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Crazy Legs (dancer)

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Full Name
  
Richard Colon

Role
  
Theater Actress

Name
  
Crazy Legs


Movement
  
Hip hop

Nationality
  
Puerto Rican

Known for
  
B-boying

Crazy Legs (dancer) The 39Crazy Inspiring39 Life of Richard Crazy Legs Colon

Born
  
January 1, 1966 (age 58) (
1966-01-01
)
Bronx, New York

Albums
  
Rock!, Extended Play - Single

Movies
  
Flashdance, Bouncing Cats, The Freshest Kids: A Hi, Hip Hop Shop

Similar People
  
Ken Swift, Thomas Hedley, Marine Jahan, Nabil Elderkin, Adrian Lyne

Last dance battle for crazy legs


Richard Colón (born January 1, 1966), better known by his stage name Crazy Legs, is an American b-boy from the Bronx New York City, USA. He was featured in the earliest stories on hip hop dancing to appear in mainstream press, and as president of the Rock Steady Crew brought the form to London and Paris in 1983. Today he is also involved in community outreach, dance instruction and dance theater productions. His pioneering status is reflected in his appearances in fiction films and documentaries. Crazy Legs is the most well known and commercially successful of the few original members remaining of the Rock Steady Crew, and is its current president.

Contents

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Career

Crazy Legs (dancer) bboycalendarcomwpcontentuploads201304crazy

Richard "Crazy Legs" Colón grew up in the Inwood section of Manhattan, New York City, where he was introduced to "breaking" by his older brother when he was nine. He was an original member of the Rock Steady Crew after its foundation in 1979. Dance critic Sally Banes in an April 1981 piece on the form in the Village Voice quotes Crazy Legs listing the best dancers extant and documents his accidental invention of the "W" move, in which the dancer sits with his legs double-backed behind him. The next month saw the New York Times cover a three-day conference on "Bronx folk culture". "There is a system of apprentices: a 'Lil' Crazy Legs with Crazy Legs," the Times reported, "Dance steps are performed solo to an accompaniment called rapping - chanting voice and percussion."

Crazy Legs (dancer) Richard Crazy Legs Coln Discusses The Roots of Hip Hop

His first film appearance was as himself in Charlie Ahearn's independent release Wild Style (1982), followed by his featuring in the early documentary on hip hop culture Style Wars (PBS, 1983). As a craze for all things hip hop took hold, the 16-year-old Crazy Legs, now President of the Rock Steady Crew, took hip hop dance to Paris and London as part of the New York City Rap Tour, with recording artists Afrika Bambaataa and Grandmixer D.ST, graffiti artists Fab 5 Freddie and Futura 2000, and the World Champion Fantastic Four Double Dutch Girls. Appearances in Hollywood films were another consequence: he was a street dancer (and also a heavily disguised body double for Jennifer Beals' final dance scenes) in the movie Flashdance (Paramount, 1983) and, as with Wild Style, played himself in the fiction film Beat Street (Orion, 1984).

Crazy Legs (dancer) BBoy Icon Crazy Legs Captions Photos From His Career

In 1991 he danced in So! What Happens Now?, "probably the first hip-hop production on a mainstream dance stage in New York City," according to the New York Times, which reflected that the production proved "street dance is an art as demanding and inventive as mainstream dance forms like ballet and jazz." The following year came Concrete Jungle as part of a program at the Lincoln Center which the Times called "a turning point in the evolution of urban street dance," the piece itself being "extraordinarily affecting". The "jubilantly hyperactive" and "astonishing" Jam on the Groove debuted in 1995, and in 1999 Crazy Legs instructed dancers of the Urban Youth Theater for their show Minotaur.

Crazy Legs (dancer) Bboy legend Crazy Legs talks about his life in photos

His connection to hip hop culture outside of theater remains strong, with hosting of b-boy contests, appearances at live events, and staging of Rock Steady Crew Anniversaries. Documentaries continue to feature Crazy Legs: a look at contemporary hip hop called The Voice of a Nation (Goldcrest, 1993), Here Come the Drums (8mm, 1993), Freestyle: The Art of Rhyme (Bowery, 2000) and The Freshest Kids (QD3, 2003). He joined a host of hip hop personalities in providing voice-overs for the television comedy series Kung Faux (Dubtitled/Tommy Boy, 2003). He is also a character in the video game Def Jam Fight For NY (EA, 2004). In 2006 he was invited by the Smithsonian Institution to contribute to a collection for the National Museum of American History. Crazy Legs officially retired from competition as of July 28,2012 after competing at the Rock Steady Crew's 35th Anniversary at The Altman Building in Manhattan, NY.

Rock Steady Anniversary parties

Crazy Legs (dancer) EXCLUSIVE Crazy Legs Talks Dancing For Queen Elizabeth Attempted

As president of Rock Steady Crew, Crazy Legs and his Backspin Productions hosts and organizes the annual Rock Steady Anniversary, a community event that honors deceased members of the crew and celebrates hip hop culture both past and present. These anniversary parties unite DJs, b-boys and b-girls, MCs, graffiti artists, and thousands of hip hop supporters from around the world. Under his leadership the group also holds the annual Celebrity Basketball Tournament during the yearly anniversary celebrations to raise money for the Greenwich Village Youth Council in New York. In 2003, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg proclaimed July 26 to be "Rock Steady Crew Day" in New York City during their 26th Anniversary Celebration at Pier 54. Sportswear company Fila debuted the "Rock Steady Crew 77" sneaker in April 2004.

Awards

Crazy Legs (dancer) Flashdance 30 Years Later BBoy Recalls Girling Up for Final Scene

As part of the Rock Steady Crew, Crazy Legs won a 1992 Bessie Award for choreography. In 1994 he received the Hip Hop Pioneer Award from The Source. He was presented with the Source Youth Foundation Image Award in 2003. He has also earned the 2003 AARTS Award from the Bay Shore Schools Arts Education Fund and was honored as the National Godfather of the 2003 Jersey City Puerto Rican Day Parade. He was nominated for an MTV Award for Best Choreography for his work with Wyclef Jean. His dance program at the Point C.D.C. for young people in South Bronx garnered him the “New Yorker of the Week” Award from New York 1 News.


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Filmography

Actor
2013
California Dreamers as
Legs
2004
Def Jam: Fight for NY (Video Game) as
Crazy Legs (voice)
2003
Kung Faux (TV Series) as
Voice Over / Various
1984
Rock Steady Crew: Uprock (Music Video) as
Crazy Legs
1984
Beat Street as
Rock Steady Crew
1983
Rock Steady Crew: (Hey You) The Rock Steady Crew (Music Video) as
Crazy Legs
1983
Flashdance as
Crazy Legs (as Richard Colon)
1982
Wild Style as
Rock Steady Crew
Miscellaneous
1997
Wyclef Jean: We Trying to Stay Alive (Music Video) (choreographer)
Self
2023
The Daily Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Diane Guerrero (2023) - Self
2019
32nd Hispanic Heritage Awards (TV Special) as
Self (as Rich 'Crazy Legs' Colon)
2018
31st Hispanic Heritage Awards (TV Special) as
Self (as Rich 'Crazy Legs' Colon)
2015
Stretch and Bobbito: Radio That Changed Lives (Documentary) as
Self
2015
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon (TV Series) as
Self - Breakdancer
- Judi Dench/Ansel Elgort/GZA with Tom Morello (2015) - Self - Breakdancer
2012
The Arena (TV Series) as
Self - Judge
- Quarter Finals #1 - Morris vs Kid David (2012) - Self - Judge
2010
Bouncing Cats (Documentary)
2008
With the DJ (TV Series short) as
Self
2006
Mega Especiales: John Leguizamo (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
2005
Urbanation (Travel) (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- New York 01 (2005) - Self
2004
Chappelle's Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Lil Jon On Lil Jon & Black Bush (2004) - Self (uncredited)
2002
Erykah Badu Feat. Common: Love of My Life (An Ode to Hip-Hop) (Music Video) as
Self
2002
The Freshest Kids (Video documentary)
2002
The Essential Michael Jackson (TV Movie documentary) as
Self - Rock Steady Crew
2001
Hip Hop Shop (Video) as
Self
2001
I Love 1980's (TV Series documentary) as
Self - Rock Steady Crew
- I Love 1983 (2001) - Self - Rock Steady Crew
2000
Freestyle: The Art of Rhyme (Documentary) as
Self
1993
Private Investigators: Mash Up the Mic (Music Video) as
Self
1993
The Voice of a Nation (Video documentary)
1993
Here Come the Drums (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1983
Style Wars (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
Archive Footage
2019
La Vraie Histoire de H.I.P.H.O.P. (TV Mini Series documentary) as
Self
- L'effet flashdance (2019) - Self
2004
And You Don't Stop: 30 Years of Hip-Hop (TV Mini Series documentary) as
Self

References

Crazy Legs (dancer) Wikipedia