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Dancer performing on a sprung floor at a dance studio, demonstrating the floor's shock absorption and performance-enhancing properties. Modern sprung floors are considered the best kind for dance and indoor sports and physical education, as they enhance performance and significantly reduce injuries.
You would find this most commonly used for public events, e.g. a gym hall used for a graduation ceremony or a club dance floor. A step above a wooden surface is the sprung floor. A sprung floor absorbs shock and can enhance performance and greatly reduce injuries.
Dance studio with barre rails, mirrors, and mounted speakers. A dance studio normally includes a smooth floor covering or, if used for tap dancing, by a hardwood floor. The smooth vinyl floor covering, also known as a performance surface and commonly called "marley", is generally not affixed permanently to the underlying floor and can be rolled up and transported to performance venues if needed.
The children were attending a Swift-themed dance and yoga class in the U.K. town when a 17-year-old man attacked them. He was arrested on suspicion of murder and remains in custody.
Shock were a music/mime/dance/pop group that was notable in the early 1980s for supporting English new wave groups such as Gary Numan, Adam and the Ants, Depeche Mode and Famous Names, led by Steve Fairnie. In 1979, mime artists Tim Dry and Barbie Wilde united with actors Robert Pereno and Lowri-Ann Richards and dancer Karen Sparks to produce ...
The attack took place at a dance school in Southport, a small seaside town north of Liverpool, per NBC News.The children killed were female and ages 9, 7 and 6, Merseyside police said in a news ...
Shock's first record "Angel Face", with production by Rusty Egan and Richard James Burgess, was a modest dance floor hit. In 1981, Shock co-starred with Ultravox at the 'People's Palace Valentine's Ball' at the Rainbow Theatre. Shock went on to support Gary Numan at his Wembley Arena shows in April, 1981.
Future Shock is a television variety show produced and hosted by James Brown from 1976 to 1979. [1] [2] [3] Shot in Augusta and Atlanta, Georgia and broadcast late on Friday nights on the Ted Turner-owned UHF station WTCG, it featured local amateurs performing a variety of popular and emerging dance styles, including disco, locking and popping, and early breakdancing, [4] to prerecorded music.