Friday, November 26, 2010
September-October-Explosion!
Wow. I've never been busier as a dancer than I have been this Fall. I had six straight travel weekends of dance event work, followed by only a brief interlude before the astonishing Catalina Jazz Dance Festival! And now I'm off to Italy again, after which I will enjoy two weeks of training with Dominique Blouin, a fabulous Canadian Balboa and Jazz dance expert. Also within that string of events was the first large-scale workshop weekend I have taught with no partner. I frequently teach alone in New York and the North-East, but Lindy producers don't often request such a thing, so a big thanks to Lara Willars and San Antonio for giving me that chance. I saw a lot of smiles down there! I can't wait to see the Texas folks again at the Lonestar Championships in January!!
Thursday, May 27, 2010
I'm back!!
Italy was great!!
Sunday, January 3, 2010
Killer Diller Photo Shoot
Photos from the International Lindy Hop Championships 2009
The Killer Dillers did well in the competitions:
1st Place Team Division
1st place Charleston: Juan Villafane
2nd place Charleston: Nathan Bugh (that's me)
3rd place Charleston: Jo Hoffberg
Filling out the rest of the Charleston finals: Evita Arce, Kevin St Laurent & Sharon Davis (ie: all the rest of the Killer Dillers)
1st place Cabaret: Evita Arce & Mike Jagger
3rd place Cabaret: Kevin St Laurent, Juan Villafane & myself
Camp Jitterbug 2009 & The Jump Session Show
This is a performance of the One Man Dance, originally created by The Five Blazes in the late 1920s:
From left to right, the performers were myself, Juan Villafane, Mike Faltesek, Kevin St Laurent and Stefan Durham:
And just for kicks, here is the original One Man Dance film clip, performed by The Five Blazes to Duke Ellington's tune Black Beauty, in 1929:
Dancing with legend Dawn Hampton
A few photos of me dancing with living legend Dawn Hampton (above), at Swing Out New Hampshire in September 2009. Dawn is 82 years old! Click on the thumbnail to see a larger version:
Some info about Dawn, care of Century Masters:
Dawn Hampton was born in 1928, in Middletown, Ohio. Her father, Clark Deacon Hampton, Sr., had a family band and vaudeville act that was part of a traveling carnival. She grew up listening to the music of the family band, Deacon Hampton's Pickaninnys, sitting on an orange box behind her mother Laura's piano.
It wasn't long before the infant Hampton was making a contribution. She began performing at the tender age of three, and two years later sang "He Takes Me to Paradise".
Dawn is one of twelve children. Slide Hampton, the well-known jazz trombonist, is the youngest. Two of Dawn's older sisters, Aletra and Virtue, live in Indianapolis and are still performing and there are many more musical Hamptons scattered around the country.
After the war, the family band reunited for several years. There were fourteen pieces and nine Hamptons; Dawn played alto and tenor sax. They traveled under the leadership of her brother, Duke, and played throughout the Midwest and South. Finally, in 1950, the band achieved its dream of performing at Carnegie Hall (along with another well-known, although unrelated Hampton - Lionel).
Once the Big Apple got a taste of the Hampton Family, they were featured at the Apollo Theatre and the Savoy Ballroom. The Hamptons became the house band at the then-famous Sunset Terrace in Indianapolis, and then moved on to the Cincinnati Cotton Club. Sometime in the mid-1950s, several brothers left to study music and Dawn and her sisters Aletra, Virtue, and Carmelita continued to perform as The Hampton Sisters.
Fascinating Rhythm
The Berry Brothers were a famous flash act duo (and later trio) in the 1920s, 30s and 40s. Their specialties included soft shoe tap, cane, spectacular splits and death-defying acrobatics. The brothers were Ananias (or Nyas) Berry, James Berry and Warren Berry. They performed alongside Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway at the Cotton Club in Harlem, were the first African-American act at the Copacabana in 1929, and performed at the grand opening of Radio City Music Hall in 1932. They also headlined at New York’s Apollo Theatre, the Zanzibar Cafe, Harlem’s Savoy Ballroom, The Moulin Rouge in Paris, and The Rio Cabana in Chicago. Their film credits include Lady Be Good (1941), Panama Hattie (1942), Boarding House Blues (1948), and You’re My Everything (1949).
The Berry Brothers are remembered as one of the greatest dance acts in the history of the American stage and cinema in the twentieth century. At a time when tap dancers were “a dime a dozen,” these brothers combined their talents to form a unique act that remains unsurpassed. Their mixture of the Cakewalk’s Strut, tap dancing, thrilling acrobatics, and amazing cane work was a winning and lasting formula. Click here to read more about them.
Here is the original:
The Killer Dillers: New Website
The Killer Dillers now have a website at www.thekillerdillers.com!
Apart from information about the six of us, there's also info about the styles of dance we do, photos, videos and a bunch of other stuff!