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Hip-hop master coming to city

Fairgrounds YMCA will host dance workshops Nov. 1, 2
By CHRIS BROCK
TIMES STAFF WRITER
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2008
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If you don’t think you’re hip enough to hip-hop, amble on over to the Watertown Fairgrounds YMCA for upcoming workshops.

There, master hip-hop instructor Pat-y-o (real name: Patrick Otero) will guide you through the right moves during classes on Nov. 1 and 2.

Hip-hop dancing is closely associated with rap music and with the style and fashions of black inner-city residents.

HIP-HOP
WORKSHOP DETAILS


WHAT: Hip-hop workshops taught by Pat-y-o.
WHEN/WHERE: Nov. 1 and 2 at the Fairgrounds YMCA, 585 Rand Drive.
Workshop length is 11/2 hours. Junior workshops will be held for ages 7-12 and senior workshops for ages 13 and up. Two workshops total will be held each day.
COST: $50. Scholarships are available.
MORE INFO: To discuss scholarships or for more information, contact Fairgrounds YMCA director Tammie J. Miller at 755-9622.

Pat-y-o has 14 years of experience in directing, judging and stage-managing with Starbound National Dance Competition and more than 30 years of experience in dance overall. Besides his work in television, movies and sporting events, he is a co-instructor featured in the videos “Off Da Hook” and “Hip-Hop You Don’t Stop.”

In August, he headlined the hip-hop master class for Dance Teacher/Dance Spirit Dance Convention in Manhattan. Shereen Daly, owner of In Motion School of Dance in Watertown, attended the conference and asked Pat-y-o if he could come to Watertown.

He agreed, and the Fairgrounds YMCA decided to host the workshops. Tammie J. Miller, Fairgrounds YMCA director, said the hip-hop workshops fit in with the YMCA because the agency offers other dance classes. She added it’s also a way for the YMCA to promote the arts and to bring dancers and instructors at the area’s dance studios together.

Mrs. Daly said the recent popularity of reality shows with dance themes on network television should create lots of interest for the hip-hop classes.

Pat-y-o will offer one workshop a day to junior groups, ages 7-12, and to senior groups, ages 13 and up.

“We’re hoping this is going to reach out to not only the dance studios, but to the schools,” said Mrs. Daly.

According to answers.com, hip-hop dance originated in New York City among young Hispanic and black men during the late 1960s as part of the hip-hop culture of rap, scratch music and graffiti art. The technique essentially embraces the break-dance and body-popping dance styles.

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