2020 Bessie-Award Nomination for It's Showtime NYC and Artistic Director Adesola Osakalumi

It’s Showtime NYC is incredibly honored and grateful to be nominated for the NY Dance and Performance Awards, the prestigious 36th Annual Bessies for Outstanding “Breakout” Choreographer. The nomination is for theatrical-dance piece What Time Is It?” created in collaboration with Artistic Director Adesola Osakalumi with presenting partner Abrons Arts Center. Nominees will be honored in a free live stream awards ceremony streaming on December 14, 2020 at 7:30 pm ET. We are absolutely honored to be in the company of so many accomplished artists. For a complete nomination list and award registration information please visit http://bessies.org/2020-nominees/

Link to excerpt of performance here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JMpK5I3sB-4&feature=youtu.be

Dance Enthusiast - IMPRESSIONS: Harlem Stage E-Moves Program B with Omari Mizrahi/Les Ballet Afrik, It’s Showtime NYC, and TweetBoogie

Dance Enthusiast - IMPRESSIONS: Harlem Stage E-Moves Program B with Omari Mizrahi/Les Ballet Afrik, It’s Showtime NYC, and TweetBoogie

[…] It’s Showtime NYC’s Festival of dreams was created by two international choreographers: Moya Michael from South Africa and Faustin Linyekula from the Congo worked in collaboration with the dancers. Both are primarily contemporary dance artists, and perhaps not the most obvious choice for a group rooted in NYC subway and street dance. Also in the blend is spoken word artist Nasiyr Abdullah, whose performance reckons with the historical and ongoing racial trauma of America. The successful cohesion of this mix is a statement in itself: white supremacy is a global force, but so is the black art that resists it. […]

Read More

Spectrum News NY1: It's Showtime: Subway Breakdancing Meets the Middle Ages

Spectrum News NY1: It's Showtime: Subway Breakdancing Meets the Middle Ages

It's the kind of dance most often seen on the streets or the subway.

But on a recent night, a brand of hip-hop dancing turned up in the Arms and Armor Court at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where dancers dressed in medieval warfare gear moved to the sounds of the 21st Century.

"You're putting on what feels like another persona," said Rhea 'Wiildkard' Nance, a dancer with It's Showtime NYC. "And you're adding that to your movements."

It is called "Battle Hip-Hop in Armor," a collaboration between the Met and "It's Showtime NYC," a dance troupe featuring former subway performers like Nance.

Met curator Pierre Terjanian told us the idea is to bring to life artifacts that now sit behind glass.

"I have feeling that a lot of the objects can be studied, can be enjoyed, almost like still lifes," Terjanian said. "But in reality, it's not about study, it's also about enjoyment. I think the dancers bring a completely different feel to the objects as they are in movement."

The dancers don't perform in the original armor, but replicas, like these gauntlets and chain-mail shirts, some of which weigh 20 pounds and affect how the body moves. […]

Read More

Pictorial: Geniuses at the Met Museum of Art Got Showtime Dancers To Perform Wearing Armor

Pictorial: Geniuses at the Met Museum of Art Got Showtime Dancers To Perform Wearing Armor

In a truly inspired strategy for demonstrating how their collection looks in action, the Metropolitan Museum of Art has invited dancers from the organization It’s Showtime NYC! to do a series of performances in their Arms and Armor gallery.

The Met sent us some footage from a recent rehearsal, which you can see above. The collaboration melds two New York institutions—perhaps the city’s most famous museum, and tradition of subway performances that begin with the loud announcement that “It’s SHOWTIME!”—and the result really does give you a new appreciation for what these pieces looked like in their original context. It’s an infinitely better way to understand armor than slowly circling a fully-assembled suit muttering “now how in the hell...” like some of us have found ourselves doing. […]

Read More

The New Yorker: Goings on about town | Dance

The New Yorker: Goings on about town | Dance

It’s one thing to draw an analogy between the competitive face-offs in hip-hop dance and combat between knights. It’s another to outfit hip-hop dancers in medieval armor. In the Arms and Armor Court of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the talented street and subway performers of It’s Showtime NYC! wear replicas of some of the battle gear on display—gauntlets, helmets, breastplates—and experiment with how the extra weight affects their moves and swagger.



Read More

MEDIUM - Stand in Their Shoes | Syhem Belkhodja’s Dance Workshop

MEDIUM - Stand in Their Shoes | Syhem Belkhodja’s Dance Workshop

“Can I give you something?” asked Rhea “Wiildkard” Nance as she eased her way through a crowd of people pushing up the stairs from the basement theater at New York’s French Institute, where Nance had just performed. She handed a woman in a cherry-red blazer and matching skirt a black and white headshot of a woman, printed on plain paper.

In a packed elevator headed for the Skyroom, the woman in red looked up intently at Nance as she told her the story of the woman in the picture, a dancer Nance had encountered in a workshop taught by Tunisian choreographer Syhem Belkhodja and conducted over four days in the week before the show. The elevator was headed for act three of the performance, which was presented by local street-dancers from It’s Showtime NYC, like Nance, and a troupe from Tunisia led Belkhodja. […]

Read More

Dance Enthusiast - IMPRESSIONS: The 17th Annual River To River Festival with Cori Olinghouse, Catherine Galasso and It’s Showtime NYC!

Dance Enthusiast - IMPRESSIONS: The 17th Annual River To River Festival with Cori Olinghouse, Catherine Galasso and It’s Showtime NYC!

[…] It’s profound to see a collective of men and women of color celebrating and thriving in front of Federal Hall and George Washington’s statue  — both markers of government and institutional slavery. Equally interesting is that this site is one block away from the historical slave market (corner of Wall Street and Pearl Street) designed to keep minorities from assembly and possible rebellion. It’s Showtime NYC! temporarily transforms this space into one of liberation. […]

Read More

ALL ARTS: SUBWAY DANCERS PERFORM IN BATTLE GEAR AT THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART

ALL ARTS: SUBWAY DANCERS PERFORM IN BATTLE GEAR AT THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART

In an effort to liven up its Department of Arms and Armor, The Metropolitan Museum of Art has invited 29 freestyle dancers from the South Bronx to perform in replica battle gear at the museum throughout the first half of the year. The dancers hail from It’s Showtime NYC!, a group made up of artists who cut their teeth performing on New York City subway trains and platforms. As part of the commission, members of the troop will don traditional chain mail, leather and armor while dancing to their own selection of beats and music. The goal, according to museum curators, is to reveal “unexpected parallels” between historical combat tradition and hip-hop dance culture. Of course, the series also highlights the ways in which armor moves with and protects the body.

Read More

JFK International Air Terminal: “Heavy metal” meets hip-hop

JFK International Air Terminal: “Heavy metal” meets hip-hop

If you’ve visited the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Arms and Armor gallery, you’ve probably wondered what it was like to walk, ride a horse, or fight under the weight of all that metal. But performers from the South Bronx arts organization Dancing in the Streets can tell you what it’s like to execute hip-hop moves while wearing armor. Replicas of real medieval armor from the museum’s collection. 

Battle: Hip-Hop in Armor gives us a glimpse of what it would look (and sound) like if knights of old stepped to a modern urban beat. The dancers, who have been featured on It’s Showtime NYC!, are collaborating with the Met on a series of live shows.

Read More

The New York Times: The Dance Battle Is Joined

The New York Times: The Dance Battle Is Joined

Two dance teams go to war in “Battle! Hip-Hop in Armor,” part of It’s Showtime NYC’s residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

#SPEAKINGINDANCE | “It’s us comparing and contrasting the art of battling in dance and on the field,” said @ _wiildkard_, a member of @itsshowtimenyc, a company of street dancers in residence at the @metarmsandarmor through June. “We went over details of battle prep, and we were like, that’s us. It’s all or nothing.” As part of “Battle! Hip-Hop in Armor,” the dancers present “The Champion’s Battle” on February 8, in which 2 teams go to war — naturally, in armor. “We got to choose our own pieces that fit not only to who we are, but our dance styles as well,” said @flexx_wit2x

Read More

The New York Times: Subway Break Dancers, Clad in Armor, Go Medieval at the Met Museum

The New York Times: Subway Break Dancers, Clad in Armor, Go Medieval at the Met Museum

Out of nowhere, the clang of armor and the beat of hip-hop music boomed through a gallery at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Tourists who had been peering at filigreed shields and wrought-iron broadswords swung toward the sound.

There, beside a cluster of horse statues in armor, a dancer moved into a handstand — one-handed by necessity. On his free hand, he wore a gleaming silver gauntlet, which he shimmied off and placed on the floor so that it stood upright like the disembodied hand of a knight.

Above the medieval-style metal glove, he spun, he kicked, he flipped.

Read More

The New York Times: Instead of Arrests, Subway Dancers Are Getting a Stage Above Ground

The New York Times: Instead of Arrests, Subway Dancers Are Getting a Stage Above Ground

For years, it was the sight that stopped “showtime”: a plainclothes officer, rising to identify himself aboard a New York City subway car and greeting tip-seeking break dancers with handcuffs.

Arrests for performers onboard trains more than doubled last year. The “acrobats,” as Police Commissioner William J. Bratton called them, were held up as a signpost of disorder underground; enforcement against them, the commissioner said last year, was “soaring.”

But in recent months, police officers underground have quietly begun delivering a sharply different message on small palm cards handed to the scofflaw showmen they encounter.

“Make money,” the cards read. “Avoid arrest. Dance!”

Read More