Category — New York - Tri State
World Hustle Dance Championships 2008
A World of Dance at World Hustle
A weekend full of Hustle, West Coast Swing, Salsa, and more was what Event Director, Diane Nardone had on hand July 24th - 27th at the 8th Annual World Hustle Dance Championships held at the lovely Hilton Hotel in East Brunswick, NJ. MC Ron Bess (of Dance Talk) along with Robert Royston, worked hard the whole weekend to keep things running smoothly and the crowd energized.

The event offered something for everyone with many workshops, competitions, performances as well as plenty of social dancing and late-night parties.
A plethora of world-class instructors were teaching workshops throughout the weekend. There were three rooms of classes running at once offering a variety of styles and techniques. Along with the exceptional workshops in Hustle, West Coast, and Salsa, there were some added surprises thrown in to keep things interesting. Belly Dancing, Argentine Tango, Cha-Cha, Hip-Hop, Night Club and Country 2-Step, along with a Dips and Tricks Workshop taught by David Paris and Zoe Klein, gave dancers an opportunity to get a taste of something new to spice up their dancing.

If competing is your thing, there were contests for all levels, including Juniors, all weekend long to keep the crowd cheering. One highlight was the Friday night Team Match Challenge where groups consisting of amateurs and professionals went head-to-head in a heated battle. The energy in the ballroom was high as everyone rooted for their favorite team. The Phantastic Philadelphia Pretzels was the team that walked away with the top prize. But every competition at every level had top-notch dancers, and anyone who stepped out on the floor came out a winner!

There was a Saturday night dinner followed by a show that was a highlight of the event. It showcased the talent of the invited staff and gave guests the opportunity to see their instructors at their best. Following the show, there were more Pro Competitions to inspire all of the dancers in attendance to take their dancing to the next level.

Saturday’s late-night party allowed all to put what they learned in their workshops to practice with social dancing that went well into the early morning. Two rooms were groovin’ the whole night. In the main ballroom, Hustle, along with a California Mix of other dances, was played by popular DJ’s Dave Muzii and Mark Routzahn. The West Coast Swing Room was definitely swingin’ with top DJ’s Michael Frank and John Festa keeping everyone on their feet.

Just a few hours later, on Sunday, the social dancing continued along with more competitions. The Hustle and West Coast Amateur Jack and Jills took place, and they are always a favorite at any event. Another treat was the entertaining Hustle and WCS Jill and Jack competitions where the men strutted their stuff and the women took the lead! Even though many people had been up late (or early!) dancing, all the competitors involved had a high level of energy and were able show off their best moves. This was all followed by an awards ceremony for all of the Amateur Competitors. For the hard-core dancers, there was even a post-event party on Sunday evening to wrap up this fabulous event.

If you missed this year’s event, never fear, the 9th Annual World Hustle Dance Championships will be held again next year on July 23rd – 26th, 2009 at the same great location! It promises to be the same diverse and fun event that it was this year, so mark your calendars! You can find out more about this event on Diane’s website at www.hustledanceworld.com.
August 5, 2008 9 Comments
Q&A with Derrick Allen
Derrick Allen bears the grace and style of Fred Astaire with the confidence and realness of the streets of New York. Derrick’s strength is his consistency of dance, regardless of the time he has spent out of dancing. Here is a video of Derrick dancing with Donna De Simone for which they won the Pro Open Theatre Arts category at the 2006 NY Hustle Congress.
Here’s the Q&A:
Q - Derrick, how did you become interested in dancing?
Derrick - Actually I was into playing football and my sister was studying dance; I had to take her to dance school everyday and I did. I would sit there at her class watching and basically absorbing; my sister’s dance teacher was the principal dancer of the Alvin Ailey Dance Company at the time. It was incredible exposure for me and eventually, I came to really like the idea of dancing.
Q - So what made you want to dance Hustle?
Derrick - At the time, as a young guy in High School and towards graduation in the mid 70’s, Latin Hustle was a pop dance. You learned cause, that’s where the girls were [laughs], if you didn’t learn it, you were gonna stand around all night [laughs]. So it was do or die, go to clubs, dance; that’s what it was about, people danced. I didn’t choose Hustle, Hustle chose me; and it’s a great dance, plus its a touch dance, a partner dance. I kinda evolved from social dancing to competitive from around that point in my life.

Q - So tell me about the transition to competing and what are some of the highlights of your competitive career?
Derrick - Competing was also something I sort of slipped into, I hadn’t thought of competing or set that as a goal. A friend of mine named Keith, he was an attorney; I saw him compete at a small club in Queens called Seconds and later on that night he saw me dance and pushed me to compete.
Q - What year was that Derrick?
Derrick - That was in ‘77, and I didn’t start competing right away but I started dancing more seriously and I started looking for a partner; and the funny thing, the very first person I asked to partner with me was Lisa, Lisa Nunziella. We were at a small club in Queens, right on Queens Boulevard…
Q - Which club was it?
Derrick - Oh, wow, it was in the Woodhaven, Ridgeway section of Queens, a real small club, I don’t remember the name, Lisa probably would. Anyway, She didn’t know who I was, and I didn’t know who she was. She was at a club and I saw her dancing and she was the right height, size and frame, ya know to partner with me me and I saw her dance and I thought ‘Wow, she’s really good’. So I finally walked up and asked her to dance and she said no thank you. I explained to her I was looking for a dance partner, and she politely declined, but it was just a fluke and she probably didn’t even remember that happened. Right behind that was the contest at Cherries and I couldn’t find a partner so I taught my girlfriend at the time some of my moves; I know how put some stuff together from watching my sister and we did it, we danced to and ended up winning Cherries, we won the two cars. That was my first contest and from there I took it more seriously.
Q - So what ever became of you and Lisa Nunziella dancing together?
Derrick - Well, back in the day, when you made a name for yourself dancing, the small clubs would hire you to come out and dance and I remember I used to get hired alot by Philips Dance Studio and I would see Lisa’s mother there a lot and she would often comment that Lisa and I would make such a good team together. I remember her so fondly and to this day, Lisa tells me her mother still remembers me; But yeah, we never ending up partnering together, even though we are so fond of each other to this day. Eventually she asked me to fill in and partner with her, but I couldn’t because of my partner, but we love each other and she’s a dynamite person.
Q - Derrick, you were telling me one day you decided to hang up your shoes and you did just that, you decided to stop dancing and did not resume for nearly 25 years. Tell me how you came back.
Derrick - Well, first of all 20 years is a long time and I had not thought of getting back into it except for two, no three people. My wife, Diane Nardone and Donna De Simone. I don’t know how the subject got opened up but Diane had been trying to get in touch with me regarding dancing at her event, World Hustle Dance Championships, and finally she and I got on the phone and she really wanted me to come out that particular year and I truly considered, but I remember it exactly because it was my wife and I’s 15th Anniversary and I knew I couldn’t do that because we would be Tahiti, so I promised Diane I would make it the following year and I did, and it all kinda started from there.
Editor - Here is what Diane Nardone said about the first dance at the big night Saturday when Derrick finally came back in to Hustle at her event:
“I’ll never forget, it was the big opening night dance and Derrick and I opened the night with the first dance, no one else was on the floor, just Derrick and I. The lights were dimmed and the spotlight was on and the music started and we just took flight and everyone was in awe. After the dance people were coming up to me going, ‘Wow, who is that?’ ‘That was incredible’ etc., a lot of the younger dancers didn’t know Derrick and they were just mesmerized. They had never seen his incredible unique style. It was a memorable re-entry into the dance”.
Diane Nardone
Editor - Here’s what Donna De Simone said about getting back into the dance:
“Taking a 25 year break from competitions had it’s challenges but we had a great time choreographing our come back routine “Last Dance” which we performed and won at the ” New York Hustle Congress” in 2006. I know Derrick would agree that without the support we received from our families & fellow Veteran Pros such as: Bonnie Herbert Diaz, DonaMarie Portelli & Chuck Fetta who’s input served in our vision to deliver our best performance, our sincere thanks to all”.
Donna De Simone

Q - This question isn’t meant to alienate anyone or be territorial or controversial but for posterity reasons, why is Hustle so unique, and particularly Hustle in New York?
Derrick - I think there are a couple reasons for that, this is the birthplace of it and you have the original old school dancers that contributed to it. Not that there is any one person, that could say they created it, but there is definitely a class of dancers that contributed to it, who lived this dance, I’m talking about the Lisas, Billys, the Maria Torres’, myself, Lee, Ricky Quintana, George Velasquez and all these people were outta New York, and we laid a good foundation for this dance. We took this dance and gave it a certain look and feel.
Every dance has it own character and look, Hustle has a definite rhythm, a definite step pattern and characterization and New York gets that. And we borrow a lot of it from the Salsa world. Essentially, the Hustle basic is half of a Salsa basic. I think that New York is unique in that that fundamental deep-rooted understanding of the dance is here because it started here.
Q - There are so many misconceptions of where Latin Hustle started. I mean I refer to it as Latin Hustle here to make a point, because when I was growing up in New York, it was always called Latin Hustle. I don’t even know where this description of NY Hustle began and proliferated for that matter, and I personally never refer to Hustle as NY Hustle. I have a very interesting Q&A coming up with Billy Fajardo on the relationship between Salsa and Hustle, also the Caribbean connection with New York that identifies Hustle so strongly with the Latin essence. Derrick, if you can touch on your experiences with people misunderstanding the roots of Latin Hustle.
Derrick - Okay, I remember one of the young male dancers from that huge dance show on TV, (that I won’t name) was out here for an appearance and they had a Q&A afterwards and they asked him about the origins of Hustle and he said ‘You know where the Hustle started, the Hustle is derived from West Coast Swing’. That is totally incorrect, he made that statement and I said ‘No you’re wrong, period. You’re wrong’. Hustle was created here in New York, and Hustle IS unique to New York because of that fundamental true flavor of the dance and the understanding of the dance and the roots of the dance is inherently New York.
Q - That’s not to say that other’s can’t do a brilliant Hustle because obviously some of the winning-est Pros currently are outside of New York, nor am I dismissing new movement ideas and inspirations, but I make this point so as to publicly acknowledge the importance of the foundation and roots of the dance, the patterns, the rhythms; can you talk more about this Derrick?
Derrick - The original dancers, the enduring Pros, the Lisas (Nunziella), Billys (Fajardo), Arte Phillips, we know and understand the dance and timing, the patterns. Now what we, the community has got to do is get some of these younger dancers into the fold. Hustle started here and there really is a basic fundamental understanding of the dance by New York that goes beyond what people try to say otherwise.
And I don’t want to get too winded on this next statement but… I know there is this discussion here and there about ‘the music is too fast or not fast enough’, ‘we need this type of new sounding music, or this type of classic sounding music’ and my feeling is ‘Hey this is the count…&123, the count doesn’t change’, people can enjoy that count and dance at 135 bpm, or 110 bpm, who knows, but the dance is still the dance. How well you are able to move, how fast you are able to transfer your weight, is a matter of your conditioning, but the dance is the dance, if you change the count, you are not doing Hustle.
Q - I really want to give clarity to this thought because I sense a very, very small group of dancers who are New York haters, not in the literal sense to New York but disdainful of the roots, who may, through the subject of music and beats per minute as the sacrificial lamb, want to subvert the essence of the dance. To give clarity, at the end of the day what you are saying is, it’s &123 and that’s all there is to it.
Derrick - That’s all there is to it, period. Okay, whether it’s And123, or Uh123, it’s still a half beat followed by two steps, that is all there is to it, period. And the music, for me would dictate how I deal with that rhythm and how I do my footwork with that, given the speed of the music, how much melody it has through it or whatever the case might be, that basic, basic count, doesn’t change. That is The Hustle. If I change that count, it ain’t Hustle anymore, it’s something else.
To me when you have people saying ‘Oh you gotta change this and that’ it’s because either they can’t do it or they don’t understand it. You gotta go back to that fundamental understanding of partner dancing in general. There’s a technique to partner dancing to get two people to dance as one and there’s a timing, there’s a connection all those things go together and that’s what makes this dance happen. If you change that character, if you change that rhythm, you got a different dance, not the Hustle, period, end of story.
Q - Do you see Hustle evolving and growing of late?
Derrick - There is a resurgence and an interest in the dance, but we gotta get beyond the borders that we have and get the young people involved and show them how cool a dance this is; and one of the coolest things about this dance is that it’s the only touch/partner dance that can be done to pop music.
Q - What would you tell people who want to do this dance who are struggling, whether they are just social dancing like myself or even Pros who are struggling with evolving and growing. Because lots of people compete in the amateur categories, and people do take this dance seriously sometimes getting down on themselves.
Derrick - It’s like anything else, you get the fundamentals down and everything will come, if you understand movement and moving through your center; through your core, all those things, everything will come. Get good coaching; when I came back out after 25 years, I knew the dance, but I needed that third eye to tell me I wasn’t standing up straight, work on my line or work on the choreography, whatever it may be. You can’t be afraid to seek help, but you have to get someone who is willing to help you achieve your vision, not just do it for the money. You gotta be willing to take constructive criticism, but more importantly keep a strong mental attitude. And whatever you do, you gotta remember everybody started somewhere.
Q - Speaking of partnering, tell me about some of your favorite follows to partner with?
Derrick - Wow, that’s a tough question…oh wow, [laughs] is that a trick question?
Q - It’s not a trick question, but; coming from a strong lead, I’m interested in what makes a great follow too.
Derrick - Wow, the ideal partner to me, a great partner is some one who is not selfish, someone who is all about the we on the floor, the two of us, we’re going for a ride together. When you can tell that the dance is nothing more than both of us having a good time, that is an ideal situation for me. For me it’s not about how I can make myself look good, it’s about how good I can make you look; doing that we both will have fun together.
Q - As far a dance partners?
Derrick - I gotta a shout to my best buddy Denise, Denise Dema, she and I have a lot of fun on the floor, we’re constantly busting each other’s chops. And then of course, there’s Lisa, I love dancing with Lisa Nunziella, Debbie Farrow, oh and Donna De Simone of course; oh and my wife! I have fun with them, it’s not about egos it’s about the love of the dance and having a good time with together. Those are the names that come to mind right now, but ya know, you always forget someone…
Q - Having said that, who are some of the Male Leads you enjoy watching or who’s style you like?
Derrick - Lemme see, uh there are a handful that I do like watching, I like watching Hector Berrios, I find Hector a lot of fun to watch, I love his energy, I love his turns. He’s got more turns than I think he knows he has. John Merisier I like to watch, I don’t know how he dances in his boots [laughs]; but the thing is you could tell he’s having fun out there, I enjoy watching him. Umm, I like watching Raul (Santiago), cause again, he’s giving on the floor.
Q - Thank you Derrick for sharing with us, it’s been great talking to you. Hope to see more of your dancing soon…
See Derrick Allen’s bio and photos on his Hustle Pros page here.
Contributing photos: Donna De Simone
Contributing video: Lori Brizzi, NY Hustle Congress
June 4, 2008 2 Comments
DJ Nelson “Paradise” Roman
Today I had a quick conversation with an old friend of mine, DJ Nelson “Paradise” Roman. Many of you know him as NYC’s finest Hustle DJ, and he is all THAT, believe me, Mr. Man can play up a storm you’ll never forget! But I have to add that he is also a great Hustle dancer!
Nelson is truly about the music, he is an accomplished music producer, radio DJ and on air personality and he is a record label owner (several successful labels) with countless Billboard hit records to his credit.
In case anyone is planning a trip to the greatest Hustle city in the world, New York, here is his current playing schedule:
- Last Monday of the month - Dancesport Hustle party
- Hustle Jam Wednesday Night Steppin’ Out in Chelsea (David Padilla & Simone)
- 3rd Saturday of the month - Club 412 (Lori Brizzi’s party)
- 2nd or 3rd Friday David Padilla & Simone’s party - Steppin’ Out Studio in Chelsea
Definitely check out Nelson, his music is truly the quintessential New York flavor of Hustle! Coming up soon, I hope to have his most recent playlist and Q&A interview as well as more information about his gig schedule.
January 21, 2008 5 Comments
