
Dancing With The Stars choreographer Dave Scott dead at 52: Beloved talent also worked with Wicked director
Dave Scott, the choreographer in residence on season eight of Dancing With The Stars, has died at the age of just 52.
Born and raised in Compton, he enjoyed a dazzling career during which he also worked as a resident choreographer on So You Think You Can Dance.
He also staged the dances for Step Up 2: The Streets, helmed by Jon M. Chu, who went on to direct Crazy Rich Asians and the two-part film adaptation of Wicked.
His loved ones announced his passing on his Instagram page this Tuesday, one day after the fact, but did not specify a cause of death.
'It is with heavy hearts that we share the passing of our beloved Dave Scott, who touched so many lives with his warmth, kindness and spirit,' they wrote.
'During this difficult time we are doing our best to honor his memory in the way he deserves with love, dignity and respect,' they added.
'In lieu of flowers, we ask for donations to contribute towards memorial arrangements and helping us celebrate Dave Scott's life in a meaningful way, with a celebration of life,' they concluded underneath a picture of Scott.
Their caption offered the additional message: 'Today we have lost an icon, a legend, a father and a dear friend. The weight of this loss will send ripples through time. But his memory and legacy will continue to live on.'
They touchingly wrote: 'We love you Dave Scott and everything you've accomplished and the joy and comfort you've brought to people will never be forgotten.'
Friends flooded into the comments to express their grief, including Dancing With The Stars pro Derek Hough, who posted praying and broken heart emoji.
Mariah Carey's ex Bryan Tanaka, who was one of her backup dancers for years before they started dating, wrote: 'You inspired so many including me. The power in your movement spoke so many things. I see you.'
'Dave was like a big brother to so many of us,' wrote Glee actor Kevin McHale. 'When I felt reallllly out of place amongst so many great performers, he always made me comfortable and confident. Watching him dance and teach was a gift.'
'This one hits hard,' added another Glee star, Harry Shum Jr. 'You gave me so much confidence as a performer and welcomed me with open arms to your dance world that many were inspired by. Thank you for spreading so much joy with your love of dance. May you rest in peace brother Dave.'
Scott was behind the dances in a variety of projects like the films You Got Served with Meagan Good and Made Of Honor with Patrick Dempsey, as well as television series ranging from So You Think You Can Dance to Bones.
Stomp The Yard, the 2007 dance drama starring Meagan Good, Chris Brown, Columbus Short, Ne-Yo and more, was also choreographed by Scott.
In addition to his work in movies and TV, Scott choreographed for musical artists like Tyrese, Brian McKnight, Ginuwine and Bow Wow.
He even staged a dance-off of Miley Cyrus and Mandy Jiroux versus the legendary Australian rock band ACDC at the Teen Choice Awards.
Debbie Allen, the star and choreographer of the TV series Fame, hired him as the head of the hip-hop intensive at her dance academy in Los Angeles.
His fascination with hip hop dance 'when I was 15 growing up in Compton,' he said during a 2008 interview with Dance magazine.
'Everybody was doing B-boy moves. It started off on my street. We took a bike ramp down, put cardboard down and started doing back stands and all of that kind of stuff.'
He recalled: 'I learned how to dance by watching TV, watching videos and stuff like that. My favorite was Michael Jackson. It was ridiculous. I watched all of his videos and redid the choreography and added on stuff.'
Scott noted that he 'I was always creative because I taught myself how to dance. So I always had the desire to create something and choreograph.'
He shared that 'when I started dancing, I got a tour. Then I just started adding pieces of choreography to the tour. But, really, I have always been, from the time I started to dance, more of a creator a choreographer.'
Scott described his work as a 'triple reward because when I do my choreography, I always put myself in the audience and act like: "What can wow me?" And so I do the choreography, and then the reward is that you see what you created come to life.'
He added: "The second reward is, a lot of people choreograph, but they really don't dance. Third, I dance hard, like pretty much harder than the people I hire. To be a part of it, it's a good feeling.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
28 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
John Travolta's wild wig shocks fans in surprise turn at Grease concert where he transformed into Danny Zuko
John Travolta gave fans some 'chills' when he made a surprise appearance at a Grease sing-along in Los Angeles Friday night. The 71-year-old artist who reportedly turned down the opportunity to star in American Gigolo, stepped back in time to reprise his role as Danny Zuko from the 1978 hit musical. 'Tonight at the Hollywood Bowl, for the first time I surprised everyone at the GREASE Sing-A-Long and dressed up as Danny Zuko,' the Oscar nominee shared on social media. 'No one knew. Not even the cast. Thank you for a great evening,' he said. He adopted his character's swagger as he stepped on stage wearing dark jeans, a tight black T-shirt and a black leather jacket. The actor, who has been sporting a shaved head, donned a wig styled into a greaser-friendly ducktail, along with a scruffy beard. He then joined Grease cast members Didi Conn, Barry Pearl, Michael Tucci, Kelly Ward, and director Randal Kleiser on stage. Taking the microphone, Travolta delivered some of his iconic lines from the moment Danny Zuko reunites with his Summer Nights sweetheart Sandy (played by the late Olivia Newton-John) on the first day of school at Rydell High. 'I thought you were going back to Australia!' and then remembering he was the big man on campus, dropped into the nonchalant, 'that's cool, that's cool, that's cool baby,' I'm rockin' and rollin' and whatnot.' He then lead the cast and audience in a chant of 'A-wop-bop-a-loo-bop-a-lop-bam-boom!', Standing in front of a big screen, he then told the crowd, 'Enjoy the show. We love you!' 'You are simply ICONIC and sooo loved, wrote a 'hopelessly devoted' fan on Travolta's Instagram account. 'Wish I had been there. Awesome!' wrote another. Grease was an instant hit when it opened in theaters in June 1978. Travolta swaggered on to stage wearing a pair of dark jeans, a tight black T-shirt and a black leather jacket Both Travolta and Newton-John earned Golden Globe nominations for their portrayals of star-crossed teens Danny and Sandy. The soundtrack—which has sold more than 30 million copies and topped the Top 40 radio charts—went on to win an American Music Award for Favorite Pop/Rock Album. The original song Hopelessly Devoted to You, sung by Newton-John, was nominated for a Best Original Song Oscar. The movie musical, based on the hit stage show, went on to earn more than $396 million worldwide through re-releases and sing-along events like the one at the Hollywood Bowl.

Rhyl Journal
43 minutes ago
- Rhyl Journal
Channel 4 to air BBC-commissioned documentary Gaza: Doctors Under Attack
The BBC had originally commissioned Gaza: Doctors Under Attack more than a year ago from an independent production company called Basement Films but had delayed airing it until an ongoing review into a different programme on the region was completed. The one-off documentary, which includes witness accounts from frontline Palestinian health workers in Gaza and documents attacks on hospitals and clinics, will now air on Channel 4 on July 2 at 10pm. The film has been 'fact-checked and compiled by Channel 4 to ensure it meets Channel 4 editorial standards and the Ofcom Broadcasting Code', an announcement said. Louisa Compton, Channel 4's head of news and current affairs and specialist factual and sport, said in a statement: 'This is a meticulously reported and important film examining evidence which supports allegations of grave breaches of international law by Israeli forces that deserves to be widely seen and exemplifies Channel 4's commitment to brave and fearless journalism.' In an op-ed, Ms Compton further explained: 'We are showing this programme because we believe that, following thorough fact-checking and verification, we are presenting a duly impartial view of a subject that both divides opinion and frequently provokes dispute about what constitutes a fact. 'Channel 4 has a strong tradition of putting uncomfortable reporting in front of our audiences. In doing so, we know we will antagonise somebody somewhere sometime. But we do it because we believe it is our duty to tell important journalistic stories – especially those that aren't being told elsewhere.' She added: 'Doctors Under Attack was commissioned by another broadcaster, which took a different view of the original content and decided not to broadcast it. 'That other broadcaster will have had its own reasons for not showing the programme. 'For ourselves, after rigorous fact-checking and assessing the film against our own editorial criteria as well as against all regulatory requirements, we decided that it was both compliant with the Ofcom Broadcasting Code, but also that it was important journalism in the public interest. 'Any small changes were carried out with the producers to update the film and give viewers as much information as possible. 'The result is harrowing, no doubt. It will make people angry, whichever side they take, or if they take no side. 'But while we would never judge anyone who decides that showing something could create a risk of being thought to be taking sides, we believe there are times when the same risk is run by not showing anything at all.' Basement Films said: 'This is the third film we have made about the assault on Gaza since October 7th at Basement Films, and whilst none of them have been easy, this became by far the most difficult.' The production firm said it owed 'everything' to its Palestinian colleagues in Gaza and 'the doctors and medics who trusted us with their stories'. It added: 'We want to apologise to the contributors and team for the long delay, and thank Channel 4 for enabling it to be seen.' Gaza: Doctors Under Attack was greenlit for broadcast by Ms Compton, and was made by reporter Ramita Navai, executive producer Ben De Pear, who was previously editor of Channel 4 News, and director Karim Shah for Basement Films. Mr De Pear was also previously the executive producer on 2019's For Sama, which won a Bafta and was nominated for an Oscar. The BBC pulled the documentary How To Survive A Warzone in February after it emerged that its 13-year-old narrator was the son of a Hamas official. In a statement last week, the BBC said it had paused production of Gaza: Doctors Under Attack in April, having made a decision that they could not broadcast the film while a review into a separate Gaza documentary was ongoing. The BBC said that with both films coming from independent production companies, and both about Gaza, it was right to wait for any relevant findings – and put them into action – before broadcasting the film. In a statement, the corporation said: 'As we said at the time, we transferred ownership of the film material to Basement Films. Anything broadcast will not be a BBC film and has not undergone the BBC's final pre-broadcast sign-off processes. 'The BBC is committed to covering the conflict in Gaza and has produced powerful coverage. Alongside breaking news and ongoing analysis, we have produced award-winning documentaries such as Life and Death in Gaza, and Gaza 101. We have also investigated allegations of abuse of Palestinian prisoners and Israel's attacks on Gaza's hospitals. 'Last week we ran a powerful piece of in-depth journalism that captured the final two weeks inside a Gaza hospital before it was forced to close.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Ridiculous ways the rich are trying to keep up with the uber-wealthy as they take over the Hamptons for summer
As New York City boils under the 100-degree heat this week, the wealthy will be finding their way out east to the summer oasis of the Hamptons, but only some of them can really afford it. It's the land of multimillion dollar homes and private chefs and nannies where millionaires and billionaires don ugly flip flops, designer purses and carry a sweater around their shoulders in case the country club gets too cold. It's loved by celebrities and reeks of wealth, family heritage, and splendor where those with more money than sense don't blink at paying a whopping $16 for 12 eggs. But there's more to the Long Island bolt hole than just It Girls dripping in designer clothing and jewels, the nepo babies escaping their West Village homes for Westhampton, and affluent scions that spend all winter dreaming of the polo clubs. There's the wannabes. And let's just say, it's hard to keep up with generational wealth when you don't have it! 'There's a desperation in the air, especially in August,' one unidentified woman told The Cut. 'There's an insecurity that you need to be operating on a certain level or else you're not good enough if you don't have the Goyard tote.' A number of anonymous Hamptonites have spoken to The Cut and shared their first world 'struggles' of what summer in the elite enclave is really like for them as they try to keep up with the billionaires next door. Extortionate grocery bills and not-so-designer purses An unidentified woman told how she was tired of the upkeep it takes to be someone in the Hamptons, and despite her irritation by it, she ultimately plays into it with fake designer purses and dishing out an exuberant amount for a carton of eggs. 'Can I afford a $7,000 purse? No. Do I still want the $7,000 purse? Yes,' she told The Cut. 'And when I'm there, I'm checking out everyone's purses. And I'm wondering: "Does everyone here have the real thing?" Are we just surrounded by $200,000 worth of purses? Or is everyone just pretending? I'm pretending.' Groceries are already up in the US, and she moans that it's hard to feed her kids with the Hamptons' prices. She's seen $16 for a single carton of eggs and $8 for a bundle of asparagus. She said that despite being able to fake some of the wealth her neighbors seem to have, she can't fake everything including her wheels. 'My Honda Odyssey is the only one that's not a Maserati,' she sniped about her neighbors motors. Tax debts and $2,000 tips One man's child revealed how her father will go to great lengths to keep up the image that he has Hamptons 'summer money', even if that means tax evasions... and several years of it. The unidentified father will easily drop $200,000 on a rental house to be near his friends in the summer, despite having large amounts of debts to pay off back home. And he doesn't care if it's not near the water or as ritzy as his friends. 'Honestly, I am not trying to sound bratty or anything, but these houses are just not very nice,' his child, who manages the finances for the family business, told The Cut. And to keep up the image that he still had the money he had before his divorce, he'll go to his favorite restaurant on the island, order one of everything on the menu, and leave an eyewatering $2,000 tip on the bill. While great for the waitress, it's not so great for the family finances. 'Still, he will scrape together every cent he can to try to get that Hamptons house. He wants to be out there with his friends. He wants to go to Dockers. And it's definitely a strain,' the adult child said. 'It would get us to the point where we were struggling to make payroll for our 50-person company because he wanted that Hamptons house. 'There's been a lot of personal struggle on his end and neglecting things that are much more necessary in hopes of having one more year of doing this. And you'd never know it.' Flashy realtors who can't afford their own home Even those who sell to the rich can't escape the draw of a nice, big home in the good part of town, and some will do anything to get it, even if that means living paycheck to paycheck. 'I've been in the Hamptons for five years now, and you see this a lot with junior agents overspending on their cars, clothes, watches,' an unidentified realtor told The Cut. 'Next thing you know, they're living check to check, can't make the mortgage payments, losing their home.' They even saw a female real estate agent lose her South Forks home rather than rent it out because she couldn't bear letting 'any of her peers find out she needed the money'. The broker said he knows plenty of others who have practically bankrupted themselves just to keep up with the ultra-rich. Bribes for the hottest spots on the dock Another thing all coastal rich people love are yachts and those in the Hamptons aren't any better. For those lucky enough to afford them don't even get to enjoy the luxury to the full extent as they're too busy scouting out their neighbor's boat - is their boat bigger than our boat? Another thing they're preoccupied with? Getting an in at the right dock. 'The dockmasters are the gatekeepers - and for the ones who take advantage, it's no pay, no play,' one crew member told The Cut. The rich and famous can fork up to $20,000 for a precious slip and the only way to get it is to bribe the dockmaster.