One of the few things in dance to match the Royal Ballet's curtain calls is the Royal Ballet's dancing.
Any woman can make pole dancing a regular part of their exercise routine - and a fun part of their romantic life!
I have been blessed with strong leg muscles, and dancing really exercises one's legs.
There's this certain caliber of dancing I was striving for when I was younger, and it's very hard for me to go back and just do it for fun. But I take all other kinds of classes: I take jazz classes, modern classes, and I love doing that instead of going to the gym. The gym is not very much fun.
I just finished a film with Michael Radford called Dancing at the Blue Iguana.
It was always acting, singing and dancing that I loved.
I would say that 'Shake It Up' was a chance for me to do two things I really love: acting and dancing.
I like a guy who uses his hips when he's dancing.
I don't see my dancing or acting as two separate things. I don't define them separately, so I can't say one has helped the other, It's all the same thing. More than anything I love being on stage and performing.
With 'Dance Moms' in L.A., we film on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. When we film in Pittsburgh, we film the same days, but we still dance in our studio when we're not filming, so I'm dancing every day except Sunday.
I've been dancing all my life, but I never did it seriously.
I remember the first time I felt that I was sharing the stage with someone spectacular was dancing with Beyonce. It was the dancers, the band, Beyonce and me in front of thousands of people. That was sick. It was pretty amazing that I got to travel the world with someone like her.
Fighting is dancing. Look at a great boxing match, and it's a dancing.
The thought of dancing scared me. A lot. Because I have absolutely no aptitude for it.
I've been dancing for 10 years.
Every act I see, their whole act is choreographed. I'm sick of seeing these dancers. The only reason they have them is they don't have enough talent to get people dancing themselves.
One must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star.
I've completely changed the way I eat since doing 'Dancing With The Stars.'
In 'Seesaw,' I played Gittel Mosca, and because it was a musical, I loved it more because I was able to do anything. I was able to use all parts of me that I don't get to use... the comedy and the singing and the dancing.
I'm not a signing or dancing man.
I looked about me once again, and suddenly the dancing horses without number changed into animals of every kind and into all the fowls that are, and these fled back to the four quarters of the world from whence the horses came, and vanished.
'Dancing With The Stars' is a little family. The cast, we're all together - we're a really friendly competition.
I love ballet, and it's a little boring for me to go to the gym because I'm used to the dancing discipline - it's really hard but much more fun.
When I was a teeny little girl, I was in dancing school, and I sang.
I tore up my knee break dancing. I have no idea how that happened. Apparently these legs are meant for swimming, but not dancing. I was watching an MTV video, thinking, 'I can do this.' Definitely not. I heard a pop. I sat down and it blew up like a watermelon. I had to go to the hospital and get surgery.
Dancing is a tough career, but I'm glad I spent it at the Royal Ballet.
I went to Salford Tech. They did a two-year performing arts course. I went there singing and dancing - I had a terrible time. I turned up in green dungarees and German power boots. I was into prog rock at the time - Gong and Hawkwind - and I was clumping around.
I danced growing up. I had two friends of mine that, actually, one of them wound up dancing with Alvin Ailey.
Compared to dancing, films seemed to me to be the work of lay bums. There was no physical pain; it was enough to say and imagine what was in the script. It was very easy for me.
I love to dance, and sing - in the shower, not in public. I'm too old to go raving, but my fondest memories are of that kind of thing - dancing, with lots of people, outside if possible.
I was a dancer for fifteen years, and I think a lot of what dancing gives you crosses over so much into anything to do with fighting, martial arts, anything action.
Exactly the same with dancing, you can't dance until you've learnt steps, the things your feet can do.
I was a dancer from a young age. My parents were dancers; we were taken to a lot of ballet as children. It occurred to me that what I liked more than dancing the steps was acting the story of whatever particular performance I was taking part in.
When you make a record, I always imagine people dancing to it. If the chef thinks it tastes good, then there will be someone who ultimately believes the same thing.
I think the inception of my interest in arts was when I was around 9 or 10 and I started dancing. I was really convinced that I was going to go to New York and be onstage in 'A Chorus Line.'
I really enjoy dancing. When there's music around, I can't help it; I start dancing, especially when I'm with friends.