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Beyonce single ladies video
Beyonce single ladies video












I give myself 10 years to get there.”įrom the energy of the master class, however, it seems that Knight has already started his something of a movement. Fosse, and put musicals together and create my own movement. I’m not classically trained-I learned from music videos and going to little teenage clubs. Knight insists that he wants to be known for more than just choreographing pop starlets’ videos: “Somehow that’s where I ended up, but I’m trying to get out of it somehow. I’m in rehearsals for the film and there’s no time to do anything!” “I know, who turns down Whitney, right? But I was tuckered out. He had to say no to Whitney Houston’s big comeback video this summer. He has even reached the coveted status of being able to turn down major work. Next up: A film project with Cher and Christina Aguilera. That butt slapping move is pure Auntie Joanna, at the family reunion.”Īfter the video took off, Knight’s career did the same-he choreographed Beyoncé’s “Diva” video and 2009 tour, the 2009 American Idol tour, The Dream’s 2009 tour, and select numbers from Britney Spears' latest “Circus” tour. Like, ‘What would your little cousin do?’ or ‘What would your auntie do at the cookout?’ It got real country and dirty. She’s from Houston and I was raised in Atlanta, so we thought a lot of the dirty South. So between us, we started to dream up a lot of social steps that you might do at a party. She saw this clip-the Bob Fosse-which he choreographed from the Ed Sullivan Show with Gwen Verdon, and she said, ‘I want to do this,’ just plain and simple. “I don’t know if people know that, but she always knows what she wants and she usually gets it. definitely knows what she wants,” laughs the young dancer, who arrived with a sizeable entourage that included Gatson and his mother. “When we were filming ‘Single Ladies,’ Beyoncé and the two other girls told me I nearly killed them rehearsing for it,” says Knight. It is his own style, but a change from the plucky, girl power swagger of “Single Ladies,” a fact Knight attributes to Beyoncé’s unwavering vision. (“I love to come back and teach the youth,” he says, though he can count most of his students as peers.) Today, he’s teaching a combination to a track off of (Beyoncé’s husband) Jay-Z’s new Blueprint 3, an aggressive dance that draws heavily on step dancing, krumping, and cocky hand gestures. He is at Alvin Ailey studios to teach a packed master class. Knight is in New York again, but this time under very different circumstances. “But he said he couldn’t send it to me on e-mail and I had to fly to New York that night.” “Frank called me up and said he wanted me for a new Beyoncé song,” Knight says in an interview.

beyonce single ladies video

Knight heard from Gaston again a few months later. Gatson (the favored choice of Beyoncé and Britney Spears) was so taken with Knight’s dancing that he asked him to co-choreograph Williams’ video rather than star in it. Originally from North Carolina, Knight caught choreographer Frank Gatson’s eye in a try-out for a Michelle Williams video in early 2008. Knight conceived of the video’s moves when he was only 19, thanks to a lucky break in a Los Angeles audition.

beyonce single ladies video

Amateurs re-created the moves on YouTube, Justin Timberlake spoofed it on Saturday Night Live, and on tonight’s episode of FOX’s comedy Glee, the “Single Ladies” choreography drives the entire plot line from start to finish (think football players doing booty slaps).Īnd we have choreographer JaQuel Knight to thank. When the single, black and white shot of Beyoncé (as her alter-ego Sasha Fierce) swiveling, dipping, and brandishing a single golden glove hit the Internet on October 13, 2008, it became nothing less than a dance phenomenon (a feat perhaps only matched by Los Del Rio’s “Macarena” in the late ‘90s). Or, in Kanye’s words, “Yo Taylor, I’m really happy for you and I’mma let you finish, but Beyoncé had one of the best videos of all time.”Īll eye-rolling at West’s juvenilia aside, the “Single Ladies” video-with its Bob Fosse inspiration and sassy hip thrusts-is an iconic piece of work. But many have forgotten the real reason West interrupted Taylor Swift’s acceptance speech to begin with: to champion Beyoncé’s “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It)” music video. Kanye West’s infamous tantrum at last week’s MTV Video Music Awards is now the stuff of pop culture legend (or at least a major Internet meme).














Beyonce single ladies video