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  2. Ballroom dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballroom_dance

    There is a part of the ballroom world dedicated to college students. These chapters are typically clubs or teams that have an interest in ballroom dancing. Teams hold fundraisers, social events, and ballroom dance lessons. Ballroom dance teams' goals are to have fun and learn to dance well.

  3. Toni Redpath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toni_Redpath

    Toni Redpath was born in Surfers Paradise, Queensland, Australia, and started ballroom dancing at the age of 9, after accompanying a friend to a local dance competition and deciding that it looked like too much fun not to try.

  4. Pierre Dulaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Dulaine

    Pierre Dulaine (born 23 April 1944) [2] is a dance instructor and dancer. He invented the Dulaine method of teaching dance. He also founded Dancing Classrooms, a social and emotional development program for 5th grade children that uses ballroom dancing as a vehicle to change the lives of the children and their families.

  5. Robert Banas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Banas

    In 1942, his father arranged ballroom dance lessons for Banas and his sister Faith. “I was on the move trying different lifts with Sis and we had so much fun; at times we couldn’t stop laughing. “I was on the move trying different lifts with Sis and we had so much fun; at times we couldn’t stop laughing.

  6. Tony Dovolani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Dovolani

    The Stamford location is the fourth in the chain and the first in Connecticut started by Dovolani, Maksim Chmerkovskiy, Valentin Chmerkovskiy and their partners. The other studios are in Ridgefield, N.J., Long Island, N.Y., and Soho, N.Y. Tony left Dance With Me in middle 2018, to return to Fred Astaire, where he started learning ballroom. [15]

  7. Mad Hot Ballroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mad_Hot_Ballroom

    Mad Hot Ballroom is a 2005 American documentary film directed and co-produced by Marilyn Agrelo and written and co-produced by Amy Sewell, about a ballroom dance program in the New York City Department of Education, the New York City public school system for fifth graders.

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