Sökresultat för: ”Lets Dance”

  • Erik Segerestedt är laddad inför Lets dance-premiären

    Jennifer Åkerman: Nu har jag en partner att ta hand om klipp måndag 25/3 kl 16:00 Jennifer Åkerman, som dansar med 2012 års tvåa – Calle Sterner, har dansat en del jazz förut. Men det är annorlunda nu, menar hon, ”när jag har en partner jag måste ta hand om”. Eller vem var det nu som skulle ta hand om vem?

  • Hen åker ut ut ”Lets dance” ikväll

    För andra veckan i rad får han lägst stöd från Nöjesbladets läsare. Det är Marcus Schenkenberg som får lämna ”Let’s dance” i kväll – i alla fall om läsarna får bestämma. Det är omgång sju av ”Let’s dance” på TV4 och med bara fem par kvar i tävlingen hårdnar konkurrensen. Förra veckan fick Anders Timell, 46, lämna programmet trots sina högsta jurypoäng någonsin.

  • Rhythm Thief & The Paris Caper Lets You Dance And Fight Your Way Across … – Cult of Mac

    Originally arriving in the App Store last Thursday, Rhythm Thief & the Paris Caper mysteriously vanished the following day after SEGA discovered “unexpected problems”[1] with the game.Well, now its back — allowing gamers everywhere to download and play the rhythm-based game which follows Raphael, a young boy living in Paris who investigates his father’s disappearance with the help of his dog, Fondue.It’s all a bit ridiculous — but Rhythm Thief & the Paris Caper is less about plot than it is about, um, rhythm — and here SEGA promises that gamers won’t feel cheated: with over 20 original songs, 50 new missions, and a slew of new mini-games designed to test players’ wits and timing.For those who never had the chance to play the original 2012 Nintendo 3DS title, of which this is a port, now’s your chance!Source: iTunes[2]Via: Computerandvideogames[3]References^ “unexpected problems” (www.digitalspy.co.uk)^ iTunes (itunes.apple.com)^ Computerandvideogames (www.computerandvideogames.com)

  • ’Cédric Andrieux ’ at OtB lets the dancer do the talking – The Seattle Times

    What’s it like to be a dancer? How are a dancer’s steps made? And what non-dance-related factors — chance, love affairs, even public events — wind up shaping a dance career? Those questions and others are addressed in Jérôme Bel’s one-man show “Cédric Andrieux.” The solo performer in “Cédric Andrieux” isn’t Bel, but Andrieux himself, a 36-year-old former dancer with Merce Cunningham Dance Company and Lyon Opera Ballet. In a quietly confiding deadpan tone, Andrieux tells us where he was born (Brest, France) and how old he was when he decided he wanted to become a professional dancer (14)

  • Liquidman lets you dance like a maniac on a busy street from the comfort of … – ROCKETNEWS24

    Liquidman lets you dance like a maniac on a busy street from the comfort of … – ROCKETNEWS24

    Have you ever wanted to start dancing like a madman in the middle of a crowded urban street, but felt restrained by the conventions of society? Our reporter Mr. Sato[1] sure has. So when he learnt about the Halls throat lozenges’ YOUareLIQUIDMAN campaign, he got right on it. YOUareLIQUIDMAN encourages sheepish individuals to upload a photo of themselves to the Halls website

  • In Buenos Aires, Tango Queer lets the dancers switch roles – Los Angeles Times

    BUENOS AIRES — Daniel Frago sat with a cup of coffee at a small table on the edge of the dance floor, explaining the art of the tango. ”It’s not about the man and the woman,” the 55-year-old Buenos Aires hairdresser said. ”It’s about the driver and the driven.” Frago had come out to celebrate the eighth birthday of Tango Queer, a weekly party where women dance freely with women, and men dance freely with men. It’s one of several popular gatherings in Buenos Aires that cater to gay and lesbian tango enthusiasts, as well as straights who want to test the dance’s traditionally heterosexual gender roles. Here there are no expectations that a dominant man lead and a passive woman follow, said organizer Mariana Docampo

  • Biomusic lets you dance to the beat of your own drum – New Scientist

    Biomusic lets you dance to the beat of your own drum – New Scientist

    (Image: Marie Boran/Sensum) A favourite song, a playlist for doing housework, the tune you listen to when you’re feeling blue[1]. Our choice in music has always reflected our individuality. Now technology is pushing that even further, using data from our own bodies. Our heart rate, movement and even DNA can now be captured to create unique pieces of music. We can quite literally march to the beat of our own drum. Launched last week, Mu_ by Sensum[2], a start-up based in Belfast, UK, uses wearable sensors to create danceable music tracks complete with trippy on-screen visuals.

  • Rewriting Shakespeare: Dance Collective lets audience take part in telling – Fort Wayne Journal Gazette

    As I walk into the Embassy’s lobby for Fort Wayne Dance Collective’s production of “Star Crossed,” I am handed a white mask.From my research, I know the show is going to be a modern-day adaptation of Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet” that uses a “choose your own adventure” concept – a risqué form of theater that popped up in New York and toned down for a Fort Wayne demographic. The audience travels from room to room, dropping in on certain scenes. The masks help open up the audiences to interacting with the performers. A majority of the audience who first walk into the reception decide to wear the white mask as a headpiece as they glance over the array of finger foods and lack of seating. Two teenage girls dressed in light, flouncy dresses far too thin to fight off the evening’s chill seem to have forgotten their lopsided masks as they take turns pinching off one sticky bun

  • Charming iPad App Lets You Choreograph a Famed Dance Genius – Wired

    Charming iPad App Lets You Choreograph a Famed Dance Genius – Wired

    Dot Dot Dot is an interactive dance routine, designed specifically for the iPad. Pentagram Dancing is a great, visceral pleasure. Watching a dance performance–one where you’re packed stiffly in a seat alongside a few hundred other audience members, viewing the action up on stage from a distance–can be, well, the opposite of great and visceral. But maybe it’s not the dance that’s the problem.