teacher James Truitte, Broadway dancer James Mitchell, and the gay 
activist Harry Hay. 
Doris Batcheller Humphrey (October 17, 1895  December 29, 1958) was 
a dancer of the early twentieth century. In Chicago, she both studied 
and taught dance, opening her own dance school in 1913 at the age of 
18.In 1917, she moved to California and entered the Denishawn 
School of Dancing and Related Arts, where she studied, performed, 
taught classes, and learned choreography. Her creations from this era, 
"Valse Caprice" ("Scarf Dance"), "Soaring", and "Scherzo Waltz" 
("Hoop Dance") are all still performed today. Humphrey toured the 
Orient for two years, followed by a successful career in American 
vaudeville theaters.One of her last pieces, "Dawn in New York", 
featured the strengths she demonstrated throughout her career  her 
mastery of the intricacies of large groups, and her emphasis on 
sculptural shapes. 
Michael Jackson (August 29, 1958  June 25, 2009), often referred to as 
MJ and The King of Pop, was an American musician and entertainer. 
Among the most celebrated aspects of Jackson's career were his 
dance, fashion, and vocal styles, which have given rise to 
impersonators all over the world. The "moonwalk" followed by a 
tornado spin and then balancing up on his toes have since gone on to 
become Jackson's trademark dance piece, and is virtually synonymous 
with the song. The performance sealed his position as a dance legend 
up against the likes of Fred Astaire (who actually called Jackson the 
next day to congratulate him). After one of his performances The New 
York Times stated "The moonwalk that he made famous is an apt 
metaphor for his dance style. How does he do it? As a technician, he is 
a great illusionist, a genuine mime. His ability to keep one leg straight 
as he glides while the other bends and seems to walk requires perfect 
timing" 
Robert Joffrey (19301988) was an American dancer, teacher, producer, 
and choreographer, known for his highly imaginative modern ballets. 
Of Afghan parentage, he was born in Seattle, Washington, and 
originally named Abdulla Jaffa Anver Bey Khan. Joffrey 
studied ballet and modern dance in New York City and made his debut 
in 1949 with the French choreographer Roland Petit and his Ballets de 
Paris. From 1950 to 1955, he taught at the New York High School for 
the Performing Arts, where he staged his earliest ballets.In 1954, he 
formed his own company, which premiered Le bal masqu (The 
Masked Ball, 1954; music by French composer Francis Poulenc) and 
Pierrot Lunaire (1955; music by Austrian composer Arnold 
Schoenberg). Joffrey's other works include Gamelan (1962) 
and Astarte (1967; to rock music with special lighting and motion-
picture effects). 
Sabra Elise Johnson (born July 29, 1987) is a dancer from Roy, Utah and 
the most recent champion of the Fox reality television show So You 
Think You Can Dance. She has the distinction of being the first female 
and person of African-American descent to win the title. Johnson 
started formal dance training at the age of 16 at Dance Impressions in 
Bountiful, Utah, under the direction of mother-daughter team Kandee 
Allen and Vivian Colobella and before training in dance, Johnson had a 
previous background in gymnastics.. She has been a fast-learner being 
able to win "America's Favorite Dancer" name in So You Think You Can 
Dance just in her fourth year of being a dancer. Her dance training 
consists of jazz, ballet, contemporary, and gymnastics, with some 
experience in hip hop, modern dance, tap dancing, and theater. 
Johnson's favorite style of dancing is contemporary. 
Thomas Johnson (better known as Tommy the Clown) is an American 
dancer, best known as the inventor of the "clowning" style of dance, 
which evolved into the popular "krumping" style. Johnson invented the 
style in 1992, to enhance birthday party clown acts, thereby creating 
the concept of "hip-hop clowns". Johnson and his followers have 
performed at birthday parties ranging from inner city communities to 
celebrities like Madonna, Pamela Anderson, and Cedric the Entertainer. 
Kurt Jooss (12 January 1901  22 May 1979) was a German modern 
dancer and choreographer mixing classical ballet with theatre; he is 
also widely regarded as the founder of Dance Theatre or Tanztheater. 
Jooss is noted for establishing several dance companies, including 
most notably, the Folkwang Tanztheater, in Essen. Kurt Jooss works 
are still performed today especially The Green Table. Anna Markard, 
(Jooss daughter) supervises companies that perform his works, 
conserving authenticity of the author of Dance Theatre. 
Malika (Mazol) Yashuvayevna Kolontarova (September 5, 1950 - ) is a 
legendary Tajik Bukharian Jewish dancer. She earned the titles 
of People's Artist of USSR, People's Artist of Tajikistan, and Honored 
Artist of Tajikistanthe highest titles given in her native nation. Her 
dance moves were completely in sync with the music and she 
conquered the world with her fiery dancing. She is married to Ishkak 
Gulkarov, a famous doira player and Honored Artist of Tajikistan and 
the two were Tajikistan's biggest supercouple. Since her move to the 
United States in the early 1990s, Kalontarova founded the "Malika 
International Dance School." 
Tamara Platonovna Karsavina (March 10, 1885  May 26, 1978) was a 
famous Russian ballerina who eventually settled in England, where she 
helped found the Royal Academy of Dance in 1920 Karsavina was born 
in St. Petersburg, Russia, the daughter of the dancer Platon Karsavin. 
Beautiful and talented from an early age, Karsavina quickly moved 
through the ranks of professional ballet.Her most famous roles were 
Lise in La Fille Mal Garde, Medora in Le Corsaire, and the Tsar Maiden 
in The Little Humpbacked Horse. She was the first Ballerina to dance in 
the so-called Le Corsaire Pas de Deux in 1915.The 
choreographer George Balanchine said he had fond memories of 
watching her when he was a student at the Imperial Ballet School. 
Eugene Curran Kelly (August 23, 1912  February 2, 1996), better known 
as Gene Kelly, was an Academy Award-winning American dancer, 
actor, singer, director, producer, and choreographer .Kelly was a 
major exponent of 20th century filmed dance, known for his energetic 
and athletic dancing style, his good looks and the likeable characters 
that he played on screen. Although he is probably best known today 
for his performance in Singin in the Rain, he dominated the Hollywood 
musical film from the mid 1940s until its demise in the late 1950s. In 
1999, the American Film Institute named Kelly among the Greatest 
Male Stars of All Time, ranking at No. 15. 
Alonzo King is an American dancer and choreographer working in San 
Francisco, California. He is known for founding a contemporary ballet 
company, Alonzo King's LINES Ballet, in 1982.Alonzo King began 
his ballet training in Santa Barbara, California with June Lane and 
moved to New York City to continue his artistic development. He 
trained at the Harkness School of Ballet and the Alvin Ailey dance 
school. While attending the American Ballet Theatre School on full 
scholarship, he studied with Patricia Wilde and Leon Danelian; he was 
also on full scholarship at the School of American Ballet where he 
trained with Stanley Williams and Richard Rapp. In New York, King 
performed with the Harkness Youth Company, apprenticed with Alvin 
Ailey American Dance Theatre, and danced with Dance Theatre of 
Harlem, Donald McKayle, Lucas Hoving, and a number of European 
companies. After returning from New York, he danced with Bella 
Lewitzky in Los Angeles before moving to San Francisco. 
Beyonc Knowles (September 4, 1981 - ), more commonly known by her 
first name Beyonc,is an African-American female singer-songwriter, 
dancer, choreographer and actress. She is a former member of the 
now separated girl singing group Destiny's Child, later called DC3. She 
is famous for her vocal talents and abilities, and also for her iconic and 
influential dancing. Her dance abilities are seen in her music videos for 
her anthemic singles "Crazy in Love", "Single Ladies" and "Sweet 
Dreams". Beyonc is often seen dancing to songs around 
the R&B, Pop and "Hip Hop". Audiences around the world recognize 
Beyonc for her unique dancing techniques. 
Ji Kylin (born 1947) is a Czech dance choreographer .Kylin studied in 
Prague, as well as at the Royal Ballet School in London. He joined the 
Stuttgart Ballet in 1968 and worked under John Cranko, where he 
began to choreograph. Kylin became Artistic Director of Nederlands 
Dans Theatre in 1976. His style is very energetic and contemporary 
and his best known works include Symphony of Psalms (1978). 
Maria Kochetkova (born 1984 in Moscow) is a Principal Dancer with the 
San Francisco Ballet. Kochetkova studied at the Bolshoi School in 
Moscow, and danced with the Royal Ballet and English National Ballet. 
Akshay Koparkar He started his dancing at the age of 11.He famous 
in nagpur, India for his break dance.He is famous for his 
amazing Moonwalk And Breakdance.Also he is famous for his break 
moves like biggest entertainer Michael Jackson.He completed his 28 
dance shows.His style include Hip-Hop, Locking And 
Popping, Freestyles 
Rudolf Laban (December 15, 1879- July 1, 1958) was a notable, central 
European dance artist and theorist, whose work laid the foundations 
for Laban Movement Analysis, and other more specific 
developments.He moved to Munich at age 30 and under the influence 
of seminal dancer/choreographer Heidi Dzinkowska began to 
concentrate on the movement arts .Laban established the 
Choreographic Institute in Zrich in 1915, and later founded branches 
in Italy, France, and central Europe. One of his great contribution to 
dance was his 1928 publication of Kinetographie Laban, a dance 
notation system that came to be called Labanotation and is still used 
as one of the primary movement notation systems in dance. His 
theories of choreography and movement served as one of the central 
foundations of modern European dance. Nowadays, Laban's theories 
are applied in diverse fields, such as Cultural Studies, Leadership 
development, Non-Verbal Communication, and more. 
Walter Laird (26 July 1920  30 May 2002) Dancesport World Champion in 
Professional Latin. Author of the Technique of Latin American Dancing, 
and coached many successful dancers including Allan Tornsberg, 
Vibeke Toft, Espen Salberg, Jukka Haapalainen and Sirpa Suutari. 
Last For One is a break dancing crew that formed in 1997. With their win in 
the 2005 Battle of the Year, they have been recognized as a worldwide 
known name and a contributor to the Korean wave, their fans 
respectively calling them the Dancing Taeguk Warriors. Their love for 
dancing started 7 to 8 years ago when they saw Seotaiji and Boys 
dancing on television or, like fate, came across a video featuring break 
dancing. Many of their families had to endure poverty which drove 
their parents to strongly disagree with their passion for dancing. They 
danced while others looked on with pity and anger, only keeping one 
dream in mind: to become a b-boy. In the day, they were busy 
running around doing any kind of job they could find, and by night, 
they met together to dance. Living in a small one room apartment did 
not bother them for they had an outlet called dance. One member said 
that "All of this was nothing to us because it was happiness in itself 
that we were able to dance." 
Nick Lazzarini (born c. 1984) was the first season winner of the Fox reality 
show So You Think You Can Dance. He is from Sunnyvale, California 
and is a trained dancer in jazz, lyrical, hip hop, ballet andmodern 
dance styles. Lazzarini spent two years at the Dance Company of San 
Francisco and also toured Europe with the RAW dance company, which 
was founded by choreographer Mia Michaels. He has also taught at 
conventions for chapters of DANCE MASTERS OF AMERICA, and is a 
faculty member of 2006 JUMP Alternative Convention. 
Nikolai Legat (18691937), was a dancer with the Russian Imperial Ballet 
from 1888 to 1914 and was the main successor to the roles of the 
great ballet dancer, Pavel Gerdt. Legat later held duties of a 
balletmaster in Russia, teaching and passing on the legacy of the 
repertoire of that company, namely the work of the prolific 
choreographer and great balletmaster, Marius Petipa .Nikolai had a 
younger brother, Sergei Legat, who was also a dancer with the 
Imperial Russian Ballet from 1894 to 1905 when he died at age thirty. 
He originated the role of the Nutcracker (at age 17) at the premiere of 
the famous Ivanov/Tchaikovsky ballet, The Nutcracker at the Theatre 
Mariinsky in St. Peterburg, Russia, on December 6, 1892. 
Lawrence Leritz (September 26, 1962) is an American dancer and 
choreographer. Lawrence's international dance career included working 
with George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Alvin Ailey, Robert 
Joffrey,Ruth Page, John Neumeier, Lee Theodore, Tommy Tune and 
Sir Frederick Ashton, with such major dance companies as Hamburg 
Ballet, Chicago Ballet, Israel's Bat-Dor Dance Company, Paris 
Opera and as guest artist throughout the world, including Plcido 
Domingo's Los Angeles Music Center Opera. Leritz also directed the 
company Dance Celebration, which he toured worldwide. Leritz was 
the producer and choreographer of the Off-Broadway hit Boobs! The 
Musical, during the 2003-2004 season and was nominated for the 
2004 Mac Awards for Best Musical Revue. 
Mris Liepa (27 July 1936, Riga  26 March 1989, Moscow) was a 
Latvian ballet dancer. He graduated from Riga Choreography School 
where he was taught by Valentns Binovs. He performed in Moscow for 
the first time in 1950. He has performed on stages of Europe and USA. 
Liepa has played roles in movies and TV, in Hamlet and Spartacus. A 
book, I Want to Dance for Hundred Years, was published in Riga in 
1981. Liepa is a winner of many distinguished Soviet Union awards, 
prizes and bestowals, including the Konstsantin Stanislavsky medal, 
Paris Ballet Academy Vaslav Nijinsky award and Marius Petipa Prize. 
Latvian National Opera hosts the annual Mris Liepa memorial concerts 
that are organized by his children - son Andris and daughters Ilze 
(ballet dancer) and Maria (actress and singer). 
Lil' C (born Christopher A. Toler in January 1983) is an American dancer 
and choreographer. He has choreographed for So You Think You Can 
Dance, along with many top music icons. 
Jos Arcadio Limn (19081972) was a pioneering modern dancer and 
choreographer. He was born in Culiacn Mexico and the eldest of 12 
children. He moved to New York City in 1928 where he studied 
underDoris Humphrey and Charles Weidman. In 1946, Limn founded 
the Jos Limn Dance Company. His most famous dance is The Moor's 
Pavane (1949), based on Shakespeare's Othello. 
Jennifer Lopez (July 24, 1969), often referred to as J. Lo, is an American 
actress, singer-songwriter and dancer. Jennifer Lopez is known for her 
upbeat pop songs and latin-pop influenced dancing abilities. 
Antonia Merc y Luque (September 4, 1890  July 18, 1936), known by 
her stage name as La Argentina, was a flamenco dancer. She 
originated and helped to establish the neoclassical style of Spanish 
dance as a theatrical art. prior to World War I, La Argentina was 
extremely admired in Paris, where she accepted invitations to dance at 
the Moulin Rouge and other important locations. In her career she 
made six transcontinental tours in North America, sometimes 
accompanied by flamenco guitarist Carlos Montoya. She received 
several awards, including the French Lgion d'honneur and the 
Spanish Orden de Honor Isabel La Catlica. 
Madonna (August 16, 1958 - ) is an American recording artist, actress and 
dancer. Her controversially successful career has made her one of the 
Best Selling Artists of All Time and one of the world's most influential 
dancers. Madonna's dancing abilities are often viewed as improvised, 
entertaining and agile. Madonna has a very lengthily career of singles, 
albums and dance sequences and has been nicknamed the Princess of 
Pop and later, the Queen of Pop, along with fellow entertainers Britney 
Spears, Christina Aguilera, Celine Dion, Mariah Carey and Whitney 
Houston. 
Frankie Manning or Musclehead (born on May 26, 1914) is an American 
dancer, instructor and choreographer. Manning is considered to be one 
of the founding fathers of Lindy Hop. In recent years, Frankie 
Manning's annual birthday celebrations have drawn together dancers 
and instructors from all over the world. His 80th birthday was 
commemorated by a weekend long celebration in New York City; his 
85th culminated in a sold out party at New York's Roseland Ballroom, 
where a pair of his dance shoes were placed in a showcase along with 
those of dancers such as Fred Astaire. 
Mario Maya is recognized as one of the greatest flamenco dancers and 
choreographers of all times. He was born in Crdoba in 1937, but grew 
up in the Sacromonte of Granada. Some of his most important works 
include Camelamos Naquerar (1976), Ay! 
Jondo (1977), Amargo (1986), El Amor Brujo (1987) and Requiem 
Flamenco. He is the father of Belen Maya, one of the main figures of 
contemporary flamenco dance. 
Norma Miller (born December 2, 1919 in Harlem, New York) is an 
American swing dancer known to many people as The Queen of Swing. 
She was interviewed along with dance partner Frankie Manning in Ken 
Burns' documentary Jazz. Discussing the early days of swing dancing, 
Norma describes the start of her dancing career at the Savoy 
Ballroom (which was just across street from where she lived) during 
the early 30s in Harlem. Discovered at the age of twelve by the Savoy 
Ballroom's legendary dancer Twist Mouth George, Ms. Miller has been 
in show business ever since. 
Mata Hari was the stage name of Margaretha Geertruida Zelle (7 August 
1876 15 October 1917), a Dutch exotic dancer and courtesan who 
was executed by firing squad for espionage during World War I. Many 
books have been written about Mata Hari, some of them serious 
historical and biographical accounts, but many of them highly 
speculative. 
Ann Miller (April 12, 1923[1]  January 22, 2004) was an American dancer, 
singer and actress.Miller was born in eastern Texas, the daughter of 
Clara Emma (ne Birdwell) and John Alfred Collier, a criminal lawyer. 
She took up dancing to exercise her legs to help her rickets. She was 
considered a child dance prodigy. Miller was famed for her speed in tap 
dancing; she claimed to be able to tap 500 times per minute. She was 
known as well, especially later in her career, for her distinctive 
appearance, which reflected a studio-era ideal of glamour: massive 
black bouffant hair, heavy makeup with a slash of crimson lipstick, and 
fashions that emphasized her lithe figure and long dancer's legs. 
Jewel McGowan was a dancer of Lindy Hop, a form of swing dance, in the 
1940s and 1950s. She is known among dance aficionados as the 
frequent partner of dancer Dean Collins. Jewel was considered by her 
fellow Los Angeles dancers to be the best female swing dancer who 
ever lived. In addition to their social dancing, Dean and Jewel 
appeared together as dancers in films of the era. They were partners 
for 11 years and they were often called the Fred and Ginger of Lindy 
Hop. Jewel is especially known for her hip swivels, which remain 
admired and unrivaled to this day. 
Alex Moore (19011991) was a pioneer of modern ballroom dancing, a 
dancer, dance teacher and author of classical ballroom dancing books. 
His Ballroom Dancing is considered to be the "Bible" of International-
style ballroom dancing. His dancing career started at the age of 6. In 
1926 he placed second in a World Championship of ballroom dancing. 
In 1932 he partnered with Pat Kilpatrick, who would become his wife. 
In his teaching he travelled all over the world: European countries, 
North America, Japan, Australia and South Africa. 
Mary Murphy (born March 9) is a ballroom dance champion, accredited 
dance judge, and a regular judge and choreographer on the FOX dance 
competition-reality show So You Think You Can Dance. Mary Murphy is 
a former U.S. champion ballroom dancer and TV personality. She was 
born in Lancaster, Ohio, the only daughter in an Irish family of four 
children. She graduated from Northwest High School in Canal Fulton, 
Ohio. 
The Nicholas Brothers were a famous African-American team of dancing 
brothers, Fayard Nicholas (19142006) and Harold Nicholas (1921
2000). With their highly acrobatic technique, high level of artistry and 
daring innovations, they were considered by many the greatest tap 
dancers of their day. Growing up surrounded by Vaudeville acts as 
children, they became stars of the jazz circuit during the heyday of the 
Harlem Renaissance and went on to have successful careers 
performing on stage, film, and television well into the 1990s. 
Vaslav Fomich Nijinsky (March 12, 1889  April 8, 1950) was a 
Polish ballet dancer and choreographer. Nijinsky was one of the most 
gifted male dancers in history, and he became celebrated for his 
virtuosity and for the depth and intensity of his characterizations. He 
could perform en pointe, a rare skill among male dancers at the time 
(Albright, 2004) and his ability to perform seemingly gravity-defying 
leaps was also legendary. 
Rudolf Nureyev (March 17, 1938  January 6, 1993), is regarded as one of 
the greatest male ballet dancers of the 20th century, alongside Maris 
Liepa, Vaslav Nijinsky, Alexander Godunov and Mikhail 
Baryshnikov.Despite his late start, he was soon recognized as an 
incredibly gifted dancer. Nureyev pushed himself hard, rehearsing for 
hours in order to make up for the years of training he missed. Under 
the tutelage of a great teacher, Alexander Pushkin, he blossomed. 
Pushkin not only took an interest in him professionally, but also 
allowed the younger dancer to live with him and his wife, with the 
latter of whom, at 21, he had an affair. Upon graduation, the Kirov and 
the Bolshoi both wanted to sign him. He continued with the Kirov and 
went on to become a soloist - extremely unusual for someone of his 
age and experience .His grave, at a Russian cemetery in Sainte-
Genevive-des-Bois near Paris, features a tomb draped in a mosaic of 
an oriental Turkic-style carpet. Nureyev was an avid collector of 
beautiful carpets and antique textiles. 
Donald O'Connor (born August 28, 1925  died September 27, 2003) was 
a famous American tap dancer. He appeared alongside Peggy Ryan in 
several Universal Studios musicals throughout the 1940s. Several 
years later, he appeared with Gene Kelly and Debbie Reynolds in the 
1952 film classic Singin' in the Rain. His film career ended in 1997, but 
he was making public appearances well into 2003. He died at the age 
of 73 from congestive heart failure, due to his lifelong smoking habit 
and a near fatal addiction to alcohol. 
Simona Orinska (born August 18, 1978) is the only butoh artist in Latvia 
and a multidisciplinary artist: contemporary dancer, poet, director and 
choreographer of many art projects. She is also a Dance Therapy or 
Dance Movement Therapy practitioner. 
Cristian Oviedo (born November 19, 1979) is a professional dancer, dance 
instructor, and choreographer. He offers lessons in Los Angeles-
style salsa, New York-style Salsa, Casino Rueda and InternationalLatin 
Dance (which include Cha-Cha-Cha, Rumba, Jive, Paso 
Doble, Samba and Argentine Tango). Believing that practice makes 
the master and in order to become a better dancer one must be 
willing to dance, he recommended dance classes of any type. In his 
words, "Dont ever give up. I wouldnt be here if I would have given 
up". For choreographing a great salsa show he begins with the ladies 
stylistic moves, partnered salsa dancing into the individual mens 
footwork and shines, ending with a spectacular dip. 
Anna Pavlovna Pavlova (12 February 1881  23 January 1931) was a 
famous Russian ballerina of the late 19th and the early 20th century. 
Her name along with that of Nijinsky is synonymous with the art 
ofballet. Pavlova is a legend largely remembered for her famous dance 
The Dying Swan and because she was the first ballerina to travel 
around the world and bring ballet to people who had never seen it. 
Jules-Joseph Perrot (August 18, 1810  August 18, 1892) was a dancer 
and choreographer who later became Balletmaster of the Imperial 
Ballet in St. Petersburg, Russia. He created some of the most famous 
ballets of the 19th century including Pas de Quatre, La Esmeralda, 
Ondine, and Giselle with Jean Coralli. Perrot danced often with the 
great Romantic ballerina, Marie Taglioni but their partnership was 
short-lived. She eventually refused to dance with him fearing that he 
would outshine her. Jules Perrot died on holiday in Param August 29, 
1892. 
Arlene Phillips OBE, English choreographer and former dancer. Has staged 
numerous musicals in the West End and Broadway; winning or being 
nominated for a number of prestigious awards including theLaurence 
Olivier Award and the Tony Award. Is most noted as a television dance 
expert, judging shows such as Strictly Come Dancing and So You Think 
You Can Dance. 
Physicx (23 August 1984 in South Korea) is a South Korean B-boy, who has 
countless titles that put his name as one of the best b-boys in the 
world. He is currently a member of one of the best Korean crews called 
Rivers Crew and was formerly a member of the Korean all-star crew, 
Project Soul. Physicx has been a champion of many international-level 
tournaments both as a member of a crew and as an individual. His 
most notable crew achievements include a R-16 Korea title with Rivers 
in 2007, and UK B-Boy Championship titles with Project Soul in 2002 
and 2004. As an individual, he won the solo title at UK B-Boy 
Championship in 2004. He was also selected for the 2005 Red Bull BC 
One individual tournament involving 1 on 1 battles between the top 16 
b-boys in the world. 
Maya Plisetskaya is a Russian ballet dancer. 
Eleanor Torrey Powell (November 21, 1912  February 11, 1982) was 
born in Springfield, Massachusetts. A dancer since childhood, she was 
discovered at the age of 11 by the head of the Vaudeville Kiddie revue, 
Gus Edwards. When she was 17, she brought her graceful, athletic 
style to Broadway, where she starred in various revues and musicals. 
During this time, she was dubbed "the world's greatest tap dancer" 
due to her machine-gun footwork, and in the early 1930s appeared as 
a chorus girl in a couple of early, inconsequential musical films. 
Dame Marie Rambert (20 February 1888  12 June 1982) was a Polish-
Jewish dancer and dance pedagogue who exerted a great influence on 
British ballet, both as a dancer and teacher.Born Cyvia or Miriam 
Ramberg in Warsaw, Poland, she also used a number of other names, 
including Rambach, Rambam. Between 1912 and 1913 she 
collaborated with Les Ballets Russes led by Sergei Diaghilev. In 1918 
she moved to the United Kingdom, where in 1920 she founded her 
own ballet school. In 1926 she created her own ballet company 
called Marie Rambert Dancers. Currently named Ballet Rambert, it is 
the oldest still active ballet company on British Isles. 
Wade Robson (born September 17, 1982) is an Australian dancer, 
choreographer, producer and songwriter. He began performing as a 
dancer at the age of five, and as a child worked as a back-up dancer 
forMichael Jackson. He is also an award-winning choreographer and 
has directed music videos and world tours for music artists, most 
notably for 'N Sync and Britney Spears. Robson has found success as a 
competition judge, both for his own MTV show, The Wade Robson 
Project, and the televised competition So You Think You Can Dance. 
He won an Emmy for his choreography on the latter show in 2007. 
Pierre Rameau (16741748) was the French dancing master to Elisabetta 
Farnese, and the author of two books that now provide us with 
valuable information about Baroque dance. Rameau's first book, Le 
Matre  Danser (1725, Paris), was a dance manual giving instruction 
on formal ballroom dancing in the French style. The first part covers 
posture, reverences, steps, and the ballroom minuet, while the second 
part is concerned entirely with the use of the arms. His second 
book, Abbreg de la Nouvelle Methode (c1725, Paris), described a 
modified version of Beauchamp-Feuillet notation and included several 
choreographies by Pcour in the new notation. While Rameau's 
notation was not generally adopted, his information about the 
shortcomings of Beauchamp-Feuillet notation provides dance historians 
with clarifications about the execution of the steps. 
Bill "Bojangles" Robinson (May 25, 1878  November 25, 1949) was a 
pioneer and pre-eminent African-American tap dance performer .At the 
age of six, he began dancing for a living appearing as a "hoofer" or 
song-and-dance man in local beer gardens. At seven, Bill dropped out 
of school to pursue dancing. Robinson died of a chronic heart condition 
at Columbia Presbyterian Center in New York City in 1949. 
Peggy Ryan (August 29, 1924 - October 30, 2004) was an American dancer 
and starred in several Universal Studios musicals in 
the 1940's with Donald O'Connor, such as Mister Big, What's Cookin'?, 
and Patrick the Great, their last film together. Ironically, her and 
Donald shared their birthdays, Peggy being a year older. She died at 
the age of 80 from the effects of two strokes. 
Adam G. Sevani (born on June 29, 1992) is an actor as well as a dancer. 
Known as Moose from Step Up 2: The Streets and it's new 
sequel, Step Up 3D. Adam and director of Step Up 2, Jon Chu and 
their dance group, ACDC or Adam/Chu Dance Crew, had challenged 
pop star Miley Cyrus to a highly publicized dance battle. Adam is set to 
star in the new sitcom "LOL" with Miley in 2011. 
Ruth St. Denis (January 20, 1879  July 21, 1968) was an early modern 
dance pioneer.Ruth St. Denis founded Adelphi University's dance 
program in 1938 which was the one of the first dance departments in 
an American university. It has since become a cornerstone of Adelphi's 
Department of Performing Arts .Her early works are indicative of her 
interests in exotic mysticism and spirituality. Many companies 
currently include a collection of her signature solos in their repertoires, 
including the programme, "The Art of the Solo", a showcase of famous 
solos of modern dance pioneers. Several early St. Denis solos 
(including "Incense" and "The Legend of the Peacock") were presented 
on September 29, 2006, at the Baltimore Museum of Art. A centennial 
salute was scheduled with the revival premiere of St. Denis "Radha", 
commissioned by Countess Anastasia Thamakis of Greece. The 
program's director, Mino Nicolas, has been instrumental in the revival 
of these key solos. 
Benjiman "Benji" Daniel Schwimmer (born on January 18, 1984)[1] is 
an American professional swing dancer. On August 16, 2006 he was 
crowned "America's Favorite Dancer", as the winner of the second 
season of So You Think You Can Dance. Benji Schwimmer and his 
older cousin, Heidi Groskreutz (herself a top-4 finalist on the same 
season of So You Think You Can Dance), are also U.S. Open Showcase 
Swing champions in West Coast Swing style. Schwimmer left the 
dancing scene at the top of his game to serve a two-year mission for 
the LDS Church in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. He has subsequently 
founded the non-profit charity organization "Dancers Everywhere 
Making a Needed Difference" (D.E.M.A.N.D.) for helping orphans in 
southern Mexico and Africa and providing healthcare for dancers with 
HIV/AIDS, and is a co-owner of 5678 Dance Studio in Redlands, 
California. 
Lloyd Shaw (18901958), also known as Dr. Lloyd "Pappy" Shaw, was an 
educator, and is generally credited with bringing about the broad 
revival of square dancing in America. He was 
superintendent/principal/teacher/coach for Cheyenne Mountain 
Schools, Colorado Springs, Colorado from 19161951, and taught folk 
dancing .Shaw traveled the country, and compiled instructions for 
traditional square dances from different callers all over the country. He 
documented them, and tried them out on the students he taught. He 
formed the Cheyenne Mountain Dancers, a high-school exhibition 
team, which toured the United States in the 1930s and 1940s, 
appearing in more than 50 major cities .As the popularity of square 
dancing grew, square dance callers began extracting individual calls 
from these dances, and attempts at standardised lists were developed. 
These lists were later adopted by callers, and organizations such as 
Callerlab and later the American Callers Association formed to manage 
and promote a universal list and the type of dance leadership that 
Shaw envisioned. 
Jimmy Slyde (born 1927), who is known as the King of Slides, is a world-
renowned tap dancer, especially famous for his innovative tap style 
mixed with jazz. Slyde's profile in the United States revived noticeably 
in the 1980s. He danced in the films The Cotton Club, Tap and Round 
Midnight, as well as a number of television specials. He collaborated 
with Steve Condos on a program of jazz tap improvisation at the 
Smithsonian Institution and performed across the United States and in 
South America. In 1989, Slyde received a Tony Award nomination for 
his Broadway debut in the musical Black and Blue.In recent years, 
Slyde has received a number of significant honors, including the NEA 
National Heritage Fellowship Award (1999), the Charles "Honi" Coles 
Award (2001), a Guggenheim Fellowship for Choreography (2003), 
and an honorary Doctorate of Performing Arts from Oklahoma City 
University. Slyde is still performing and teaching today throughout the 
United States. He continues to stress the importance of mastering the 
basics and using sliding cascades of taps close to the floor. 
"Shorty" George Snowden was an African American dancer in Harlem 
during the 1920s and 1930s. He is popularly credited with coining the 
name "Lindy Hop" for a popular partner swing dance of the day. He is 
also often credited with inventing the dance, though this is 
unsubstantiated and unlikely. Snowden was a popular dancer at 
the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem, New York, in the United States and 
appears in the film After Seben (1929), in which he performs the 
breakaway, a variation on the Charleston, which later developed into 
the Lindy Hop. He can also be seen in the film Ask Uncle Sol (1937), 
dancing with his most famous partner Big Bea. 
Britney Spears (December 2, 1981 - ) is an American singer, songwriter 
and dancer. Apart from being famous for her hit singles ...Baby One 
More Time and Oops!...I Did It Again, she is also internationally 
renowned for her unique outfits and her entertaining and freestyle 
dancing. Her debut single,...Baby One More Time, features Spears 
dancing in a formal yet somewhat revealing catholic school girl 
uniform, which brought both success and extreme controversy to her 
iconic career. Britney Spears is often compared to fellow singers and 
dancers Madonna and Christina Aguilera. 
John William Sublett (February 19, 1902  May 18, 1986), known by his 
stage name John W. Bubbles, was an American vaudeville performer, 
singer and entertainer .Sublett is known as the father of "rhythm tap", 
a form of tap dance. As opposed to the tap dancing of Bill Robinson 
(Bojangles) who emphasized clean phrases and toe taps, Sublett 
brought in percussive heel stomps and played with the traditional 
eight-bar phrase, slowing it down to allow for more rhythmic freedom. 
He thus merged the art of tap dancing with the new improvisitory style 
of jazz, reinventing the tap artform. 
Sylvia Sykes is a swing dance instructor, judge and choreographer. In 
particular she is considered by most to be the leading authority on the 
dance Balboa. She also represented the U.S. in the World Boogie 
Woogie Championships in Grenoble, France with her original partner 
Jonathan Bixby. She is best known for reviving Balboa, which is rapidly 
gaining popularity around the world, and is a regular guest at the 
balboa dance camps. 
Uday Shankar (December 8, 1900  September 26, 1977) (Bengali:  
), the pioneer of modern dance in India, and a world renowned 
Indian dancer and choreographer, was most known for adapting 
Western theatrical techniques to traditional Indian classical dance, 
imbued with elements of Indian classical, folk, and tribal dance, thus 
laying the roots of modern Indian dance, which he later popularized in 
India, Europe, and the United States in 1920s and 1930s. 
Marie Taglioni (April 23, 1804  April 24, 1884) was a famous Italian 
ballerina of the Romantic ballet era, a central figure in the history of 
European dance. Marie Taglioni was born in Stockholm, Sweden, to the 
Italian cheoreographer Filippo Taglioni and the Swedish dancer Sophie 
Karsten (daughter of the Swedish opera singer Christoffer Christian 
Karsten and the Polish actor Sophie Stebnowska). Marie Taglioni rose 
to fame as a dancer when her father (and teacher) created the ballet 
La Sylphide (1832) for her. Marie retired from performing in 
1847.Later she taught social dance to children and society ladies; she 
also took a limited number of ballet pupils. Her only choreographic 
work was Le Papillon (1860) for her student Emma Livry, who is 
remembered for dying in 1863 when her costume was set alight by a 
gas lamp (limelight) used for stage lighting. Marie lived much longer, 
dying in Marseilles in 1884. 
Twyla Tharp (born July 1, 1941) is a leading American dancer and 
choreographer. She has won Emmy and Tony awards, and currently 
works as a choreographer in New York City .Twyla Tharp Dance 
merged with American Ballet Theatre in 1988, where Tharp created 
more than a dozen works. Since that time Tharp has choreographed 
dances for many companies including The Paris Opera Ballet, The 
Royal Ballet, New York City Ballet, The Boston Ballet, The Joffrey 
Ballet, Hubbard Street Dance and The Martha Graham Dance 
Company. 
Danny Tidwell (born August 1, 1984 in Norfolk, Virginia) is an American 
contemporary and ballet dancer and choreographer, best known for 
being the runner-up on Fox's third season of So You Think You Can 
Dance in 2007. Tidwell began dancing as a child, at first focusing 
on jazz before changing to ballet while attending Kirov Academy of 
Ballet at the age of fifteen. He has worked in elite companies, 
including the American Ballet Theater. He has also performed the 
works of renowned choreographers, including Debbie Allen, William 
Forsythe and Mia Michaels. He is Travis Wall's brother, also a runner-
up, of the second season of So You Think You Can Dance. 
Eddie Torres (born on July 3, 1950) is one of the most famous salsa 
dance instructors in the world. He has trained thousands of dancers, 
including some of the most well known contemporary dancers. 
Through his dance school, he has taught thousands of people how to 
dance salsa in his own distinctive style. He also has a children's dance 
program that teaches approximately three hundred students a year. 
Antony Tudor (4 April 1908 - 19 April 1987), born William Cook, highly 
influential twentieth-century English ballet choreographer, teacher and 
dancer. Antony Tudor is generally accepted to be one of the great 
originals of modern dance forms. Along with George Balanchine, he is 
seen as a principal transformer of ballet into a modern art, but of a 
genius that uses, rather than proceeds from, ballet forms. His work is 
usually considered as modern "psychological" expression, butlike 
their creatorof austerity, elegance and nobility. 
Agrippina Yakovlevna Vaganova (July 6, 1879 - November 5, 1951) was 
an outstanding Russian ballet teacher who developed the Vaganova 
method - the technique which derived from the teaching methods of 
the old Imperial Ballet School (today the Vaganova Academy of 
Russian Ballet) under the Premier Matre de Ballet Marius Petipa 
throughout the mid to late 19th century, though mostly throughout 
the 1880s and 1890s. It was Vaganova who perfected and cultivated 
this form of teaching the art of classical ballet into a workable syllabus. 
Her Fundamentals of the Classical Dance (1934) remains a standard 
textbook for the instruction of ballet technique. 
John Weaver (July 21, 1673  September 24, 1760) was a dancer 
and choreographer and is commonly known as the father of 
English pantomime. Weaver was born in Shrewsbury. His father, a 
dance teacher, suggested he go to London and become a ballet 
master. Weaver soon became a specialist in comic roles and created 
the first pantomime ballet, the burlesque Tavern Bilkers (1702). His 
more serious work, The Loves of Mars and Venus dealt with themes 
from classical literature and required a significant amount of gestures 
due to the story not being expressed in any spoken form. Because 
Weaver attempted to use plot and emotion in replacement of more 
sophisticated technical and speech methods, he is considered a major 
influence on subsequent choreographers, including Jean-Georges 
Noverre and Gasparo Angiolini. 
Charles Edward Weidman, Jr. (1901 in Lincoln, Nebraska  1975) was a 
modern dancer, choreographer and teacher. He studied and performed 
with Denishawn before leaving to form the Humphrey-Weidmanschool 
and company with Doris Humphrey and Pauline Lawrence. Like his 
partner Humphrey, Weidman worked from principles of fall and 
recovery and also experimented with a form of linking unrelated 
movements that he called "kinetic pantomime." During the 1930s, 
Weidman taught at the Bennington School of the Dance in Vermont 
and presented choreography including his popular Candide (1937) 
through the Federal Dance Theatre of the WPA. 
Mary Wigman (18861973) was a German dancer, choreographer, and 
instructor of dance. Credited for innovation of expressionist dance, and 
pioneer of modern dance in Germany. Mary Wigman's choreographies 
often employed non-Western instrumentation: fifes, bells, gongs, and 
drums from India, Thailand, Africa, and China. However, the primary 
musical accompaniment for her most well known dances was 
percussion, which contrasted greatly with her use of silence. Mary 
would often employ masks in her pieces, influenced again by non-
western/tribal motifs, as well as ecstatic spinning. 
 
Filipino Dancers 
Cheryl Burke  (born May 3, 1984) is a professional dancer. She is best 
known for being the first two-time champion 
of ABC's American version of Dancing with the Stars. 
Lisa Teresita Pacheco Macuja-Elizalde (born on October 3, 1964) is a 
Prima Ballerina. She is the first Philippine ballerina, and first foreign 
soloist who ever joined the Kirov Ballet in 1984. In the Philippines, 
she is the Artistic Director of Ballet Manila and Vice-Chairman of the 
Philippine UNESCO National Commission. She was also the 
Commissioner of the National Commission on the Role of Filipino 
Women. Macuja-Elizalde is also Directress and faculty member of 
the Ballet Manila School  a training center for ballet professionals 
who are steeped in the Russian Vaganova method. 
Leonor Orosa Goquinco  (July 24, 1917 - July 15, 2005) was a Filipino 
national artist in creative dance. She could play the piano, draw, 
design scenery and costumes, sculpt, act, direct, dance and 
choreograph. Her pen name was Cristina Luna and she was known 
as Trailblazer, Mother of Philippine Theater Dance and Dean of 
Filipino Performing Arts Critics. She died on July 15 2005 of "cardiac 
arrest secondary to cerebro-vascular accident" at the age of 87. 
SexBomb Dancers  (or also known as SexBomb Dancers) are an all-
female singing, dancing, and acting group from the Philippines. 
They are known for the novelty songs "Spaghetti," "Bakit Papa" 
("Why Father") and "Bilog na Hugis Itlog" ("Egg-shaped Circle") 
that were certified platinum in the Philippines. The music video of 
"Bilog na Hugis Itlog" aimed to educate Filipino voters on the new 
election procedure implemented on the 2010 Philippine general 
election. 
  They are also well known for the grunt "Get, Get Aww!" They were 
once mainstay dancers for the longest noontime show in the 
Philippines Eat Bulaga. However, the SexBomb Dancers can no 
longer be seen in Eat Bulaga. They are currently freelancers: they 
can appear in any channel and guest in any TV show except Eat 
Bulaga due to some misunderstandings. They can be seen in Party 
Pilipinas every Sunday or in Happy Yipee Yehey during guestings. 
 
JabbaWockeeZ  is Bay Area based Urban dance group formed initially by 
members Kevin " KB" Brewer, Phil "Swagger Boy" Tayag, & Joe 
"Punkee" larot under the name "3 Muskee". They were the winners 
of season 1 of the show America's Best Dance Crew. Other 
members include Ben "B-Tek" Chung, Chris Gatdula & Phi Nguyen 
Super Cr3w  (pronounced "Super Crew" and also spelled "Super CR3W") 
is a breakdance crew from Las Vegas, Nevada who won the 2nd 
season of America's Best Dance Crew. 
SoReal Cru  is a hip-hop dance crew from Houston, Texas who gained 
fame as the runner-up on the second season of America's Best 
Dance Crew (ABDC). Before ABDC, they won first place in the World 
of Dance competition in 2008.[1] After the second season 
of America's Best Dance Crew was over, they returned to MTV for a 
two part ABDC special, Battle of the VMA's. In the spin-off, popular 
crews from seasons one and two competed for an opportunity to 
win $25,000 for charity and to present the 2008 VMA for Best 
Dancing in a Video.[2] Alumni crews BreakSk8, Fanny Pak, Kaba 
Modern, Status Quo, and SoReal Cru participated in the 
event.[3]SoReal Cru danced to Forever by Chris Brown and made 
the cut in the preliminary rounds while BreakSk8 and Status Quo 
were eliminated. After the public voted, SoReal Cru was declared 
runners-up for having the least amount of votes. After a dance off 
at the VMA Preshow,[2][4] the public voted again, and it was 
announced during the VMA's that Fanny Pak won. 
Zaira Cosico  is a ballerina from the Philippines.[1] She is one of a few 
successful scholars of Liza Macuja's dance company, Ballet Manila. 
She first learned to dance at the Halili Cruz School of Dance. Cosico 
has been instructed in the Vaganova method by Tatiana A. 
Udalenkova of the Academy of Russia Ballet (Vaganova 
Choreographic Institute). She has also worked with Viktor Savaliev, 
Sergey Vikulov and Evgeny Scherbakov. 
Quest Crew  is an Asian-American hip-hop dance crew from Los 
Angeles, California who were declared winners of the third 
season of America's Best Dance Crew.[1]They made their first few 
appearances individually on shows like So You Think You Can 
Dance and at events such as Kollaboration 8 and World of Dance. 
Philippine All Stars is a Philippine hip-hop dance group. They won the 
2006 and 2008 World Hip Hop Dance Championships.[1] They were 
formed on 2005 by twelve individuals that were working in 
the Manilaunderground Hip-hop scene.[2] They also joined the 
Artists Revolution: 365 days to change campaign which asks the 
Filipino voters to be more critical in choosing their political leaders 
in the coming 2010 elections.[3] 
Poreotix also known as Poreotix, is an American all-male dance crew 
from Westminster, California. The crew was formed in 2007 by 
"Dumbo" Nguyen and specializes 
in popping, choreography and robotics, hence the name Po-reo-tics. 
They have performed in numerous hip hop dance competitions, 
most notably coming in 1st place in the USA division of the 2009 
and 2010 Hip-Hop Internationals[1] and in other dance programs 
and competitions including the Vibe 15, FUSION X, Body Rock, and 
World Of Dance. On April 8, 2010, they were crowned the 
champions on the fifth season of America's Best Dance Crew.[2] On 
January 14, 2011 they were crowned as Team of the Year at the 
World of Dance awards. 
Massive Monkeys  is a 28 member[1] B-boy group from Seattle, 
Washington that won the 2004 World B-boy Championships 
in London and appeared on season 4 ofMTV's America's Best Dance 
Crew. 
Jennifer Olayvar is a contemporary ballerina[1] from the Philippines. 
She has been a dancer for Ballet Manila since 2000. She had been 
the special assistant toLisa Macuja-Elizalde from 2004 to 2007. 
Olayvar has taken minor and intermediate examinations in 
the Royal Academy of Dance in London, England. 
Kaba Modern  is a dance group originating from Irvine, California. Kaba 
Modern is a spin-off of the University of California, Irvine Filipino 
cultural club, Kababayan, which means "countrymen" in Tagalog. 
Created by Arnel Calvario in 1992,[1] Kaba Modern began as 
dancers that performed the hip-hop portion or the "Modern Suite" 
of Kababayan's annual Pilipino Cultural Night (PCN) at UCI. Since 
then, Kaba Modern has entered multinational competitions and 
gained recognition in the media. For instance, few Kaba Modern 
members helped choreograph the "dance battle" scene in The 
Debut in 1997 while 3 members were shown onscreen during the 
Making of Featurette of the DVD. 
Cris Judd (born August 15, 1969) is an American actor and 
choreographer known for his brief marriage to Jennifer Lopez. He 
hails from Abilene, Texas. 
Charles Klapow (born July 5, 1980) is an American choreographer and 
dance instructor who has performed and choreographed for various 
performers and several television and stage productions. He is also 
known for his teachings of the mental approach to dance. Klapow's 
mother is Filipino and his father is Russian American. 
Tadd Gaduang 
Marko Germar 
Supreme Soul 
G-Force