So You Think You Can Dance | |
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Created by | |
Developed by | Simon Fuller |
Directed by |
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Presented by | |
Judges | |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 15 |
No. of episodes | 281 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
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Production company(s) | |
Release | |
Original network | Fox |
Picture format | |
Original release | July 20, 2005 – present |
External links | |
Website |
So You Think You Can Dance is an American televised dance competition show that airs on Fox in the United States and is the flagship series of the international So You Think You Can Dance television franchise. It was created by American Idol producers Simon Fuller and Nigel Lythgoe and is produced by 19 Entertainment, Dick Clark Productions, and Conrad Sewell Productions. The series premiered on July 20, 2005, with over ten million viewers and ended the summer season as the top-rated show on television. The first season was hosted by American news personality Lauren Sánchez. Since the second season, it has been hosted by former British children's television personality and game show emcee Cat Deeley.
The Fox Broadcasting Company is an American commercial terrestrial television network that is a flagship property of the Fox Corporation. The network is headquartered at 1211 Avenue of the Americas in New York City, with additional offices at the Fox Broadcasting Center and at the Fox Television Center in Los Angeles.
So You Think You Can Dance is a franchise of reality television shows in which contestants compete in dance. The first series of the franchise, created by Idols producers Simon Fuller and Nigel Lythgoe, premiered in July 2005 and has broadcast fifteen seasons since. Adaptations of the show began airing in other countries in late 2005 and to date 30 localized adaptations have been produced, representing 41 different countries and comprising more than ninety individual seasons.
American Idol is an American singing competition television series created by Simon Fuller, produced by Fremantle USA and 19 Entertainment, and distributed by Fremantle North America. It initially aired on Fox from June 11, 2002, to April 7, 2016, for 15 seasons. Since March 11, 2018, a revival of the series has aired on ABC.
The show features a format wherein dancers trained in a variety of dance genres enter open auditions held in a number of major U.S. cities to showcase their talents and move forward through successive additional rounds of auditions to test their ability to adapt to different styles. At the end of this process, a small number of dancers are chosen as finalists. These dancers move on to the competition's main phase, where they perform solo, duet, and group dance numbers on live television, attempting to master a diverse selection of dance styles, including classical, contemporary, ballroom, hip-hop, street, club, jazz, and musical theatre styles, among others. They compete for the votes of the broadcast viewing audience which, combined with the input of a panel of judges, determines which dancers advance to the next stage from week to week, until a winner is crowned as "America's favorite dancer".
Contemporary dance is a genre of dance performance that developed during the mid twentieth century and has since grown to become one of the dominant genres for formally trained dancers throughout the world, with particularly strong popularity in the U.S. and Europe. Although originally informed by and borrowing from classical, modern, and jazz styles, it has since come to incorporate elements from many styles of dance. Due to its technical similarities, it is often perceived to be closely related to modern dance, ballet, and other classical concert dance styles.
Ballroom dance is a set of partner dances, which are enjoyed both socially and competitively around the world. Because of its performance and entertainment aspects, ballroom dance is also widely enjoyed on stage, film, and television.
Hip-hop dance refers to street dance styles primarily performed to hip-hop music or that have evolved as part of hip-hop culture. It includes a wide range of styles primarily breaking which was created in the 1970s and made popular by dance crews in the United States. The television show Soul Train and the 1980s films Breakin', Beat Street, and Wild Style showcased these crews and dance styles in their early stages; therefore, giving hip-hop mainstream exposure. The dance industry responded with a commercial, studio-based version of hip-hop—sometimes called "new style"—and a hip-hop influenced style of jazz dance called "jazz-funk". Classically trained dancers developed these studio styles in order to create choreography from the hip-hop dances that were performed on the street. Because of this development, hip-hop dance is practiced in both dance studios and outdoor spaces.
So You Think You Can Dance has won seven Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Choreography and a total of nine Emmy Awards altogether. Licensed variations of the show, produced for broadcast markets in other nations, began airing in August 2005, and dozens of localized adaptations of the show have been produced since, airing in 41 countries to date. The fifteenth and most recent season of the U.S. show aired from June 4 through September 10, 2018, while a sixteenth season has been commissioned, with a scheduled premiere of June 3, 2019. [1]
This is a list of winners of the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Choreography. With the exception of 2013, the award is given at the Creative Arts Emmy Awards ceremony.
A typical season of So You Think You Can Dance is divided between a selection process, during which expert judges select competitors from a wide pool of applicant dancers, and a competition phase, during which these 'finalists' (more typically referred to as the 'Top 20') compete for votes from home viewers. Though it is produced over the course of months, the selection phase is highly edited and usually constitutes only the first 2–4 weeks of aired episodes, with the competition episodes forming the remaining 7–9 weeks of the season.
The open auditions, the first stage in determining a season's finalists, take place in 2–6 major U.S. cities each season and are typically open to anyone aged 18–30 at the time of their audition, although season 13 focused on a younger class of competitors, ages 8–14. The cities where auditions are held change from season to season but some, such as Los Angeles and New York, have featured in most seasons. During this stage, dancers perform a brief routine (typically a solo, but duet and group routines are allowed as well) before a panel of dance experts, usually headed by series creator and executive producer Nigel Lythgoe. This panel then decides on-the-spot whether the dancer demonstrated enough ability and performance value to proceed further. If the dancer exhibited exceptional ability in their performance, judges award "a ticket to Vegas" (or in more recent seasons "a ticket to the Academy"), moving them instantly one step forward in the competition. Alternatively, if judges are on the fence about the dancer, they may ask the contestant to wait until the end of that day's auditions to participate in a short test of their ability to pick up professional choreography.
The second stage of the selection process is referred to as "the callbacks" (this round was referenced as "Vegas Week" for much of the show's run, as it was held in Las Vegas, but has been called Academy Week since season 13). The callbacks consist of a several-day-long process in which the remaining hopefuls are tested for overall well-rounded dance ability, stamina, creativity and their ability to perform under pressure. The dancers are put through a battery of rounds that test their ability to pick up various dance styles; these are typically some of the more well-represented genres that are later prominent in the competition phase, such as hip-hop, jazz, ballroom, and contemporary. Additionally the dancers may be asked to perform further solos in styles of their choosing and participate in a group choreography round in which small teams of contestants must display their musicality and ability to communicate professionally by choreographing a performance to a randomly selected piece of music — this challenge is notable as being the only time competitors are asked to choreograph themselves, aside from solos.
The Las Vegas Valley is a major metropolitan area in the southern part of the U.S. state of Nevada. The state's largest urban agglomeration, it is part of the Las Vegas MSA. The Valley is largely defined by the Las Vegas Valley landform, a 600 sq mi (1,600 km2) basin area surrounded by mountains to the north, south, east and west of the metropolitan area. The Valley is home to the three largest incorporated cities in Nevada: Las Vegas, Henderson and North Las Vegas. Five unincorporated towns governed by the Clark County government are part of the Las Vegas Township and constitute the largest community in the state of Nevada.
The callbacks are often collectively portrayed as one of the most exhausting and stressful stages of the competition; each successive round sees cuts in which a significant portion of the remaining dancers are eliminated from competition and dancers are given a limited amount of time to adapt to styles they are sometimes wholly unfamiliar with while being physically taxed by the rapid progression of rounds and a limited amount of rest. At the end of this process, usually less than 40 competitors remain in a pool that final contestants are chosen from. Most seasons have featured 20 "top" finalists for the competition portion of the show, but season 1 was represented by a Top 16, season 7 saw a Top 11, and seasons 13 through 15 have featured a Top 10.
Following the finalist selection process, the show transitions into its regular competition phase, which lasts the rest of the season. The competition stage is typically divided into eight weeks, generally with two contestants eliminated per week. Dancers are paired-up into male-female couples that will sometimes stay paired for much of the remaining competition if neither is eliminated (since season 7, competitors have also been occasionally paired with "All Stars", returning dancers from previous seasons who partner with the contestant dancers, but who are not themselves competing). These couples perform 1–2 duets per week in different styles which are typically, but not always, randomly selected. These duets, as with all non-solo performances at this stage in the competition, are choreographed by professional choreographers. Prior to most duet performances, a video packet of clips of the couple preparing to perform the routine is shown; these packets are intended not only to demonstrate the couple's efforts to master the routine, but also to give glimpses of the personalities and personal histories of the dancers as well as insights from the choreographer as to the thematic, narrative, and artistic intentions of the piece. Following each duet performance, the week's panel of judges gives critical feedback, often emphasizing the two key areas of technique and performance value. Duets and their accompanying video packets and critiques typically take up the majority of an episode but are often supplemented by solos, group numbers, and occasionally guest dance or musical performances.
In season 1, each week of the competition featured a single episode, with dancers' eliminations pre-recorded the week they occurred and then broadcast at the beginning of the next week's episode. In seasons 2-8, the show's weekly format was split between two episodes, a performance episode, as described above, and a results show which revealed the outcome of the at-home-viewer voting following the performance show of the same week. More recent seasons have returned to a one-show-per-week format, but with each week's episode typically reflecting the results of voting for the previous week's performances, with these results revealed at the end of the following week's performances. Depending on the stage of the competition, each week may feature eliminations which are based entirely on an at-home viewer vote, or the vote may simply create a group of bottom dancers from which the show's judges will select the final eliminations. Voting has also varied by season (and often within seasons) with regard to whether the voter selected individuals or couples. Following the announcement of their elimination, dancers are typically given a brief send-off via a video montage. Each competitive episode ends with a quick recap of the night's routines accompanied by voting prompts. Episodes typically last around two hours, commercials included. There has also been variability in how long couples are kept together and how the at-home-viewer votes are balanced against judge decisions, though ultimately at some point in every season, the judges give up their power to save dancers and eliminations are determined exclusively by viewer votes. The total number of hours shown in a given week during the performance phase of the competition has varied from two to four hours.
A season's finale episode is often the most elaborately produced show of a season and features the last performances of the competitors, encore performances of many of the season's most acclaimed routines, guest dancers (including returning past season competitors and cast-members from other international versions of the franchise), musical performances, and multiple video packets chronicling the course of the season's events, all culminating in the announcement of the winner of the competition. Most seasons have featured a single winner, while seasons 9 and 10 featured both a male and female winner. Following the closure of the season, the Top Ten dancers often go on tour for several months, performing hit routines from the season among other performances.
A typical season of So You Think You Can Dance is presided over by a panel of 2–4 permanent judges, supplemented by occasional guest judges, with the panel sometimes ballooning up to twice or more its normal size for callback episodes or season finales. Executive producer and co-creator of the show Nigel Lythgoe is the only judge to have sat as a permanent member of the panel across all seasons, although ballroom specialist Mary Murphy has also sat as a permanent member of the panel in seven seasons. Other permanent judges have included film director and choreographer Adam Shankman, contemporary choreographer Mia Michaels, pop music and dance icon Paula Abdul, noted youth dancer Maddie Ziegler, music and dance artist Jason Derulo, and successful show alumni and season 4 runner-up Stephen "tWitch" Boss.
Mary Ann Murphy is an American ballroom dance champion, accredited dance judge, and a judge and choreographer on the Fox dance competition-reality show So You Think You Can Dance.
Adam Michael Shankman is an American film director, producer, dancer, author, actor, and choreographer. He was a judge on seasons 3-10 of the television program So You Think You Can Dance He began his professional career in musical theater, and was a dancer in music videos for Paula Abdul and Janet Jackson. Shankman has choreographed dozens of films and directed several feature-length films, including A Walk to Remember, Bringing Down the House, The Pacifier and the 2007 remake of Hairspray.
Mia Michaels is an American choreographer and judge on the television show So You Think You Can Dance. She has worked with Tom Cruise, Celine Dion, Gloria Estefan, Madonna, Ricky Martin, Prince, and Catherine Zeta-Jones. In 2005 she choreographed Cirque du Soleil's world tour Delirium and Celine Dion's A New Day, for which she received an Emmy Award nomination. In 2007 she won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Choreography for her routine on "Calling You" during season two of So You Think You Can Dance. She won another Emmy Award during season five in 2010. She was a judge during season 7 with Adam Shankman and Nigel Lythgoe. She choreographed the dance sequence for "Get Happy" in the episode "Bombshells" of the television series House.
Many earlier seasons frequently featured guest judges in occasional episodes, though this practice has become increasingly rare. These guest judge positions have typically been filled by choreographers who work regularly on the show (who in rare cases may also be former contestants themselves) and by iconic names from the entertainment industry. Guest judges for the show have included: Debbie Allen, Christina Applegate, Robin Antin, Toni Basil, Cicely Bradley, Kristin Chenoweth, Misty Copeland, Alex Da Silva, Ellen DeGeneres, Tyce Diorio, Joey Dowling, Napoleon and Tabitha D'umo, Carmen Electra, Brian Friedman, Jean-Marc Généreux, Jason Gilkison, Neil Patrick Harris, Hi-Hat, Katie Holmes, Dan Karaty, Lady Gaga, Carly Rae Jepsen, Lil' C, Rob Marshall, Mandy Moore, Megan Mullally, Kenny Ortega, Toni Redpath, Debbie Reynolds, Wade Robson, Doriana Sanchez, Shane Sparks, Sonya Tayeh, Olisa Thompson, Stacey Tookey, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, and Travis Wall.
Season | Dates | Host | Permanent judges | Separate results show? | Dancer showcase episode?† | Number of finalists in first live show | Number of contestants eliminated per week | Number of contestants remaining in finale | Number of winners | All-Stars included in format? | Point at which judge eliminations end | Voting for individual dancers starting with |
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1 | Summer 2005 (July–October) | Lauren Sánchez | Nigel Lythgoe | No | No | 16 | 2 | 4 | 1 | No | Top 8 | Top 8 |
2 | Summer 2006 (May–August) | Cat Deeley | Yes | No | 20 | 2 | 4 | 1 | No | Top 10 | Top 10 | |
3 | Summer 2007 (May–August) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy | Yes | No | 20 | 2 | 4 | 1 | No | Top 10 | Top 10 | |
4 | Summer 2008 (May–August) | Yes | No | 20 | 2 | 4 | 1 | No | Top 10 | Top 10 | ||
5 | Summer 2009 (May–August) | Yes | No | 20 | 2 | 4 | 1 | No | Top 10 | Top 10 | ||
6 | Fall 2009 (September–December) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy Adam Shankman | Yes | Yes | 20 | 2 | 6 | 1 | No | Top 10 | Top 10 | |
7 | Summer 2010 (May–August) | Nigel Lythgoe Adam Shankman Mia Michaels | Yes | Yes | 11 | 1* | 3 | 1 | Yes | Top 4 | Top 11 | |
8 | Summer 2011 (May–August) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy | Yes | Yes‡ | 20 | 2* | 4 | 1 | Yes | Top 6 | Top 10 | |
9 | Summer 2012 (May–September) | No | Yes‡ | 20 | 2* | 4 | 2 | Yes | Top 6 | Top 20 | ||
10 | Summer 2013 (May–September) | No | Yes‡ | 20 | 2 | 4 | 2 | Yes | Top 6 | Top 20 | ||
11 | Summer 2014 (May–September) | No | Yes | 20 | 2 | 4 | 1 | Yes | Top 10 | Top 20 | ||
12 | Summer 2015 (June–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Paula Abdul Jason Derulo | No | Yes | 20 | 2⁂ | 4 | 1 | Yes | Top 14 | Top 20 | |
13° | Summer 2016 (May–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Paula Abdul Jason Derulo Maddie Ziegler | No | Yes | 10 | 1** | 4 | 1 | Yes | Top 8 | Top 10 | |
14 | Summer 2017 (June–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy Vanessa Hudgens | No | No | 10 | 1 | 4 | 1 | Yes | Top 6 | Top 10 | |
15 | Summer 2018 (June–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy Vanessa Hudgens Stephen "tWitch" Boss | No | No | 10 | 2 | 4 | 1 | Yes | Top 8 | Top 10 | |
16 | Summer 2019 (June—September) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy Laurieann Gibson Dominic "D-Trix" Sandoval | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA |
† From its inception in season 6 and through season 10, the dancer showcase episode represented a non-competitive round with no viewer voting or subsequent eliminations, followed the next week by the first competitive round. In season 11 it was the first episode of the season upon which viewers voted.
‡ For seasons 8-10, the dancer showcase episode was combined with the Top 20 reveal episode, with groups of the dancers performing immediately after being revealed as finalists.
* In both seasons 7 and 8, the judges decided not to eliminate any dancers on the occasion of one results show; in both cases this event was followed by the elimination of double the normal number of contestants the following week. Similarly, for format reasons, season 9 featured two shows with double eliminations, with four dancers eliminated instead of two for each of these shows.
⁂ Unlike all previous seasons, season 12 featured the elimination of one "street" dancer and one "stage" dancer each week, as opposed to one female and one male contestant (as in all previous seasons which eliminated two dancers per week).
°Season 13 (during which the show was subtitled 'The Next Generation') featured competitors between the ages of 9 (or as young as 8 at time of application) and 14.
**In season 13, the judges held the audition rounds, but the all-stars, rather than the judges, made the eliminations during Academy week to choose the top 10. After this, in episodes 7 and 8, from the two contestants with the lowest viewer votes, the judges made the elimination. In episode 9, the two contestants with the lowest viewer votes were both eliminated, and in episodes 10 and 11, the contestant with the lowest viewer votes was eliminated.
Over the course of its fifteen seasons, So You Think You Can Dance has featured dozens of distinct dance styles in its choreographed routines. Most of these styles fall into four categories that are regularly showcased and can be found in almost every performance episode: western contemporary/classical styles, ballroom styles, hip-hop/street styles, and Jazz and its related styles. Various other forms of dance that do not especially fall into these broad categories are seen as well, but not as regularly. The following styles have all been seen in a choreographed duet or group routine; styles featured only in auditions or solos are not listed.
Routines from the classically derived style of contemporary dance are the most common dances seen on the show, being seen in every performance episode of the series (and typically at least twice per episode). While contemporary, lyrical, and modern dance are typically considered three separate (if overlapping) styles of dance, the practice on So You Think You Can Dance has been to refer to all routines in this area as "contemporary", except in the first season where the label "lyrical" was used for the same purpose. Ballet routines occur much more rarely, at a rate of one or two per season since their introduction in the fourth season.
Genre | Styles |
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Western Classical styles | |
Contemporary, Lyrical, Modern, Ballet/Pas de Deux | |
Choreographers | |
Dee Caspary, Tessandra Chavez, Sean Cheesman, Thordal Christensen, Tyce Diorio, Joey Dowling, Talia Favia, Justin Giles, Mandy Moore, Mia Michaels, Lindsay Nelko, Dwight Rhoden, Desmond Richardson, Jaci Royal, Garry Stewart, Sonya Tayeh, Stacey Tookey, Travis Wall, Tovaris Wilson, Keith Young |
Hip-hop routines are also present in every performance episode. While these routines frequently feature elements from many different subgenres of hip-hop (locking and popping, for example) and various "street" styles (such as breaking), they are typically all labelled under the umbrella term of hip-hop. An exception is the now frequently featured lyrical hip-hop , which is unique amongst all the styles on SYTYCD in that it is the only one that is held to have become a known distinct style at least in-part as a result of the show; the style is widely attributed to regular show choreographers Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo and the term itself to judge Adam Shankman. These two broad categories are occasionally supplemented by routines which are labelled as krump, breakdancing, waacking, and stepping.
Genre | Styles |
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Street and Contemporary Club Styles | |
Hip-hop (umbrella term for all Popping, Locking, and New Style/Commercial Hip-Hop styles), Lyrical Hip-hop, Breaking, Krump, Stepping, Waacking, Vogue | |
Choreographers | |
Cicely Bradley, Luther Brown, Tessandra Chavez, Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo, Dan Karaty, Marty Kudelka, Lil' C, Keone and Mari Madrid, Chuck Maldonado, Todd Sams, Christopher Scott, Dave Scott, Shane Sparks, Jamal Sims, Olisa Thompson, Dana Wilson, Pharside and Phoenix, Luam, Mark Kanemura |
Ballroom styles are also seen regularly in every performance episode. These routines may use the movement of traditional International Standard forms or lean toward American competitive styles; other routines may use street or regional variants, or may combine elements of different variations.
Genre | Styles |
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Standard or Smooth Ballroom styles | |
Foxtrot, Tango, Argentine Tango, Quickstep, Waltz (including Smooth Waltz, Slow Waltz, American Slow Waltz, and Viennese Waltz variants) | |
Latin/Rhythm Ballroom styles | |
Bolero, Cha-Cha-Cha, Jive, American Jive, Mambo, Paso Doble, Rumba, Salsa, Street Salsa, Samba, African Samba | |
Choreographers | |
Mark Ballas, Leonardo Barrionuevo, Sharna Burgess, Dmitry Chaplin, Valentin Chmerkovskiy, Alex Da Silva, Sasha Farber, Anya Garnis, Jean-Marc Généreux, Jason Gilkison, Hunter Johnson, Jenna Johnson, Pasha Kovalev, Melanie LaPatin, Miriam Larici, Liz Lira, Michael Mead, Tony Meredith, Tomas Mielnicki, Ron Montez, France Mousseau, Mary Murphy, Jonathan Platero, Oksana Platero, Toni Redpath, Jonathan Roberts, Elena Samodanova, Fabian Sanchez, Edward Simon, Emma Slater, Heather Smith, J.T. Thomas, Louis Van Amstel, Gustavo Vargas, Glenn Weiss |
Jazz is featured in nearly all performance episodes. While these routines are typically labelled simply "Jazz", the genre is notable as being one of the most fusional featured on the show and various style combinations and sub-categories have been referenced. Descended from Jazz but treated as a separate genre on SYTYCD, "Broadway" is analogous to the label "Musical Theater" outside the U.S.
Genre | Styles |
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Jazz Styles | |
Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Modern Jazz, Lyrical Jazz, African Jazz, Jazz-Funk, Latin Jazz, Pop-Jazz/Pop | |
Broadway/Musical Theatre Styles | |
Broadway, Burlesque, Can-Can, Tap | |
Choreographers | |
Chloe Arnold, Al Blackstone, Andy Blankenbuehler, Warren Carlyle, Sean Cheesman, Tyce Diorio, Joey Dowling, Brian Friedman, Laurie Ann Gibson, Savion Glover, Derick K. Grant, Mark Kanemura, Charles Klapow, Ray Leeper, Spencer Liff, Mandy Moore, Anthony Morigerato, Amanda Robson, Wade Robson, Sonya Tayeh, Travis Wall, Nick Young |
These dance styles are featured less frequently than their ballroom relatives, but have been seen intermittently since the first season.
Genre | Styles |
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American Social / Traditional Club Styles | |
Charleston, Country-Western Two-Step, Disco, Go-Go, Hustle, Lindy Hop, Rock n' Roll, Swing, West Coast Swing | |
Choreographers | |
Ronnie DeBenedetta, Carla Heiney, Brandi Tobais, Travis Payne, Doriana Sanchez, Benji Schwimmer, Kristen Sorci, Maria Torres, Nick Williams |
In addition to the broad categories above, many more styles that are less common in the U.S. are sometimes featured. Most of these are seen only once, but the Bollywood style has been featured several times per season since the fourth season.
Genre | Styles |
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Regional/Traditional Styles | |
Bollywood, African, Capoeira, Kalinka, Malevos, Tahitian, Tropak | |
Choreographers | |
Lilia Babenko, Leonardo Barrionuevo, Nakul Dev Mahajan, Miriam Larici, Tiana Liufau, Youri Nelzine. |
Season | Winner | Runner-up | Third place | Fourth place | Fifth place | Sixth place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nick Lazzarini (Contemporary Jazz) | Melody Lacayanga (Contemporary) | Jamile McGee (Popping) | Ashlé Dawson (Jazz) | ||
2 | Benji Schwimmer (Swing/Latin) | Travis Wall (Contemporary) | Donyelle Jones (Jazz/Hip-Hop) | Heidi Groskreutz (Ballroom) | ||
3 | Sabra Johnson (Contemporary) | Danny Tidwell (Contemporary) | Neil Haskell (Contemporary) | Lacey Schwimmer (Swing/Latin) | ||
4 | Joshua Allen (Hip-Hop) | Stephen "Twitch" Boss (Hip-Hop) | Katee Shean (Contemporary) | Courtney Galiano (Contemporary) | ||
5 | Jeanine Mason (Contemporary) | Brandon Bryant (Contemporary) | Evan Kasprzak (Broadway) | Kayla Radomski (Contemporary) | ||
6 | Russell Ferguson (Krump) | Jakob Karr (Contemporary) | Kathryn McCormick (Contemporary) | Ellenore Scott (Jazz) | Ashleigh Di Lello (Ballroom) | Ryan Di Lello (Ballroom) |
7 | Lauren Froderman (Contemporary) | Kent Boyd (Contemporary Jazz) | Robert Roldan (Contemporary Jazz) | |||
8 | Melanie Moore (Contemporary) | Sasha Mallory (African Jazz) | Marko Germar (Contemporary Jazz) | Tadd Gadduang (Breakdance) | ||
Female winner | Male winner | Female runner-up | Male runner-up | |||
9 | Eliana Girard (Ballet) | Chehon Wespi-Tschopp (Ballet) | Tiffany Maher (Jazz) | Cyrus "Glitch" Spencer (Popping/Animation) | ||
10 | Amy Yakima (Jazz) | Du-Shaunt "Fik-Shun" Stegall (Hip-Hop) | Jasmine Harper (Contemporary) | Aaron Turner (Tap) | ||
Winner | Runner-up | Third place | Fourth place | |||
11 | Ricky Ubeda (Contemporary) | Valerie Rockey (Tap) | Jessica Richens (Jazz) | Zack Everhart, Jr. (Tap) | ||
12 | Gaby Diaz (Tap) | Jaja Vaňková (Animation/Krump) | Virgil Gadson (Hip-Hop) | Hailee Payne (Jazz) | ||
13 | Leon "Kida" Burns (Hip-Hop) | J.T. Church (Jazz) | Tate McRae (Contemporary/Ballet) | Emma Hellenkamp (Tap) | ||
14 | Lex Ishimoto (Contemporary Hip-Hop) | Koine Iwasaki (Contemporary) | Taylor Sieve (Contemporary) | Kiki Nyemchek (Latin Ballroom) | ||
15 | Hannahlei Cabanilla (Contemporary) | Jensen Arnold (Latin ballroom) | Genessy Castillo (Contemporary) | Slavik Pustovoytov (Hip Hop/Animation) |
On September 2, 2009, as prelude to season 6, a special show aired featuring judge picks for the top 15 routines from the first five seasons. At the end of the show, show creator and judge Nigel Lythgoe presented his favorite performance, a contemporary piece choreographed by Tyce Diorio and performed by Melissa Sandvig and Ade Obayomi.
In March 2014, Chinese television station CCTV broadcast a promotional episode in which notable all-star dancers from the U.S. and Chinese versions of So You Think You Can Dance competed directly against one-another as teams. Titled Zhōngměi Wǔ Lín Guànjūn Duìkàngsài - Super Dancer Born Tonight, the show was shot in Las Vegas but never aired on U.S. television.
So You Think You Can Dance premiered with over 10 million viewers in 2005. For season 1, it was the No. 1 summer show on television. However, when NBC's America's Got Talent premiered in the summer of 2006, it took the title of "#1 summer show" and, over the following few years, broadened its lead. In summer 2009, SYTYCD premiered strong with a 3.4 rating in its target demographic, although with the start of America's Got Talent roughly a month later in the same timeslot, Dance fell to No. 4 on the ratings board. It continued to lose viewers throughout the summer of 2009 and ended up with an average of approximately 8 million viewers. Fox then moved SYTYCD to its fall 2009 schedule where its ratings continued to decline; hitting an all-time series low of 4.6 million viewers for a "special" episode hosted by Nigel Lythgoe on September 2, 2009. The move to the fall was short-lived. After dropping to an average of 6 million viewers, Fox moved SYTYCD back to the summer in 2010. With Mia Michaels replacing Mary Murphy and former contestants termed as "All-Stars" being used as partners, the ratings for Dance continued to slide to all-time series lows; dropping to just 5.6 million viewers on July 15, 2010. For season 7, So You Think You Can Dance averaged just over 5 million viewers. After season 7, Mia Michaels was replaced on the judge's panel by returning personality Mary Murphy. The change appeared to have little effect on the ratings, and the show continued to average just over five million viewers per episode in 2011's season 8. Season 9 saw a slight uptick in ratings early on, with each of the season's first five episodes garnering between six and seven million viewers, but the rise was short-lived and the show's ratings hit a new low of 4.16 million viewers on August 29, 2012. Season 10 maintained similar numbers, averaging about 4 million viewers per episode in 2013, with a 4.3 million viewership for the last episode of the season, an all-time series low for a finale. [2]
In April 2014, Nigel Lythgoe appealed on Twitter to fans to share information about the show ahead of the 11th season's May premiere in an attempt to augment the show's ratings for the upcoming season and bolster its chances of renewal thereafter. [2] [3] The show was renewed for a 12th season, but ratings continued to decline, with an average of around 3.5 million viewers per show. FOX renewed the show for a 13th season, but with a drastically re-worked format focused on child dancers. Ratings declined further for the new version, with only five episodes breaking the 3 million viewer mark; the finale saw a series low viewership of just 2.27 million viewers.[ citation needed ]
In 2016, a New York Times study of the 50 TV shows with the most Facebook Likes found that "in general", Dance "is more popular in cities, though it hits peak popularity in Utah". [4]
Season | First aired | Last aired | TV season | Timeslot (ET) | Season viewers | Season ranking | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Viewers (in millions) | Date | Viewers (in millions) | |||||
1 [5] | July 20, 2005 | 10.30 | Final Performances: September 28, 2005 | 7.30 | 2005 | Wednesday 8:00 pm | ||
Season Finale: October 5, 2005 | 8.20 | |||||||
2 [6] | May 25, 2006 | 10.70 | Final Performances: August 9, 2006 | 10.10 | 2006 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (performance) | ||
Season Finale: August 16, 2006 | 10.70 | Thursday 9:00 pm (results) | ||||||
3 [7] | May 24, 2007 | 9.50 | Final Performances: August 15, 2007 | 8.70 | 2007 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (performance) | ||
Season Finale: August 16, 2007 | 9.60 | Thursday 9:00 pm (results) | ||||||
4 [8] | May 22, 2008 | 6.70 | Final Performances: August 6, 2008 | 9.00 | 2008 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (performance) | ||
Season Finale: August 7, 2008 | 9.70 | Thursday 9:00 pm (results) | ||||||
5 [9] | May 21, 2009 | 8.80 | Final Performances: August 5, 2009 | 7.80 | 2009 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (performance) | ||
Season Finale: August 6, 2009 | 9.60 | Thursday 9:00 pm (results) | ||||||
6 [10] | September 9, 2009 | 6.60 | Final Performances: | 2009-10 | Tuesday 8:00 pm (performance) | |||
Season Finale: December 16, 2009 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (results) | |||||||
7 [11] | May 27, 2010 | 8.20 | Final Performances: | 2010 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (performance) | |||
Season Finale: August 12, 2010 | Thursday 9:00 pm (results) | |||||||
8 [12] | May 26, 2011 | 9.50 | Final Performances: | 2011 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (performance) | |||
Season Finale: August 11, 2011 | Thursday 8:00 pm (results) | |||||||
9 [13] [14] [15] | May 24, 2012 | 6.26 | Final Performances: September 11, 2012 | 4.33 | 2012 | Wednesday 8:00 pm | ||
Season Finale: September 18, 2012 | 4.71 | |||||||
10 [16] [17] [18] | May 14, 2013 | 5.12 | Final Performances: September 3, 2013 | 4.17 | 2013 | Tuesday 8:00 pm | ||
Season Finale: September 10, 2013 | 4.37 | |||||||
11 [19] [20] [21] | May 28, 2014 | 5.33 | Final Performances: August 27, 2014 | 3.68 | 2014 | Wednesday 8:00 pm | ||
Season Finale: September 3, 2014 | 4.12 | |||||||
12 [22] [23] [24] | June 1, 2015 | 4.03 | Final Performances: September 7, 2015 | 2.64 | 2015 | Monday 8:00 pm | ||
Season Finale: September 14, 2015 | 2.44 | |||||||
13 [25] [26] [27] | May 30, 2016 | 3.75 | Final Performances: September 5, 2016 | 2.37 | 2016 | |||
Season Finale: September 12, 2016 | 2.27 | |||||||
14 [28] [29] [30] | June 12, 2017 | 3.56 | Final Performances: September 18, 2017 | 2.14 | 2017 | |||
Season Finale: September 25, 2017 | 1.91 | |||||||
15 [31] [32] [33] | June 6, 2018 | 3.25 | Final Performances: September 3, 2018 | 2.43 | 2018 | |||
Season Finale: September 10, 2018 | 2.60 | |||||||
Dance competition had been a part of American television for decades before the premiere of So You Think You Can Dance, but usually in the form of all-around talent searches (such as Star Search , Soul Train , or Showtime at the Apollo ). However, a season-long American Idol-like talent-search show with a sole focus on dance had never been broadcast on American network television. Producers and judges associated with the show have stated on numerous occasions, both within broadcasts of the show and in interviews, that the series was meant to rejuvenate the visibility and appreciation of dance as an art form in the U.S. and to give exposure to struggling dancers. Series judge Mary Murphy says, for example, "Of course you hope you can make a living at it, because you don't want to give up on something that you do, but the honest truth is most dancers have to carry one or two jobs and dance as much as they can on the side -- it's a very lucky dancer who gets a full scholarship." [34] A number of dance-themed competition shows have been produced for American television since the premiere of So You Think You Can Dance, including America's Best Dance Crew , Superstars of Dance , Live to Dance , and World of Dance .
In 2009, Lythgoe came together with fellow SYTYCD judge Adam Shankman as well as Katie Holmes, Carrie Ann Inaba, and others in the dance entertainment industry, in an effort to launch The Dizzyfeet Foundation, with the aim of providing scholarships and training to young dancers of limited means. [35] The foundation has been referenced sporadically on the show since. In 2010, Lythgoe, with the assistance of other SYTYCD personalities and long-time healthy lifestyles proponent Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, was successful in getting another of his dance-oriented concepts realized—an official National Dance Day, held now annually on the last Saturday of July, to promote fitness through movement. [36] This national dance day has been celebrated annually by the show since. [37]
Before the end of 2005, the year the series first premiered, its format had already been licensed for the first of a number foreign adaptations. To date, the resulting So You Think You Can Dance franchise has produced 28 shows representing 39 different countries and comprising more than 90 individual seasons. These adaptations have aired in Armenia, Australia, Belgium, Canada, China, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Iraq, India, Israel, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Lithuania, Malaysia, Morocco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Palestinian Territories, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, South Africa, Sudan, Sweden, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom and Vietnam.
Emmy Awards and nominations | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Result | Category | Recipient(s)/ Choreographer(s) | Style | Music |
2007 | Won [a] | Outstanding Choreography | Wade Robson | Pop-Jazz | "Ramalama (Bang Bang)"—Róisín Murphy |
Mia Michaels | Contemporary | "Calling You"—Celine Dion | |||
2008 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Wade Robson | Jazz | Hummingbird and Flower/"The Chairman's Waltz" from Memoirs of a Geisha |
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Jazz | Table/"Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)"—Eurythmics | ||
Nominated | Shane Sparks | Hip-hop | Transformers/"Fuego"—Pitbull | ||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic) | ||||
2009 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Tyce Diorio | Contemporary | Adam and Eve/"Silence" from Unfaithful |
Nominated | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo | Hip-hop | "Bleeding Love"—Leona Lewis | ||
Nominated | Mia Michaels | Contemporary | "Mercy"—Duffy | ||
Nominated | Dmitry Chaplin | Argentine tango | "A Los Amigos" from Forever Tango | ||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic) | ||||
Won | Outstanding Costumes For A Variety/Music Program Or A Special | Soyon An | |||
2010 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Mia Michaels | Contemporary | "Koop Island Blues"—Koop feat Ane Brun |
Contemporary | Addiction/"Gravity"—Sara Bareilles | ||||
Contemporary | "One" from A Chorus Line | ||||
Nominated | Stacey Tookey | Contemporary | Fear/"Two Steps Away"—Patti LaBelle | ||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic) | ||||
Won | Outstanding Costumes For A Variety/Music Program Or A Special | Soyon An Graine O'Sullivan | |||
2011 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo | Hip-Hop | "Scars"—Basement Jaxx ft. Kelis, Meleka, and Chipmunk |
Lyrical Hip-Hop | "Fallin'"—Alicia Keys | ||||
Hip-Hop | "Outta Your Mind" (District 78 Mix)—Lil Jon and LMFAO | ||||
Won | Mia Michaels | Contemporary | Alice in Mia-Land/"Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic"—Sting | ||
Contemporary | "When We Dance"—Sting | ||||
Contemporary | "This Bitter Earth/On the Nature of Twilight"—Max Richter and Dinah Washington | ||||
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Pop-Jazz | "Oh Yeah"—Yello | ||
Jazz | "Boogie Shoes"—KC & the Sunshine Band | ||||
Contemporary | "I Surrender"—Celine Dion | ||||
Nominated | Stacey Tookey | Contemporary | "Mad World" (Alternate Version)—Michael Andrews ft. Gary Jules | ||
Contemporary | "Sundrenched World" (Live Session)—Joshua Radin | ||||
Contemporary | "Heaven is a Place on Earth"—Katie Thompson | ||||
Nominated | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Collide" (Acoustic Version)—Howie Day | ||
Contemporary | "How It Ends"—DeVotchKa | ||||
Contemporary | "Fix You"—Coldplay | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition Program | Cat Deeley | |||
Won | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Direction for a Variety, Music, or Comedy Series | Robert Barnhart Pete Radice Patrick Boozer Matt Firestone | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality-Competition Program | Producers | |||
2012 | Nominated | Outstanding Choreography | Stacey Tookey | Contemporary | "In This Shirt"—The Irrepressibles |
Contemporary | "Turning Tables"—Adele | ||||
Contemporary | "Heart Asks Pleasure First"—Ahn Trio | ||||
Nominated | Christopher Scott | Hip-hop | "Misty Blue"—Dorothy Moore | ||
Hip-hop/Contemporary | "Velocity"—Nathan Lanier | ||||
Nominated | Spencer Liff | Broadway | "Whatever Lola Wants"—Ella Fitzgerald | ||
Broadway | "Please Mr. Jailer"—Rachel Sweet | ||||
Broadway | "(Where Do I Begin) Love Story (Away Team Remix)"—Shirley Bassey | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition Program | Cat Deeley | |||
Won | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Direction for a Variety Series | Robert Barnhart Matt Firestone Pete Radice Patrick Boozer | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality-Competition Program | Producers | |||
2013 | Nominated | Outstanding Choreography | Sonya Tayeh | Contemporary | "Possibly Maybe"—Björk |
Contemporary | "Turning Page"—Sleeping At Last | ||||
Jazz | "Sail"—Awolnation | ||||
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Contemporary | "The Power of Love"—Celine Dion | ||
Contemporary | "Wild Horses"—Charlotte Martin | ||||
Nominated | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo | Jazz/Hip-hop | "The Circle of Life/Nants Ingonyama (District 78 Remix) from The Lion King"—Ella Fitzgerald | ||
Jazz [38] | "The Lovecats"—The Cure | ||||
Jazz | The Beautiful People (District 78 remix)"—Marilyn Manson | ||||
Nominated | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Where the Light Gets In"—Sennen | ||
Contemporary | "Without You"—Harry Nilsson | ||||
Contemporary | "Unchained Melody"—The Righteous Brothers | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition Program | Cat Deeley | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Direction for a Variety Series | Robert Barnhart Matt Firestone Pete Radice Patrick Boozer | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality-Competition Program | Producers | |||
2014 | Nominated | Outstanding Choreography | Christopher Scott | Hip-hop | "Trigger (Original Mix)"—Kezwik ft. Mel Presson |
Jazz | "Sand"—Nathan Lanier ft. Karen Whipple | ||||
Contemporary | "The Gravel Road" from The Village (Score from the Motion Picture) | ||||
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Contemporary | "I Can't Make You Love Me"—Mark Masri | ||
Jazz | "Feeling Good"—Jennifer Hudson | ||||
Contemporary | "Edge of Glory (Live from a Very Gaga Thanksgiving)"—Lady Gaga | ||||
Won | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo | Hip-hop | "Gold Rush"—Clinton Sparks ft. 2 Chainz, Macklemore, & D.A. | ||
Hip-Hop | "Run the World (Girls) (Nappytabs Remix)"—Beyoncé | ||||
Hip-Hop | "Puttin' On the Ritz"—Herb Alpert ft. Lani Hall | ||||
Nominated | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Hangin' By a Thread"—Jann Arden | ||
Contemporary | "Medicine"—Daughter | ||||
Contemporary | "Wicked Game (Live at Kilkenny Arts Festival, Ireland 2011)"—James Vincent McMorrow | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition Program | Cat Deeley | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic) | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality-Competition Program | Producers | |||
2015 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Wave"—Beck |
Contemporary | "When I Go"—Over the Rhine | ||||
Contemporary | "Wind Beneath My Wings"—RyanDan | ||||
Nominated | Sonya Tayeh | Contemporary | "Vow"—Meredith Monk | ||
Contemporary | "So Broken (Live)"—Björk | ||||
Contemporary | "Europe, After The Rain" —Max Richter | ||||
Nominated | Spencer Liff | Broadway | "Hernando's Hideaway"—Ella Fitzgerald | ||
Broadway | "I've Got the World on a String"—Frank Sinatra | ||||
Broadway | "Maybe This Time"—Liza Minnelli | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition Program | Cat Deeley | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Direction for a Variety Series | Robert Barnhart Matt Firestone Patrick Boozer Pete Radice | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Hairstyling for a Multi-Camera Series Or Special | Sallie Nicole Sean Smith Dean Banowetz Ralph Abalos Shawn Finch Melissa Jaqua | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup for a Multi-Camera Series or Special | Heather Cummings Marie DelPrete Amy Harmon Tyson Fountaine Adam Christopher | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality Competition Program | Producers | |||
2016 | Nominated | Outstanding Choreography | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Beautiful Friends"—Helen Money |
Contemporary | "November"—Max Richter | ||||
Contemporary | "Gimme All Your Love"—Alabama Shakes | ||||
Nominated | Anthony Morigerato | Tap | "Dibidy Dop (Swing Mix)"—Club Des Belugas feat. Brenda Boykin | ||
Nominated | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Direction for a Variety Series | Robert Barnhart Matt Firestone Patrick Boozer Pete Radice | |||
2017 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "The Mirror"—Alexandre Desplat |
Contemporary | "Send in the Clowns"—Sarah Vaughan and the Count Basie Orchestra | ||||
Contemporary | "She Used to be Mine"—Sara Bareilles | ||||
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Contemporary | "Unsteady (Erich Lee Gravity Remix)"—X Ambassadors | ||
Contemporary | "This is Not the End"—Clare Maguire | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Direction for a Variety Series | Robert Barnhart Matt Firestone Patrick Boozer Pete Radice | |||
|
Year | Result | Category |
---|---|---|
2006 | Won | Choice TV: Breakout Show |
Choice Summer Series | ||
2007 | Nominated | Choice Summer TV Show |
2008 | Nominated | Choice Summer TV Show |
Choice TV: Reality Dance | ||
2010 | Nominated | Choice Personality: Cat Deeley |
Choice Summer TV Show | ||
2018 | Won | Choice Summer TV Show |
Similar dance competition TV shows:
Dancing with the Stars is an American dance competition television series that premiered on June 1, 2005, on ABC. It is the US version of the UK series Strictly Come Dancing. The show is hosted by Tom Bergeron, alongside Erin Andrews, who became co-host in season eighteen. Lisa Canning was co-host in the first season, Samantha Harris co-hosted seasons two through nine and Brooke Burke-Charvet in seasons ten through seventeen. The twenty-seventh season premiered on September 24, 2018, and its spin-off Dancing with the Stars: Juniors premiered on October 7, 2018. Dancing with the Stars will not premiere for a spring season in 2019, but is set to return in the fall of 2019.
Travis Michael Wall is an American dancer, dance instructor, and choreographer specializing in contemporary dance and jazz dance. He is best known for his 2006 appearance as a competitor on the second season of the television show So You Think You Can Dance, which airs on the Fox Network. As of 2012, he was a choreographer for the show. In 2011, he was nominated for an Emmy for his work on the show's seventh season and won the award for his work in Season 11. In 2012, he starred in the Oxygen reality show All The Right Moves, where he, Teddy Forance, Nick Lazzarini and Kyle Robinson launched their own dance company called Shaping Sound.
So You Think You Can Dance is an American television reality program and dance competition airing on the Fox network. Season three premiered May 24, 2007.
So You Think You Can Dance is a United States television reality program and dance competition airing on the Fox Broadcasting Company network. Season four premiered on May 22, 2008, with Nigel Lythgoe and Mary Murphy returning as permanent judges and Cat Deeley returning to host. Joshua Allen was announced as the winner on August 7, 2008, the first hip-hop dancer to win the title.
So You Think You Can Dance is a dance reality show and competition aired on 8TV. Premiered on 5 April 2007, it is based on the original United States version of the same name. It has a similar premise to the American Idol series of singing competitions, with nationwide auditions leading to the discovery of the next big star.
You Can Dance: Po prostu tańcz! is a televised Polish dance competition with a format based on the American show So You Think You Can Dance. Dancers compete to win PLN 100,000, and a 3-month scholarship in dance school Broadway Dance Center and International Dance Academy in Los Angeles from season 7 on. The winners to date are : Maciek "Gleba" Florek, Artur Cieciórski, Wiola Fiuk, Ania Kapera, Jakub Jóżwiak, Dominik Olechowski, Brian Poniatowski, Mateusz Sobecko and Stefano Silvino.
Season one of So You Think You Can Dance Australia, the Australian version of the American reality dance-off series So You Think You Can Dance, is hosted by Rogue Traders vocalist Natalie Bassingthwaighte, with Jason Coleman, Matt Lee and Bonnie Lythgoe acting as the judges. The series began airing on Sunday 3 February 2008 at 7.30 pm and continued on Sundays and Mondays until the final on 27 April 2008. Jack Chambers was the inaugural winner of So You Think You Can Dance Australia 2008 taking home $200,000.
So You Think You Can Dance is a United States television reality program and dance competition airing on the Fox Broadcasting Company network. Season five premiered on May 21, 2009, with Nigel Lythgoe and Mary Murphy returning as permanent judges and Cat Deeley returning to host. Jeanine Mason was crowned America's Favorite Dancer on August 6, 2009, making her the second female to win the show. For the first time, the show moved to a new stage, but it turned out to be the last season at CBS Studios.
So You Think You Can Dance, also known as SYTYCD, is a United States television reality program and dance competition airing on the Fox Broadcasting Company network. Season six premiered on Wednesday, September 9, 2009, with Nigel Lythgoe and Mary Murphy returning as permanent judges and Cat Deeley returning to host. Season six is the first to air during the fall season, immediately following the summer airing of season five. Live shows began airing October 26 and the season finale aired on December 16. Russell Ferguson, the first krumper to make it to the Las Vegas auditions, won the title of "America's Favorite Dancer" and the $250,000 prize. Also in the finale were Jakob Karr in second place, Kathryn McCormick in third place, Ellenore Scott in fourth place, Ashleigh Di Lello in fifth place and Ryan Di Lello in sixth place.
So You Think You Can Dance is a televised dance competition and reality show that launched in the United Kingdom in January 2010 with a format based on an American show by the same name. The show was broadcast on BBC One. The presentation of the show is similar to that of the Pop Idol series of singing competitions, also created by Simon Fuller and Nigel Lythgoe. The show focuses not only on the dancers' talent, but also showcases new works by notable choreographers, crafted specifically for the dancers and the show.
So You Think You Can Dance is a United States television reality program and dance competition airing on the Fox Broadcasting Company network. Season seven premiered on May 27, 2010. In the August 12 finale, contemporary/jazz dancer Lauren Froderman was named "America's Favorite Dancer" and received the grand prize of $250,000, as well as an appearance on the cover of Dance Spirit magazine and in print advertising for Gatorade. Contemporary dancers Kent Boyd and Robert Roldan were named runner-up and third-place finisher, respectively.
So You Think You Can Dance is an American television reality program and dance competition airing on the Fox network. The show's eighth season premiered on May 26, 2011. It features the return of Mary Murphy and Nigel Lythgoe as permanent judges and Cat Deeley as host. Also returning is the selection of a Top 20 for the finals, in contrast to season 7's Top 11. Contemporary dancer Melanie Moore won the season and Sasha Mallory was the runner-up. This is the first season where both the winner and runner-up were female. DialIdol covered only the last four weeks of this season.
So You Think You Can Dance, an American television dance competition, returned for its ninth season on May 24, 2012 on FOX Television. Fox and series creator Nigel Lythgoe have each independently confirmed that the weekly results show, a staple of the series in seasons 2-8, has been cut from the show format and that only one episode will air each week for the show's ninth season. This season has marked three firsts in the series history: this season had two winners, as opposed to the single winner format used in previous seasons, a contemporary dancer was not amongst the contestants remaining in the competition in the finale, and lastly, a ballet dancer is the winner of the competition.
Thử thách cùng bước nhảy: So You Think You Can Dance is a Vietnamese televised dance competition and an entry in the international So You Think You Can Dance television franchise. The show is produced by Dong Tay Promotion Company and Endemol Shine Group under licence from 19 Entertainment, Dick Clark Productions and Conrad Sewell Productions and begins broadcasting its first season on September 15, 2012. Chí Anh from the local Dancing with the Stars is set to be a permanent judge, with additional permanent judges yet to be announced. Guest judges include Ngô Thanh Vân, broadway staff John Huy Trần, choreographer Trần Ly Ly, B-boy Việt Max, and MC Thanh Bạch. The show's winner will receive 400 million đồng and a choice between several career advancement opportunities.
So You Think You Can Dance, a televised American dance competition, began broadcast of its tenth season on May 14, 2013. It airs on the FOX Television Network and was hosted by Cat Deeley and featured returning permanent judges Nigel Lythgoe, who also serves as one of the show's executive producers, and Mary Murphy. The show featured many of the format changes instituted in the previous season, including notably a single episode per week/voting round. It was also the first season in the show's history that a tap dancer not only made it past the third week of competition, but made the finale. It is also the first season to last longer than nine weeks. Lythgoe announced in the finale that the show has been renewed for the eleventh season.
So You Think You Can Dance, an American dance competition show, returned for its eleventh season on Wednesday, May 28, 2014. The commission of an eleventh season was first announced by series creator Nigel Lythgoe on the September 10, 2013, telecast of the season 10 finale. The season again features Lythgoe, who also serves as executive producer, and ballroom expert Mary Murphy as the two permanent members of the judge's panel while Cat Deeley continues in her role as host for a tenth consecutive season.
So You Think You Can Dance, an American dance competition show, returned for its twelfth season, titled So You Think You Can Dance: Stage Vs. Street, on Monday, June 1, 2015. Seventeen episodes were broadcast on the Fox Network, including episode nine on Tuesday, July 21, 2015, which was a special celebrating the tenth anniversary of the show titled "A Decade of Dance Special Edition". The sixteen regular episodes aired each week on Mondays, rather than Wednesdays as it had been in recent previous seasons. On September 14, 2015, Gaby Diaz won the competition and made history by becoming the first tap dancer to win the title.
So You Think You Can Dance: The Next Generation is the 13th season of So You Think You Can Dance, an American dance competition show. The show premiered on Monday, May 30, 2016 in a new format featuring dancers between ages 8 to 13 at the time of their auditions. The season was broadcast on Fox in the United States, one show each week on Mondays, as it was the previous season. The top prize remained $250,000, and Cat Deeley continued as host.
So You Think You Can Dance, an American dance competition show, returned for its fifteenth season on Monday, June 4, 2018. The season's judge panel once again features series creator Nigel Lythgoe, as well as the return of ballroom expert Mary Murphy, and Vanessa Hudgens, while Stephen "tWitch" Boss is the new fourth judge during the auditions and the live shows. Cat Deeley continues in her role as host for a fourteenth consecutive season.
'That first piece we did was not hip-hop at all,' Napoleon says about Love Cats. 'Cat [Deeley, the host] introduced it as hip-hop. During dress rehearsal, we made it very clear that it’s jazz-fusion.'
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