Stud Country, a queer line dancing and two-step class from Los Angeles, made a rollicking return to New York on a recent Monday. Eliza Jouin, left, and Hannah Pinson were among the over 300 people who ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Black Southern line dance culture, and a co-sign from Beyoncé, has helped to popularize the song and its fan-snapping moves. By Kia Turner Wagener, ...
It was 4:30 on a Saturday afternoon and sophomore Tamir Poindexter was demonstrating two line dances he hadn’t planned on teaching to a room full of Tufts students. By this point, the group had ...
“Delighted confusion,” Jordon replies when I ask him how he would describe the atmosphere on the expansive wood-paneled floor of the Brooklyn Bowl. On the stage behind him, California-based duo Stud ...
Remember when the only dances you needed to know were the Cupid Shuffle, the Wobble, and maybe, if you were from the old school, the Electric Slide? Simpler times. Nowadays, that’s not enough. Whether ...
From the “Macarena” to the “Chicken Dance” and “Cotton-Eyed Joe” to the “Tush Push,” line dancesare a fun way to get people of all ages and skill levels out on the dancefloor. “I am not a good dancer ...
Adia Nuño always dreamed of being a professional dancer. But after turns as a high school and college cheerleader and then leading three cheer programs in Orange County, she figured her dance card was ...
Men donning suits and ties and women wearing dresses and heels flooded the ArtsTech center in Kansas City on Saturday night, a noticeable difference to the youth usually there. Dresses swished and ...