The Killer Dillers

Sophisticated Old-Fashioned Dance & Entertainment

This piece entitled Fascinating Rhythm, is a recreation of the world famous Berry Brothers’ act in the 1941 film Lady Be Good. With soft shoe tap, cane juggling and acrobatics, it requires such a high level of skill that The Killer Dillers have been the first to attempt it since the Berry Brothers themselves in the 1940s.

Dancers: Nathan Bugh, Kevin St Laurent, Juan Villafane
Choreography by: The Berry Brothers, 1941
Performance: Jump Session Show, Seattle May 2009 (campjitterbug.com)



And here is an edit of the Killer Dillers performing Fascinating Rhythm in New York in 2009, alongside excerpts of the Berry Brothers performing the original piece in 1941:



Read the rest of this entry, for more information about the legendary Berry Brothers.
Read the rest of this entry »

This number entitled Berry Me Not, is a tribute to the world famous Berry Brothers’ performance in the 1942 film Panama Hattie. The Killer Dillers are renowned for being the only dancers today authentically recreating the Berry Brothers’ sophisticated combination of soft shoe tap, cane spinning, spectacular splits and death-defying acrobatics.

Dancers: Juan Villafane, Nathan Bugh, Kevin St Laurent
Choreography by: The Berry Brothers, 1942
Performance: Jump Session Show, Seattle May 2009 (campjitterbug.com)


Juan Villafane berry3 The Killer Dillers performing Fascinating Rhythm

Like Lindy Hop and Charleston, tap dancing is another jazz-era dance style that came into its own in the early 20th century.  Vaudeville, showboat and minstrel shows had been displaying early African-American tap dancers since the mid-1800’s,  and helped to spread the popularity of the dance style across the nation.  Early tap styles included “buck and wing” (performed in wooden clogs) and “soft shoe” (performed with hard leather soles), evolving into the percussive style familiar today, enhanced by the addition of metal plates to leather soled shoes.

By the 1920s, 30s and 40s, tap dancing had permeated the entire entertainment industry, with famous tap dancers the stars of stage and the silver screen. Some of the famous tap dancers of this period that inspire The Killer Dillers are: Bill ‘Bojangles’ Robinson, John Bubbles, The Nicholas Brothers, Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly, The Berry Brothers, Dixie Dunbar, Chuck Green, Teddy Hale, Hal Leroy, Eleanor Powell, Bill Bailey, Sammy Davis Jnr, The Four Flash Devils, Cora La Redd, The Clark Brothers, Daniel L. Haynes, The Three Chefs, Patterson & Jackson, Tip Tap & Toe, The Condos Brothers, Cholly Atkins & Honi Coles, James Barton, The Four Step Brothers, The Three Sparks of Rhythm, Jimmy Slyde, Donald O’Connor, The Four Hot Shots, Ann Miller, Stump & Stumpy, Vera Ellen and Leonard Reed…. just to name a few!

A great inspiration to The Killer Diller gents, are the famous flash act trio, The Berry Brothers, who incorporated both acrobatics and cane juggling into their soft shoe tap numbers. Don’t miss the Killer Dillers performing ‘Fascinating Rhythm’, a tribute to this legendary trio.

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As seen in Time Out New York

About Me

The Killer Dillers are a troupe of professional dancers drawn from across the globe, specializing in performance artforms of the jazz era. Aiming to bring back the spectacular style of song-and-dance entertainment from the golden age of show business, the Killer Dillers' repertoire includes Lindy Hop, Charleston, Tap and a variety of other authentic vintage jazz dances, as well as comedy, acrobatics and burlesque. » Read more...

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