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Dance Parade NYC 2023 DanceFest Gets over 10,000 New Yorkers Dancing in the Streets

The 17th Dance Parade NYC 2023 is dancing in the streets with over 100 styles of dance, from Sixth Avenue at 17th St in Chelsea, to the DanceFest at Tompkins Square Park in the East Village; on Saturday, May 20, 2023 starting at 11:45am. FREE! 🇧🇴 🇧🇷 🇨🇺 🇨🇴 🇩🇴 🇮🇹 🇯🇲 🇲🇽 🇳🇬 🇵🇪 🇵🇷 🇪🇸 🇹🇹

Dance Parade NYC 2023 Parade Route

The parade starts on Sixth Avenue this year. It is expected to run from 11:45am to around 4:30pm.

Want a Seat?

Grandstand seats are available in Astor Place Plaza at Fourth Avenue from 11:30am – 4:30pm. Your ticket supports the parade. From $44. eventbrite.com

2023 Grand Marshals

This year’s Grand Marshals are three noted choreographers.

Ronald K. Brown is the founder of EVIDENCE, a Contemporary, African, and Afro-Cuban dance company. Mr. Brown has a long history of developing Contemporary Dance in Cuba. evidencedance.com @evidencedance

Natasha Diggs is an international New York Hip-Hop, Funk, Soul and R&B DJ. soundcloud.com @natashadiggs

Elizabeth Streb of STREB Extreme Action choreographer. streb.org @streb1

Who Is Dancing in the Streets?

Dance Parade NYC 2023 (RightFramePhotoVideo/Dreamstime)

At press time, there were 131 participants. These are some of the Latin ones.

The DanceFest 2023 Dance Festival

DanceFest 2023 dance festival features performances, dance lessons, aerial and social dance on five stages; at Tompkins Square Park in the East Village; on Saturday, May, 2023 from 3-7pm. FREE! 🇧🇴 🇨🇺 🇲🇽 🇵🇷 🇪🇸

Emcees José Rivera and Shireen Dickson host.

What is Latin Dance?

Our concept of Latin includes the Americas and the countries of Mother Africa. African American marching bands and majorettes look to us like Americanized Carnival Comparsas or Samba schools. Those came from different neighborhoods, or even free communities in the forests.

Dancing in the streets was normal in the Latin world until the Colonizers banned Indigenous and African traditions.

The Bolivian dance groups are striking. It looks like half of New York City is Bolivian, but the dancers actually come from the entire East Coast. Most Americans think of Bolivians as an Andean people, which is true. But many Bolivian dances celebrate African Diaspora traditions from the Colonial Era. We are all mixed together.

We notice many Congolese dancers this year. Kongo is one of the three African Diaspora cultural complexes that rooted in the Americas. At lot of music and dances have Congolese roots. But again, we are all mixed together in the Americas.

Afrobeat is interesting because it’s African Diaspora music that became Jazz, R&B, Rock and Funk in America; went back to Nigeria through Fela Kuti’s Afrobeat; which became all kinds of modern Afrobeats fusions, and came back to the Americas as New Wave through David Byrne’s Talking Heads, and became Champeta in Colombia. Dominican Dembow is very similar too.

South Asian dance traditions are Latin in Trinidad where South Asian music blends with Calpyso into Soca, which you can hear at New York Carnival over Labor Day.

Hip-Hop comes from Jamaican Soundsystem in The Bronx, where Latin kids added their parents’ Palladium Ballroom Rumba and Mambo moves to Breakdancing.

Jazz comes from New Orleans, but before that from Haiti. So again, we are all mixed together.

Today most of us dance for fun, but universally in the old traditions, dance was how we prayed. Don’t think too much. Just dance!

For more information, visit danceparade.org

Check out past parades at our Dance Parade NYC Archives

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